By Olumide Manuel
After a documentary with the same title by Yar'Adua Foundation Production
It is either the dying of a country or the country of bodies
Stacking an unrest to the molecules of nature, agitated
To a song of buckets, buckets of overflowing plunder.
In my mother's nightmare lake Chad waned to a battleline,
The migration of ploughing hands to the thighs of rifles,
The cruor we butter into ethnic tensions, how the North
Pours toward the Middlebelt with hunger and strife.
Benue man will say, the desert you run from has ran
Into my harvest basket, and now we run into eachother
With blames and knifes. Down South, the fish bellies
The crude oil, and a child smokes it for dinner. Now fire
Glares the evening skies of Niger delta, a testament
Of how the wreckage of creeks has made black dragons
Out of boys, black widows out of girls, and a stained
devastation out of cities struggling to breathe underwater.
A pregnant croc had swam into our store before she awoke
From the slumber of nightmare, the flood has blurred
The boundaries of where the sea ends, where the land begins.
Where do we go from here? How do we safe ourselves from
The slumber that eats our country into a graveyard, overridden
With debris, under claws, inside the silent lament of voices
Crow-walking the high walls of a weakened green body.
Olumide Manuel, NGP IX, is a writer, a biology teacher and an environmentalist. He is a nominee of Pushcart Prize, and the winner of Aké Climate Change Poetry Prize 2022. His works have been published on Magma Poetry, Trampset, Uncanny Magazine, Agbowó Magazine, Up The Staircase Quarterly, Frontier Poetry, and elsewhere.