Agoloso Presents - Atondido Stories Agoloso Presents - Songs of Anisha | Page 126

Songs of Anisha “Memories of My Home,” by Syerramia Willoughby Mountains that rise and rise, but never seem to peak Torrential rain that doesn’t cease for weeks The dry desert wind that draws all the moisture from my skin This is the beauty of my home It is in Africa. The scorching sun that shrivels the green of the soil The roads full of red dust that disguise the colour of my shoes Over the road, bends a coconut tree under the weight of its’ luscious fruit This is my home It is in Africa Odours pervade my senses, exotic food tempts my palate The woman carrying her baby on the back and at the same time has A tray of hot parched groundnuts balanced on her head. These things remind me of my home. It is in Africa The shirtless kid playing with a cloth football On a pot-hole ridden road, whose parents Can’t afford to send him to primary school This is the reality of my home It is in Africa Tin sheds where some people make their home Outdoor latrines with buzzing flies lanes made of sharp stones which tear bare feet This is indeed my home It is in Africa Markets with overladen stalls of freshly caught fish Plantains, yams, cassava and potato leaves; customers Haggling for dear life, tradespeople on the lookout for a few more leones These are my memories of my home It is in Africa Strolling on yellow grains of sand; the salty Atlantic ocean Flows in and disinfects the feet as the sun dies its’ daily death Tourists swirling about in the bamboo beach bars This is my home It is in Africa Soldiers in ragged clothes armed with cutlasses and rusty AK-47s; 124