The trees have abandoned the forest,
And the birds have forgotten their nest.
The baby ignores its mother’s breast,
For the dirty fingers of a guest.
Tears more than the chin can arrest
And pain, more than the heart can digest
Now bursts forth in an untamed protest
For the patriotism lying unexpressed.
There is too much here to harvest,
For this land still lays blessed
With more in which to invest.
But the workers are all on a quest
In search of foreign homes to rest
But those who remain are obsessed
With thoughts of living in the west.
Irony is indeed at its best,
For while Africa is said to be the richest,
Her children still congest to the west
To be oppressed, or as they say: to be a pest.
Africans no longer beat their chests
Against contemporary foreign conquests,
Instead, we’ve turned Africa into a jest;
Running to small boats to be compressed
In search of fulfillment for vain interests.
If we do this, we are called the smartest.
Those who die along, are mourned as the bravest,
And the survivors are celebrated as the luckiest.
Is this survival of the fittest, Or exiling of the weakest?
Musa Christopher Smart is a young Sierra Leonean poet. He currently lives and writes in Bo city (Southern Sierra Leone).