In Africa, millions are suffering a lot. Their lives have trampled over
them with so critical problems. They are threatened by poverty, crushed
by unemployment, wars, and disease overcomes them. The statistics tell
us a lot about the aggravation of humanity's problems in the
twenty-first century, as if the more humanity progresses, the more it
crushes the human beings on the way to progress.
According to unemployment statistics in Africa in twenty countries,
their unemployment rates are ranging between 29% and 10% ; which are
large proportions according to the population numbers.
Today, citizens are no longer victims of authoritarian regimes alone;
the monsters of the pandemics, high prices and corruption have drawn in
on them, to the extent that well-being is no longer on their list of
ambitions, but rather is satisfied with meeting their basic needs.
Safety has become a basic requirement, which they seek, safety at home,
street, school and workplace, safety for them and their families, safety
for them and their communities.
Science has helped us, or technology has caught us, in the trap of
estrangement with the other as it is a security factor for ourselves
from the oppression of the others and their negative impact. We have
established separate islands that are linked to others only by digital
technology. Face –to- face activities have been replaced by online
communication. The means of communication have become one of the tools
of non-communication; we are now replacing written, audio and video
messages for live meetings, and clichés on individual congratulatory
occasions, and we are keen to fence our islands to protect them from
penetration, as if we are electronic devices afraid of virus piracy. We
have deluded ourselves that we are happy, each on his island, even
within members of the same family.
We thought it was safe! However, the tentacles of extremism brutalized
that safety, after it spread to threaten every possible safe space:
targeting girl students in their schools, killing believers in their
places of worship, threatening workers in their factories, and blowing
up the masses in markets. Extremist terrorist operations did not exclude
a place where it wreaked havoc.
The question we - the African poets - must answer is: What will we do?
In fact, in the midst of this fierce ocean with its deadly waves that
threaten our safe islands, we must think seriously about creating safety
waves that protect our present and secure our future.
The poet’s role does not end by handing over texts to the publisher,
or giving words to the publishing platform. Our role does not stop when
our books and collections are published, but that is the beginning; the
real role is for these texts to interact with the circle of readers.
In Egypt I don’t consider my call is successful! When I requested
Egyptian poets to join me in Jack Hirschman’s Anthology, only more
than a dozen wrote their poems. When I called for online activity only
one poetess joined me, Deema Mahmood. When I announced the latest
project of Nano Poems for Africa in the next edition of the Silk Road
Anthology, I found only a dozen of poets from the whole of Africa, half
of them from Egypt, who contributed to it. The same situation was also
clear when the African Platform was formed in WhatsApp, as meetings
lacked the necessary full group, even National Coordinators.
Today, I will discuss with you few ideas, in which the writer becomes a
beacon in his depressed society, and a inspiration in his bleak
surroundings. That is, to turn into a candle those lights up the
footsteps of comrades and family in the dark, and a lamp that lights the
way for others in frustrated societies.
We need someone who inspires hope and motivates souls to work. It may be
worthy of a poet who has achieved success, to give gratitude to the root
places of this success. Did our poets think of visiting their first
school, in which the journey of education and reading began, and in
which the roots of interest in literature were planted?
The truth is that my own experience was amazing, when I took a
collection of my publications for young students and adult teachers. I
visited my primary school in my hometown (Abdul-Monem Riyadh, Benha),
and entered the library whose content I owe the beginnings of reading
and a love of knowledge. A discussion took place with young boys and
girls about reading and writing. I believe in the positivity of this
wave issued by that gathering. I recalled my poem: _When I visited my
old school, entered my old classroom, the boy who was sitting on my old
desk, never looked like me, but I loved him._
Today, the battalions of male and female poets have had access to many
platforms that make their voices fully heard and seen. One of the
problems facing our African continent is illegal immigration, which
claims thousands of lives every year. Why not is our campaign dedicated
to raising awareness of the dangers of this illegal trend?
Figures of illegal immigration from Africa are available from multiple
sources and are estimated at hundreds of thousands each year. The fates
of these people are divided between drowning at sea or being tortured or
deported on and from land. These adventurers who lost their lives were
sent by despair to the boats of death. Who puts out the fire of despair?
People in despair did not find someone to hear their voice, nor did they
find a merciful voice calling them, from the soil of their homeland, I
do not say that we have to bleed the facts in order to bear what they
are in, but we have to think about drawing alternative ways for them.
It is our duty to offer solutions and suggest means for officials in
both public and private sectors to allocate a percentage of the profits
to the care of these destitute. Simple temporary pensions and soft loans
are two means that may succeed in dissuading hundreds of thousands from
undertaking an adventure in which they pay the smuggler huge sums for
the sake of a great delusion.
After a century of all African migrations to Europe, legal and illegal,
the number of Africans registered in the countries of the old continent
does not exceed but a little ten million, with 440,000 traveled in
five years between 2000 and 2005.
We are responsible to more than a billion people to play the role of
searching for an alternative paradise in Africa for its inhabitants and
people. Hence, development in African countries is a priority for the
establishment of this paradise.
Our duty is to urge officials to develop and present our innovative
ideas to benefit from natural resources in history and tourism. Our duty
is to spread waves of hope to achieve security for these sons and
daughters, and to send waves of optimism for parents. All poets and
poetesses must turn into a field to send the waves that attract hope.
Rather, I may be more optimistic, when I dream that sports commentators,
with their papers filled with repetitive numbers, carry short poems for
the peoples of Africa to read. One match is watched by millions. The
dream of African poets will be fulfilled; that their poems will be heard
by millions at one time, on television.
Perhaps a poet in the responsibility position of radio and television
unions, can allocate the match commentator for one minute - in which
play stops during the ninety minutes- and often this happens, to read a
short text, there will be more than 200 texts, by 200 poets or writers,
in a sports season. What a breakthrough, it would be a poetic and prose
revolution without a doubt.
I also invite every poet and every publisher to allocate some of their
books; a percentage of published works to be donated to public
libraries, to school libraries, and to libraries of social and sports
clubs. Let books speak in your name in every space. It is your letters
that transcend you.
Finally, I believe that One Good Poem a Day, Keeps Despair Away. I hope
we establish mailing lists to send poems by emails and WhatsApp on a
daily basis. We open our emails to read world poetry. We can post them
on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter pages. The Floods of Poems would wash
hatred out. Poems of love, peace and solidarity are all we need to turn
into a way of life. Poems on protecting our nature, are a must need to
protect our lives on Mother Earth.
(The Writer’s speech for World Poetry Movement – Africa, 21 January
2023. This is the video link to the speech in Spanish):
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