Tag: nigerianpoetry

  • Four Poems by Tomas Maldonado 

    Muzungu Kwanjula 

    Have you ever seen Kampala from an airplane
    on a warm summer afternoon? The reddish marks 
    of highways expand as far as the graves of the forgotten 
    women of Juarez. Their names known only to the angels 
    dancing in the greyish blue clouds. 
    But sometimes we have to laugh to forget the pain or 
    our tears will remind us that the only thing in the heavens is blue sky.
    They say it never rains in southern California but does it ever snow in central Uganda? Why am I a muzungu in Nansana but a wetback in America? I’ll never forget the first time you did okufukamira. The Prophet said if he could’ve ordered any creation to bow to another, he would’ve ordered a woman to bow down to her man. Such things never concerned me. I only care about enough air in my lungs to breathe out your name. 
    In Luganda, olulimi is polysemous. It refers to both  
    tongue and language. The only difference is the way 
    it moves around in my mouth when I ask you what 
    you thought would take years to happen. 

    Ekirooto on Muzigo & Mbuubi Road

    A tall man walks past you sweating. The charcoal 
    bag on his back feels heavy. Bluish green made of 
    thin plastic threads and itchy covering his entire body. 
    You notice what’s between his sandals. Ashy feet calloused 
    enough to walk barefoot if it weren’t for the rain gods of 
    his ancestors. You see a book in his eyes telling whole chapters 
    divided into sections of dreams too long for you to finish.
    He knows hunger but is thankful for strong legs. He drifts 
    here and there longing for another sunset to lay upon his head. 
    There’s a funny way the wind strokes the palm trees back and 
    forth. Its breeze smells of hot cooking oil and burnt chapati. Maybe if 
    his mother dies the day after tomorrow he has enough for transport to 
    the funeral. They are a people in their villages but foreigners in their cities. 
    A piece of charcoal falls. You want to turn back, pick it up, give it to 
    him but you know if you do, he’ll tell you it’s not his, like most of his problems. 

    The Fanoos of Al-Azhar 

    There’s an ancient fanoos hanging in the hallways of Jami al-Azhar. 
    She shined her brightest during the days of the Mamluks: pearl 
    white, held by copper wires, Ayat-ul-Kursi circling her beautiful stomach. 
    The Ottomans changed her candle every Ramadan even as the French and 
    British carried on until the coup of King Farouk. She watched in sadness 
    when Sadat was placed under her. His shrouded body wrapped tightly in 
    chaos and hatred. And even when she was dropped and shattered by one of 
    the janitors during the inauguration of Mubarak, a craftsman fixed her good 
    enough that you couldn’t see one crack. But now time has taken its toll. 
    The glue that holds her melts with each new candle. She has fallen twice this 
    year. She’s stained with brown dust and fungus. I watch the janitors take
    her down from the wires. I can’t help but notice drops of candle wax leaking 
    from her, falling, the way teardrops do when you know it’s time to say goodbye. 

    Al-Qarafah: City of the Dead

    Reddish-glows govern beige mausoleums as white sun dives into Cairo skyline…I can see the stolen electrical lines feed life into cracks of forever darkness…it’s the stuff of Najib Mahfouz’s wet dreams, a novel in the making, maybe a novella, if you run out of typing paper or wake up from your sleep. I roll the window down, rub my eyes, and look to my left. A tragedy unfolds… 

    A pig, amongst many, 
    snuffles and snorts along 
    the dusty street avoiding 
    the Egyptian girl swinging 
    a long date palm switch across
    their backsides. She yells at them
    Yallah! Yallah! her silver cross be
    -jeweled with topaz swings side-to-side, 
    a toddler follows behind, he needs a diaper change, 
    a few feet away a family watches the news in the crypt 
    of Umm Anuk. The Egyptian girl slips in a puddle, the pig laughs, the others follow. His eyes long for freedom, to believe freely, to write, to express himself, to love who ever will love him, to live. One day, he thinks. One day.  
    Amazing what one observes from a taxicab headed to Ahmed Helmy.  

    Author’s Bio

    Tomas Maldonado is a Mexican American creative nonfiction writer and poet who teaches English for Academic Purposes and English Composition at South Central College in South Central Minnesota. He uniquely blends creative writing in his TESL courses while mentoring his multilingual students as they journal their writing experiences via poetry and creative nonfiction. Tomas writes personal essays, interviews, and book reviews for Erato magazine and has had his creative nonfiction, poetry and short stories published in Chrysalis, Rio Grande Review, SEDAA, Latin@ Literatures and The Corresponder. When he’s not taking long walks through Kampala, he’s making snow angels in Mankato.