Blood and Water by Elizabeth Muchemwa (Zimbabwe)
He washes his hands in streams she has made
Rivers flowing beneath her eyes have
salted the land with the acrid taste of her
hate
wells have risen to pool within her
catching the cries that would speak her
hurt
He washes his hands in streams she has made
She dreams sonic dreams with high decibels to end tyranny
with a speak to raise armies and wage wars
He washes his hands in streams she has made
ignoring the pleas of a maiden body slain
in her shame exposed against her will
half drawn clothes
untidy bundles of blood
laid to waste for a rush
She has made rivers and lakes bitter with the salt of her tears
beneath her breast a molten hold burnishes the light she once had
into a golden strong finish
for those that have laid her to waste
This is for the mother
who has stitched another morsel
into one dish of edible corn for our daily bread
Her who has copied the hands of the creator
and pasted onto the drawing board a new piece to the picture
so that girls everywhere can smile
She is the surgeon who has carried a knife to battles
to cut open wounds and piece them to their proper places back,
them skins and flesh scurrying to obey her command
she has done so
she has carried life so
She has melded pen and paper to tell a story
not worrying
whether the caves within her bring forth life or death
life or death life or death
the ringing bells toll and call all humankind to rest
but she does not stop taking life from death
life from death life from death
building bricks upon bricks
stitching together another life in a war zone.