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ARTS AND CULTURE

African parables

  • 15 September 2009

Somalia 2009 The camps in Eastern Kenya House a quarter of a million Refugees. Each day hundreds More cross the border from Somalia.

With our cinnamon-dusted children, We once followed the cattle in their swaying seasons To horizons promised with rain. The air was fragrant with orange blossom, Cardamom and cloves. But now, they have salted The orchards and the vines. The lowing of the cattle is taken, With our names, upon the wind. In our land there is no civil countenance. No longer may we love or mourn. We exist on rumours of water, food and hearth. We have no currency But the litanies of our hands And our public eyes In which you might recognise The price of our humanity. We stand at the brink of your wire, Watching in silence As another parable begins.

Listen — Live reading by the poet

The gate In many parts of Africa people must pay bribes to be able to work, sometimes several bribes. There is always a gate-keeper.

Each day amongst the shanty lives trading must begin anew for earth-space, water, fire and work [for now, at least, the brownish air is free]

At the building site The keeper of the gate has begun to palm The famished ounces of quiet bribes, And to usher his chosen ones Through the gate space, Where they will, by further promises, Be permitted to heft their shoulders Into the gall and gruel of work, So that a morsel, Trimmed by exacted percentages, Might fall their way.

Otherwise, Men who stood before the gate, their eyes brimmed with tall expectations, Must trail the weight of empty hands, empty pockets Back to the shanties, Where children are launching imagined craft Away from the stench of earth Into pools That are the colour of Keen's Mustard.

Listen — Live reading by the poet

A poem for Catherine Hamlin Catherine Hamlin, an Australian doctor, established A hospital in Ethiopia in 1974 with her late husband to treat women who had been damaged by the complications of childbirth. Because of their wretched injuries these women were commonly cut off from their