Liberian poet, Abunic, writes against racial discrimination in very sharp lines. His solidarity with those who were murdered on the scaffold of racism is so glaring. We hope that you enjoy the read as much as we did here.
“What is dead may never die.”
-Game Of Thrones
To the ferryman, you don’t pay the iron price.
You surrender, wholly.
Death is a mute/ at your many funerals
he speaks in flimsy voices.
You’re absent when your eulogy is read
Someone tapped their screen, &
you was alive again.
i can’t breathe, hashtag.
No! you was alive again. in their screams,
burning in the flames.
We buried you once. you was cold & black like the night.
black lives matter, hashtag.
When you’re breathing again
in the skin of another black man.
Remember, on Pyke/
your crime is not being black, it’s bleeding red.
How dare you!
Abunic Sherif II is a young Liberian writer, environmentalist, and poet. He writes from personal experiences and deep imaginations. His writing cuts across various themes such as depression, loneliness, tears, life, and death.
As a budding poet, his works have been featured on Spillwords, Poetry Soup, Praxis Magazine, The Ducor Review and other literary platforms.
Eboquills
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we’re iron born. Excellent work brother
Iron born. This is excellently written
Racism is a deep rooted plant that spreads and sucks mostly on the black skin. George Floyd was not the first, but it’s our hope he’ll be the last. This poem is not only in memory of all the souls stolen from us through racism and police brutality, it’s for every black person breathing. Our color will never be a crime, & always remember;
“What is dead may never die”
This is awesome, bro.
Keep writing ?