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Poets
tackle human rights
John Mokwetsi, The Standard (Zimbabwe)
February 10, 2008
http://www.thezimbabwestandard.com/viewinfo.cfm?linkid=14&id=8331&siteid=1
Zimbabwe Poets for Human
Rights (ZPHR) says it will "try to develop, educate, transform
and advocate for the respect of human rights using performance poetry
as the main medium".
About 15 poets converged
at the US Embassy's Public Affairs Auditorium last Tuesday
to present poems and to discuss their presentation, with a strong
audience in attendance. Poems presented focused on specific rights
ranging from the social to the cultural, also exploring the human
condition under the present tough economic environment.
Among the young upcoming
male and female poets were Fungai Machirori, Jongwe Wezhira, Rhyme
Apostle, Police State Poet, Batsirai Chigama, Prince Tendai, Ticha
Muzabazi, Mutumwa Pave, Elizabeth Muchemwa, Michael Mabwe and Shoes
Robson, the event organiser.
The discussion was facilitated
by Farai Gwaze, a filmmaker based in Durban, South Africa.
Robson, Takunda
and Mabwe presented a rendition of the poem maOperation nemaCommission
whose theme centred on the now common development where every sector
of the country is now governed by either an operation or a commission.
The trio told
Standard plus the poem was inspired by loneliness. "We gave
loneliness a platform and its speech became poetry," says Michael
Mabwe.
Cultural rights were
dealt with by Anesu Katerere, known as the Guerrilla Poet. He recited
a poem, God's Call, in which he sought to invoke divine intervention
in addressing the current economic and political crisis.
Katerere said: "I
believe the problems in Zimbabwe, like the liberation struggles
in the First and Second Chimurenga, have a spiritual attachment.
"
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