Everything must belong somewhere.
Was there anything ever made
that belonged nowhere?
There is what we found
and there is
what we made of it.
There was rhythm
long before drums,
cacophony, unsound, too.
We tightened skins
over drums and beat out
sound already there
just because we needed
our hands to affirm
what our hearts already knew.
That in a demonstration
the freedom is demonstrated
in the hands holding hands.
That bodies
are containers keeping
safe space for each other.
And I have found safe spaces draped
over sunlit shoulders, waiting
for me to rest my head.
Others I found
in the hands that hugged mine,
keeping me from grasping misery.
How many revolutions were born from verse?
Perhaps if we cried in stanzas
people would listen harder.
We beat drums to affirm our rhythm,
speak to affirm our voices,
and hope this music will drown out non-belonging.
Gloria Kiconco is a Ugandan poet, journalist, and editor. Her poetry has been published in Brittle Paper and Lawino. She has written articles for STARTjournal of the arts and Doppiozero’s column, Why Africa? She often recites her work in Kampala at Poetry-in-session. You can find more of her writing on her blog, Rhymesbythereams.
Never seen Gloria perform? Here is a video of her performing at Poetry In Session:
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