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Remember Rwanda

by Niyi Osundare
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  …Parables from our recent polls  

  I

The journey from hate to holocaust
      is perilously short. . . .*

In the national ballot just concluded:

Many voted their tribe
     Many, their tongue
Many saw nothing holier than
     Crosses and Crescents

In the polling booth
     Utterly mesmerised by
The poisonous correspondence
     Of region and religion

Many dug up skeletal skirmishes
     From the nation’s graveyard
Many were already glowing  from
     The flames of fires yet unborn

War of words
     Words foretelling wars
About who owns the land
     And who is owned by the land

Bilious boasts, un-tethered tantrums
     Shameful shibboleths once again
At the seething gates: blind swords from
     The armoury of the mouth

The nation’s memory is under assault
     From marinated murmurs and slanderous slurs
The journey from hate to holocaust
     Indeed is perilously short

                  II

When does a friend become a foe
      How does a trusted neighbour suddenly
Turn a neigh-bore saddled with count-
     Less stereotypes and deadly definitions

On streets ominously loud with othering appellations
     Whose jagged tones unnerve the ear?
How does Intolerance hatch into a fire-combed cock
     The moment Intemperance undoes the egg?

Legatees of a hasty amalgamation
     Whose mongrel congregations have never learnt
To adult into a bonding whole, when shall we begin
     To see something good in the divinity of our difference?

And so, another ballot bedlam
     And its barbarous aftermath
Cyber mobs wild with imprecations and virtual assassinations
     Their reptilian malevolence, their deadly untruths

Unhappy that nation which brings out
     The worst in its people
Unhappy the people who only bring out
     The worst in their nation

Pogroms often begin
     With the first misbegotten Word
Ye Flamethrowers of the current Nigerian war,
     Remember Rwanda!

________________________________________

* These two lines are from “Ode to Hate”, Pages from the Book of the Sun: New & Selected Poems, 2002.

*Osundare, one of Africa’s foremost poets and academics, is Emeritus Distinguished Professor of English, University of New Orleans.  

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