Thursday, October 28, 2010

The Hose Pipe

It was a bright, sunny day
when I saw it
I only got a glimpse of it

The green, slimy body
The beady eyes staring with horror at me
Life was over, and death began
I screamed when I saw the poison flaying to me

And I came to my senses
It was just an open hose pipe
with water spraying all over me

-Elethu Nkala

Life Today II

Heroes asked for change in youth
Especially in South Africa
We as youth must change
We mustn't say who is talking at his/her age
Because they want us to stay at an acceptable stage

My brothers and sisters, we mustn't live a life ahead
Today will always be today
Today won't be the same day as yesterday
They will always be different, in different ways
Like Monday and Friday

We are not perfect
But we know how to act
And if I do something
I know what will happen next
Maybe I must say we are the expert
of causing pandemonium
There's no minimum of what we do
But there is a maximum
If you're part of the pandemonium group

JUST ASK YOURSELF ...
"Is this, what I am doing to do, right?!"

Now think twice, and share what you will do before you do it.

-Lloyd Hanjana

Born

When I was about to be born
I was hit by a stone
and was left alone
But I ready to come
and be able to say "Mum"

I asked many questions in that dark
I thought: Where I will my car park?
And how will my dog bark
at night

When I am busy setting a mark
of what I'll do
It isn't clear like a nurse's uniform
which is blue

While I was a fetus
I was thinking of my birthday
and what will I say
when my mum shouted out, "HURRAY!"

But why am I lying?
I don't even know if I was kicking
or maybe crying
I don't know more -
DO YOU?

Now please leave my poem
And rush to ask your mum
If you still have one

Anger

Who are you?
What do you really do?
For you?
Have you been a human and got abused
So now you express your feelings to the living ones?

Why do you demolish my friend's future?
It is so sore to me
when I see them fool each other
and when I try to convince them
They feel like attacking me
Then I won't know what to do
because of you

Anger
You must remember
That in December
You killed my community member
Because of a temper
That was caused by you
Anger

I hate you
For being selfish and evil
The worst thing is,
you don't give us a clue

ANGER
JUST GO AWAY
WE DON'T NEED YOU
SO I WILL ALWAYS SAY "BOO"
TO YOU
DESTROYER!!

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Suspended in Memory

In my seat in terminal B, this non-place suspended between one reality and another, thoughts of South Africa overwhelm me and I shift incessantly, denim jeans sticking to plastic, searching for a comfortable spot where these punching-gut feelings will flow magically from solar plexus to fingertips to laptop screen in the form of adjectives, verbs, and nouns. They don’t want to translate, but I try anyway.

Let’s see…there’s transformative. Challenging. Defining. New! Thrilling! Brilliant! There’s to educate, to learn, to understand. To stretch. To love. Classroom. Robot. Braai. Lekker. Cheers. Pleasure. Haibo!

Are these strings of letters not wholly insufficient to capture those eight weeks in Cape Town? Why even try? Why not just sit with these feelings of transformation and gratitude, breathe, and let them move freely through my released muscles and affect my actions as they will? Why this desire to organize and define my experience?

Stuck at this logical stalemate, my fingertips lift in pause over the keyboard and my mind comes to a screeching halt. I know what must come now. I close my eyes, take a big, deep breath—and floor it, veering off the logical superhighway. Suddenly I’m in the LEAP Quantum Van, rattling down the left side of Bhunga Avenue into the bright land where Table Mountain is always in sight and words aren’t the whole smiley on the braai but more like the Thai Sweet Chili to our Original Lay’s potato chips. They’re not the core of what we do or feel, but they do remind us where we are, where we’re going, and how to get there. They help paint the richness of the experience.

Free-flowing, my inspired mind arrives in the LEAP canteen on that first morning in Pinelands. The sky is vibrant and the air crisp, but I am foggy and nervous after a lonely red eye and the abrupt realization that the southern hemisphere really does exist and is rather far from New Jersey. I can see my feet trod over the worn grey carpet that leads into that cold, bright room, and I can feel the white plastic chair wobble tentatively underneath me as I sit and turn my head to digest the roomful of chocolate faces all silently, but eagerly, welcoming us into their reality. And then they stand up and sing. The wide-eyed Americans marvel as the canteen fills with that palpable, passionate life force we later came to know so well during our time at LEAP. In that moment, floating in a sleep-deprived lucid dream, music and voices floating in and out of our pores, we all knew Something Real was going to happen to us in sleepy Pinelands.

I jump back in the Quantum and 30 minutes down the highway I’m in the dusty living room of a tiny home in the township Kalkfontein, which in haunting irony means “good farm” in Afrikaans. I am sitting opposite 22-year-old Zanele who, out of desperate passion and necessity, runs a support and performance youth group in the township. Zanele’s quiet demeanor melts away as, over two hours on a sunny Thursday afternoon, she pours her heart out to me in descriptions of the negativity sent her way from members of the community in response to her group, the pain she feels when she must take care of her sick brother, and her broken relationship with her stepfather. Her delicate, puffy eyes communicate a need more intense than I have ever experienced before in my life. She confides that she has few friends her age, and I observe—no, feel--her need to tell her stories, to connect openly. The air around me is thick with the awareness of what she fights daily just to get up in the morning. We are the same age and my intent listening sets something alight in her—perhaps my hungry ear offers hope, or simply the opportunity to have the momentary peace that comes from letting pain out of the body as words. I get lost in her story, in the juxtaposition of her sadness and vibrant passion, and wonder feverishly how our lives could be so different, and yet this connection so basic.

In the next moment I exhale Zanele and Kalkfontein and inhale directly to TWA’s final LEAP 2 community meeting where my students Philasande, Shelly, Sbahle, Thabiso, Zanele, and Asithandile present a short play, which they wrote, directed, and performed under my guidance. Smart and curious but extremely shy Thabiso speaks at full voice in front of 150 peers and teachers. Energetic, wildly smart and motivated Asithandile stands up after the play is over and says with unmasked pride, “What you just saw, I directed that.” Inspired Shelly runs to me with open arms to celebrate her performance and asks me not to leave, to do another play. I step back and observe the adrenaline in the group, and their special connectedness in those thrilling moments reminds me of the production of “Grease” I joined at camp when I was eleven because all my friends were doing it. It was the most fun I had ever had and after that little taste of what a theatrical community can accomplish, I knew I had found a home. Eleven years later, I see a mirror in six Xhosa-speaking South African 14-year-olds.

The Quantum revs its engine in the parking lot, beckoning me. But, without warning I hear, blaring, “AirTran flight 510 with nonstop service to Milwaukee will now begin boarding awl rows,” and the LEAP Van and all that it brought disappear in a puff of smoke. In a flash, I’m jetted back across the Atlantic, to this sticky plastic chair, this transitional moment. I hear the New York accents around me and I know I’m home. I grab my boarding pass and peel myself off the disagreeable seat. Moving towards gate B7, I reflect in a daze on the precious moments I visited.

All of us need to tell our stories. We need words, we need art, we need body language to put a frame and context around what we experience. The frame allows us to relate. And it is in that relating that individual suffering like Zanele’s becomes human connection. There, we can begin to imagine and dream, the first stepping stone towards a better future—in the collective voice they found as an ensemble, my group of six students rediscovered the tools for communication and change they were born with: voices, bodies, minds, and hearts. When the LEAPSAs sang for us that first, foggy day, it was an open invitation into a world, their home, that so highly values spoken word and direct communication. And to anyone who wonders what all that means in the day-to-day LEAP world, let me remind you to always: Be kind. Be honest. Be healthy. Be punctual. Look good. Work hard. Never give up. Admit mistakes. Confront issues. Be open to change. Work together. Share as much as possible.

Asserting it with words is the first step—those strings of letters may look like shallow representation, but with a little faith and passion, they become a vital vessel for connecting and motivating individuals into communities, no matter what—oceans, barbed wire, or a school desk—is between them. All it takes is that initial LEAP.

-Sara Lyons

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Homeless

I thought at first I was a king
But I wasn't - I was a member
It took a lot of time to remember
After I knew, I had a feeling of anger

Anger is evil
It took me from feeling to devil
of cruelty
and it decreased my dignity
After that, it dumped me to a place called "streets"

If you have sympathy
you must help strollers by donating money
so you can bring them to their families
I'm not saying it's your responsibility
but try something to build
their feeling to be steady

I think being homeless
isn't a good thing
because you'll feel careless
and that will be your weakness
I think the president must open more business
to decrease strollers' mess

-Lloyd Hanjana