Poem
Chris Magadza
GHOSTS IN THE MAIZE FIELDS
GHOSTS IN THE MAIZE FIELDS
GHOSTS IN THE MAIZE FIELDS
Who are these
Who stand in the ploughed fields
Wearing stolen cloaks
In the setting sun,
Casting long cold shadows
On the young crop?
Who are these
With fattened faces
And little eyes
That see neither the sun
Nor the hungry mother?
Who are these
Who speak with twisted tongues
And straddle the village path
And sit on the cooking pot?
Who are these
Who ride over the
Black village rooster
In chariots of fire;
That consume the air
And starve the land?
Who are these that rape
Their sisters and defile
Their grandmothers?
Who are these
That urinate
On the ancestors’ graves
And defecate
In the village well?
Tell me . . .
Ye empty barefooted ghosts
That bear false arms;
Ye young scoundrels
Barely weaned
That call yourselves
War veterans
To frighten the hungry lame;
Where did you bury
The heroes?
Where is Chaminuka?
Where is Nehanda?
Where is Tongogara?
Where is Goodson Sithole?
Where is Rashiwe?
Where is Chitepo?
Where are the Olds?
Where is Stevens?
Who stand in the ploughed fields
Wearing stolen cloaks
In the setting sun,
Casting long cold shadows
On the young crop?
Who are these
With fattened faces
And little eyes
That see neither the sun
Nor the hungry mother?
Who are these
Who speak with twisted tongues
And straddle the village path
And sit on the cooking pot?
Who are these
Who ride over the
Black village rooster
In chariots of fire;
That consume the air
And starve the land?
Who are these that rape
Their sisters and defile
Their grandmothers?
Who are these
That urinate
On the ancestors’ graves
And defecate
In the village well?
Tell me . . .
Ye empty barefooted ghosts
That bear false arms;
Ye young scoundrels
Barely weaned
That call yourselves
War veterans
To frighten the hungry lame;
Where did you bury
The heroes?
Where is Chaminuka?
Where is Nehanda?
Where is Tongogara?
Where is Goodson Sithole?
Where is Rashiwe?
Where is Chitepo?
Where are the Olds?
Where is Stevens?
Harare, 2000
© 2006, Chris Magadza
From: Father and other poems
Publisher: Poetry International Web,
From: Father and other poems
Publisher: Poetry International Web,
Chaminuka and Nehanda were heroes of the first ‘chimurenga’ or war against
the first white settlers in the 1890s. Tongogara was a member of the ZANU
High Command who was killed just before independence. Goodson Sithole and
Rashiwe were abducted and have never been found. Chitepo was killed in
Zambia during the struggle, by a landmine planted in his drive. Olds and
Stevens were two white farmers who had both done much for their
communities who were killed in ZANU’s third chimurenga, the ‘hondo-
yeminda’ or war for the land.
Poems
Poems of Chris Magadza
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GHOSTS IN THE MAIZE FIELDS
Who are these
Who stand in the ploughed fields
Wearing stolen cloaks
In the setting sun,
Casting long cold shadows
On the young crop?
Who are these
With fattened faces
And little eyes
That see neither the sun
Nor the hungry mother?
Who are these
Who speak with twisted tongues
And straddle the village path
And sit on the cooking pot?
Who are these
Who ride over the
Black village rooster
In chariots of fire;
That consume the air
And starve the land?
Who are these that rape
Their sisters and defile
Their grandmothers?
Who are these
That urinate
On the ancestors’ graves
And defecate
In the village well?
Tell me . . .
Ye empty barefooted ghosts
That bear false arms;
Ye young scoundrels
Barely weaned
That call yourselves
War veterans
To frighten the hungry lame;
Where did you bury
The heroes?
Where is Chaminuka?
Where is Nehanda?
Where is Tongogara?
Where is Goodson Sithole?
Where is Rashiwe?
Where is Chitepo?
Where are the Olds?
Where is Stevens?
Who stand in the ploughed fields
Wearing stolen cloaks
In the setting sun,
Casting long cold shadows
On the young crop?
Who are these
With fattened faces
And little eyes
That see neither the sun
Nor the hungry mother?
Who are these
Who speak with twisted tongues
And straddle the village path
And sit on the cooking pot?
Who are these
Who ride over the
Black village rooster
In chariots of fire;
That consume the air
And starve the land?
Who are these that rape
Their sisters and defile
Their grandmothers?
Who are these
That urinate
On the ancestors’ graves
And defecate
In the village well?
Tell me . . .
Ye empty barefooted ghosts
That bear false arms;
Ye young scoundrels
Barely weaned
That call yourselves
War veterans
To frighten the hungry lame;
Where did you bury
The heroes?
Where is Chaminuka?
Where is Nehanda?
Where is Tongogara?
Where is Goodson Sithole?
Where is Rashiwe?
Where is Chitepo?
Where are the Olds?
Where is Stevens?
Harare, 2000
From: Father and other poems
Chaminuka and Nehanda were heroes of the first ‘chimurenga’ or war against
the first white settlers in the 1890s. Tongogara was a member of the ZANU
High Command who was killed just before independence. Goodson Sithole and
Rashiwe were abducted and have never been found. Chitepo was killed in
Zambia during the struggle, by a landmine planted in his drive. Olds and
Stevens were two white farmers who had both done much for their
communities who were killed in ZANU’s third chimurenga, the ‘hondo-
yeminda’ or war for the land.
GHOSTS IN THE MAIZE FIELDS
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