An interesting thing happened to me the other day. On Thursday April 8, 2010, I was walking along Kijabe Street-on the other side of Norfolk Hotel and the Kenya Broadcasting Corporation- trying to get into Longonot Place to meet up with my pals Douglas Okwatch and Alberto Leny who recently invited me to be part of News Xtra- Nairobi's new and free daily evening newspaper- when I was hailed by this friendly guy who introduced himself as Maina Joseph. He turned out to be a veteran artist involved with drama, drumming and a whole lot more. He was convinced that he knew me from NAKURU. That struck me as kinda strange, since apart from being born in that Rift Valley market town, I have NEVER lived there for more than two days. A thought flashed through my mind. Did my mischievous dad spawn a sibling who is my spitting image, with this unknown identical near twin brother eking out an existence with a parallel Oloo family in Nakuru totally unbeknownst to me and the rest of my immediate family? That thought was brief, and like I said, it did FLASH through my mind on its way out. Anyways, Maina ended up telling me when he had just given me his business card and was about to go on his way that actually there was a poetry night starting up at the Wasanii Restaurant which is upstairs from the main stage at the National Theatre. Being an aficionado of things thespian, verse and all literary matters in between, I dashed to the venue to find buddies like Steenie Njoroge, Sophie Dola, Ksmall, Jack and other Wasanii mainstays settling in, sipping their various liquid selections as they waited for things to rev up. Khainga O'kwemba, a writer whose work is often featured in the Star came up and we chatted. He happens to be one of the main officials of the Kenyan chapter of PEN- the international association of writers. PEN Kenya was hosting the event in conjunction with the Wasanii crew. He asked me if I could contribute a poem towards the end. I immediately agreed only to start panicking instantly when I realized I did NOT have a single poem on me, not even one floating in my cranium. Quickly excusing myself, I hurried to a cybercafe to see if I could retrieve one of my old poems from one of my half a dozen blogs. But not one was appropriate for me. So I came back, fretting of what to do. I was invited to the semi-high table where all the officially invited poets and spoken word smiths were. After about seven and a half minutes Khainga sidled up to me and whispered, "You are on after the next two". I felt my tummy churning somewhat moderately. Still no poem. But I did have a writing pad and a pen. So I set off composing a poem on the spot. I had barely finished the second last line when I was officially invited to go on stage and read it. Well, here it is, modified slightly from two days ago....
the killers of our dreams
don’t want us to dream
the killers of our kenyan dreams
our dreams of peace
our dreams of national unity
our kenyan dreams of justice and equality
our kenyan dreams of a new democratic constitution
the killers of our dreams
don’t want us to dream
the killers of our kenyan dreams
want to kill us
that is why we should rise above the trivia
that is why we should transcend the inertia
the dementia of updating our facebook walls
with inane, lame and tired lines
drivel like
oh, I am so bored
limpid lines like
gosh, I am so drunk
throw away trash like
look at me, I am so fly
silly whines like
poor me, I am so dry
let us not be twittering twits
twittering tweets about
our ex romantic partners
and how we accosted them
doing the nasty stark naked
in the living room
with esther arunga doing ktn at one
let us not commit suicide
because our favourite
english premier league club
lost out to a superior la liga opponent
or was turfed out in a heartbreak concession
to a resilient bundesliga adversary
while we here in kenya
wallow in neo-colonial unglamorous squalor
let us remain
each and every one of us
not just mere
run of the mill
sometimish day wet dreamers
but focused, stubborn
hard working dreamers
never letting go
dreamers of dreams
dreaming undreamt dreams
dreaming forbidden, forsaken dreams
dreaming ex-communicated dreams
and I am not talking of x-rated dreams
of lusty fantasies and fornication orgies
but as we dream
let us wake up at the same time
and start moiling and toiling
struggling and working
day in, day out
week after week
month after month
year after year
decade after decade
struggling to make all those dreams
see the cold light of day
fellow dreamers
see yourself perched atop
the highest peak of mount Kenya
proudly hoisting aloft
our victory flag
visualize yourself
riding the most precarious crest
three hundred metres deep
into the kikambala beach
clinging tenaciously
to our banner of liberation
some of us started dreaming big
way back in our mid teens
in those half-forgotten
bell bottomed seventies
dreaming back then of freedom
of justice, of democracy
before we clasped hands
with other young dreamers
to start organizing
in the clandestine subterrains
for revolution, for socialism
now in the second decade
of a century some of our comrades
never got to see
we are now on the other side of forty five
smiling wistfully
as we observe our teen daughters
and twenty something sons
stirring with angst
as they too, dream their own dreams
in this digitized, networked, facebooked
viral marketed twenty first century
twittered demi-monde
and still we dream our dreams
meshing with their dreams
and musing their children’s future dreams
some of us
dream not of palatial dream homes
we dream not of cavernous garages
chock full of imported dream limos
we dream not of billions
stashed away in dozens
of overseas bank accounts
we dream not
of faking it
in that surreal charade
of allegedly making it
instead we still dream
stubbornly of that better world
we have been steadily yearning for
we dream still of another just society
we dream of a new day dawning
where women here and everywhere
will cherish the guaranteed equal rights
as we move beyond
the old disney world of misogyny, patriarchy and sexism
we dream of local, regional, national, continental
and global peace and prosperity
we hold on to our dreams
of international solidarity
even as we hanker fiercely
of a socialist milieu
overcoming this imperialist dystopia
so my sisters and my brothers
my comrades and my compatriots
let us be proud, confident, stubborn dreamers
dream if you are a dancer
for it will help you
choreograph your future
dream if you are a singer
as you lyrically weave today’s melodies
and tomorrow’s harmonies
dream if you are an actor
bringing dialogue and drama
to life in living colour
dream especially if
you are a poet
for your life is an epic
which has just barely begun…
don’t want us to dream
the killers of our kenyan dreams
our dreams of peace
our dreams of national unity
our kenyan dreams of justice and equality
our kenyan dreams of a new democratic constitution
the killers of our dreams
don’t want us to dream
the killers of our kenyan dreams
want to kill us
that is why we should rise above the trivia
that is why we should transcend the inertia
the dementia of updating our facebook walls
with inane, lame and tired lines
drivel like
oh, I am so bored
limpid lines like
gosh, I am so drunk
throw away trash like
look at me, I am so fly
silly whines like
poor me, I am so dry
let us not be twittering twits
twittering tweets about
our ex romantic partners
and how we accosted them
doing the nasty stark naked
in the living room
with esther arunga doing ktn at one
let us not commit suicide
because our favourite
english premier league club
lost out to a superior la liga opponent
or was turfed out in a heartbreak concession
to a resilient bundesliga adversary
while we here in kenya
wallow in neo-colonial unglamorous squalor
let us remain
each and every one of us
not just mere
run of the mill
sometimish day wet dreamers
but focused, stubborn
hard working dreamers
never letting go
dreamers of dreams
dreaming undreamt dreams
dreaming forbidden, forsaken dreams
dreaming ex-communicated dreams
and I am not talking of x-rated dreams
of lusty fantasies and fornication orgies
but as we dream
let us wake up at the same time
and start moiling and toiling
struggling and working
day in, day out
week after week
month after month
year after year
decade after decade
struggling to make all those dreams
see the cold light of day
fellow dreamers
see yourself perched atop
the highest peak of mount Kenya
proudly hoisting aloft
our victory flag
visualize yourself
riding the most precarious crest
three hundred metres deep
into the kikambala beach
clinging tenaciously
to our banner of liberation
some of us started dreaming big
way back in our mid teens
in those half-forgotten
bell bottomed seventies
dreaming back then of freedom
of justice, of democracy
before we clasped hands
with other young dreamers
to start organizing
in the clandestine subterrains
for revolution, for socialism
now in the second decade
of a century some of our comrades
never got to see
we are now on the other side of forty five
smiling wistfully
as we observe our teen daughters
and twenty something sons
stirring with angst
as they too, dream their own dreams
in this digitized, networked, facebooked
viral marketed twenty first century
twittered demi-monde
and still we dream our dreams
meshing with their dreams
and musing their children’s future dreams
some of us
dream not of palatial dream homes
we dream not of cavernous garages
chock full of imported dream limos
we dream not of billions
stashed away in dozens
of overseas bank accounts
we dream not
of faking it
in that surreal charade
of allegedly making it
instead we still dream
stubbornly of that better world
we have been steadily yearning for
we dream still of another just society
we dream of a new day dawning
where women here and everywhere
will cherish the guaranteed equal rights
as we move beyond
the old disney world of misogyny, patriarchy and sexism
we dream of local, regional, national, continental
and global peace and prosperity
we hold on to our dreams
of international solidarity
even as we hanker fiercely
of a socialist milieu
overcoming this imperialist dystopia
so my sisters and my brothers
my comrades and my compatriots
let us be proud, confident, stubborn dreamers
dream if you are a dancer
for it will help you
choreograph your future
dream if you are a singer
as you lyrically weave today’s melodies
and tomorrow’s harmonies
dream if you are an actor
bringing dialogue and drama
to life in living colour
dream especially if
you are a poet
for your life is an epic
which has just barely begun…
composed by Onyango Oloo at the table near the bar at Wasanii Restaurant in Nairobi at approximately 8:36 pm on Thursday, April 8, 2010 while waiting to read the same unwritten poem...
4 comments:
Some of your prose is infinitely better than this
I am honestly invited...
This a nice piece of art which must be read by all progressive Kenyans. With the current situation in Kenya, the best we can do is dream to keep our hope alive of a better Kenya
Beautiful! Amazing that you could compose a poem in such a short time. I do miss the creative writing that you did over at your other blog.
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