
I’d been late leaving school that afternoon. I’d stayed behind because nice Miss Leibrandt had been helping me with my poem.
On the way home I’d been kicking a can along the dirt pathway between the shacks when I heard shouting over on the main road. Then there was the explosion. Flames shot up into the air, all red and angry-looking. Black smoke billowed upwards.
My house was the other way, but I had to see. I peered out from the end of the lane. People were jumping up and down in the street, arms waving angrily. They were chanting.
Flames licked out of the little corner shop. My friend’s shop. Mr Kabongo whose skin was as black as night, who came from another country further up the map of Africa. Mr Kabongo who told me stories about the animals of the forest where he grew up and the people who lived there before the war in his country. Mr Kabongo who gave me sweets when I went to fetch a half-loaf for my mother.
And now his shop was destroyed. I wondered if he was safe. Had he run, as he’d run before?
Why can’t we all live together?
Why can’t we. All are humans, all have red blood in our veins and all have the same number of chromosomes
LikeLiked by 2 people
Traumatic events in this world we call home. You captured that beautifully here.
LikeLiked by 2 people
A timeless song that should resonate with the world all over.
LikeLiked by 1 person
If only, but we must choose to do so, religion, politics, philanthropy have all failed to induce or sustain it, we have to do it. Provocative piece.
LikeLiked by 2 people