BASH FAHAD FROM UGANDA; BABISHAI 2017 HAIKU SHORTLIST

Abubasam Fahad Mutumba is an editor with Makerere Unversity’s Campus Bee, a performer with a large following and he says that his 2017 haiku submission is a mouth-watering luwombo. #Babishai2017

What drew you to enter for the competition?
I entered the competition because I would like my poetry to get a bigger reach — given the stature of The Babishai Organization. I always look at my pen as a camera; able to paint images for the world to see them the way I saw them.

Do you have a particular personal story with haikus?
I don’t know if this answers the question well, but to me, every haiku is a story. The reason as to why I write haiku is so that I don’t forget the story I have come across.

 What do you feel towards the shortlist in general?
I feel the shortlist proves that there’s literary talent in Africa.

What motivation do poets need, to keep writing, in this ridiculously competitive world that vies for their attention?
Someone once said you should always follow your heart; that’s exactly what poets should do. Passion always wins.

 If your 2017 submission was food, what would it be?
It would be a luwombo of pasted dry fish, with mouthwatering matooke.

Read his haiku  here:

Ugandan road…

a shrivelled leaf flies in

a cloud of dust

We at Babishai, congratulate him again. The winners will  be announced at the #Babishai2017 Poetry Festival dinner on Sunday 6 August at Humura Resort, Kitante Close. Cards are on sale at 40,000/- Call +256 703147862. The full festival programme is here.

#BABISHAI2017 POETRY FESTIVAL PROGRAMME

The full winning haikus are here:

http://bnpoetryaward.blogspot.ug/2017/07/the-babishai-2017-haiku-shortlist.html

SAVIOUR WILLIE #BABISHAI2017 HAIKU SHORTLIST

Saviour Willie   his 2017 submission were food, it would be Afang soup with endless esam and he says that the shortlist is what he expected; a squadron of highbrow haijins.

What drew you into the competition?

I stay in Port Harcourt. That said, I revert to your question. My motivation is an iron-headed highbrow young Nigerian and a versatile photographer ,writer and News Editor at Neptrendz TV, Obaji-Nwali Shegun. He is my mentor and a bad literary influenza. He continued to nudge me until I turned a hot-headed Haijin. He thought me firsthand to experiment with HAIKU. And if you check out my haiku. You will see words divided by a space where fire sparkled. And a very bazaar machination.  He’s been organizing programs all over Port Harcourt to spread the exquisite beauty he continued to claim he spotted in haiku. And I am his humble student. And he is my Haiku master. When I forwarded to him the Haiku I intend submitting out for this contest, he Edited and returned to me three haiku that blew my skull away.

If I say he wrote the shortlisted Haiku am only nearing the truth. So, I joined this competition because a 19year old Nigerian, Obaji-Nwali Shegun thoroughly lectured and inundated me in the  art. I deal a thumb high for him. And I wasn’t surprised he was shortlisted. He had always wanted to tell The world the cajoling effects of alcohol in Africa, and the need for the decrease in the amount of ethanol injected into the beers shipped into the continent. He is my motivation.  my Haiku questioned  African night,
What has gone wrong with our night that an old    man who have seen all things sauntered out of his armchair just for the sounds of  crickets? What folded fears into our night? Is this old man discomforted by the war and grenades bursts that have characterized the Nigerian night?

Did you have a particular personal story   with HAIKU?      

Yes, a friend introduced me to a young Nigerian organizing Haiku programs for interested youths in an open field in a school in UPE Borikiri porthacout. I went, sat in a plastic chair and got captivated by the candour and wit of a very young boy passionately expounding a very cranky poetry form sweetly describing how it stormed the world from Japan, mentioning a Basho..and a Adgeyi Baah  Afriku, mamba journal, Heron and many other things. I decided to go close to him. I met in the school where he often teaches Literature and it had been a nice friendship. He softly rejected my first batch of Haiku, calling them shallow and passionless. I became perfect as I continued to join his programs. At a point we started talking in Haiku. haha. Shegun, your boy de loyal.

What do you feel towards the shortlist in general?

The shortlist is what I expected. A squadron of terrific  Kus. Highbrow  Haijins. And nothing is so encouraging to see me in the shortlist With the hot-headed Obaji-Nwali Shegun having promised to drop his tongue for me to cut if we did not make the shortlist. He so much believe in our haikus. The shortlist spill fires.

What motivation do poets need , to keep writing , in this ridiculously competitive world that vies for their attentions

Poetry is a large river many fits deep. Getting to the riverbed to exum something worthwhile you will have to do what Obaji-Nwali Shegun has been advising us to do “read and read more and more poems intil they lure you to sleep” so read a lot and you will compete favourably.

If 2017 submission was food, what would it be?

If my submission should be food it would be Afang soup with endless esam or periwinkle.

 

We at Babishai, congratulate her again. The winners will  be announced at the #Babishai2017 Poetry Festival dinner on Sunday 6 August at Humura Resort, Kitante Close. Cards are on sale at 40,000/- Call +256 703147862. The full festival programme is here.

#BABISHAI2017 POETRY FESTIVAL PROGRAMME

The full winning haikus are here:

http://bnpoetryaward.blogspot.ug/2017/07/the-babishai-2017-haiku-shortlist.html