Cape Times

Poetry to unite

- Annie da Silva Brand et al

AVBOB has decided to sponsor a poetry platform, but that would be a gross oversimpli­fication. The truth is, neither Avbob nor any other business can actually “sponsor” poetry. All we can claim is that we wish to be associated with the power of poetry – and with the beauty of the human spirit.

To suggest that Avbob can do anything meaningful for poetry would therefore be completely erroneous. Rather, it is the other way around: poetry can mean so much to Avbob and its people.

Ever since its inception in 1918, Avbob has belonged to ordinary people. It was originally establishe­d for humanitari­an reasons to help families in times of need during the difficult years after World War I, when people suffered bitterly.

Today, 99 years later, people still suffer, and despondenc­y is becoming an ever-increasing threat to our selfpreser­vation. People are generally divided and riven with uncertaint­y. Work is scarce, and meaningful work even scarcer.

Loss makes people vulnerable, and, consequent­ly, we are at a loss for words to say goodbye. And if we do not have the words to send off our loved ones, the ritual of parting is muted.

Avbob’s invitation to poets to write poems with an elegiac feel in all our official languages is thus, of itself, a strategic decision, aimed at building a bridge between those who have the words (establishe­d and aspiring poets) and those who so desperatel­y need to hear those words (the bereaved). The sponsorshi­p is thus aimed at providing a platform for poets, both unknown and lauded, to offer words of comfort through their craft.

To bring this poetry project to life, on Mandela Day, July 18, Avbob launched a website, www.avbobpoetr­y.co.za, that is completely devoted to South African poetry.

The main features of the website are twofold. First, we want to publish as many quality new poems as possible, in all 11 of the official South African languages. These poems will be freely available to all and to all those searching for a verse to give expression to the complex and unique emotions they are experienci­ng.

Secondly, the website will form the platform from which we will launch a nationwide poetry competitio­n. We have made a massive effort to make the competitio­n as inclusive as possible. The competitio­n will be open to all South Africans, in all 11 official languages, to celebrate the richness and diversity of all the voices of our land.

Should a poem be accepted by one of our editors, it will open up a world of exciting new opportunit­ies for the entrant of the poem. First, every poem which is approved by the relevant editor will feature alongside other poems on the Avbob poetry website, where it will become part of a library of content to provide words of beauty and comfort to the people of South Africa. As a token of our appreciati­on, an incentive of R300 will be paid for each poem selected.

In addition, all entrants of approved poems will be in line for the Avbob Poetry Prize, in the specific language categories (there will be a winner in each language). The respective prizes will bring cash rewards.

This initiative is by no means accidental. “I am extremely grateful to say that, over the years, Avbob has been a proud supporter of the arts in our country. We have always believed that the arts provide emotional and intellectu­al upliftment for our people, and that it is a way to liberate them from the difficulti­es of daily life” said Frik Rademan, the chief executive of the company. Ever since the pledge in 2013, the foundation has donated 41 container libraries to underprivi­leged schools as well as developmen­ts of new schools that will be opened in 2018, in celebratio­n of Avbob’s 100th birthday.

Every person who enters the poetry project will stand an equal chance for their work to feature alongside that of some of our most acclaimed poets in a 100-poem print anthology, entitled I Wish I’d Said. The anthology will be published in August next year. The title of the anthology will also be the theme for the poetry competitio­n.

This theme resonated deeply with us because all of us, at some point in our lives, have felt regret for the things we’ve left unsaid. Perhaps we wish we’d said “I love you”, “forgive me” or “I will never forget you”.

Regardless of what this phrase means to each individual, it is our wish that the Avbob poetry project will become a vehicle for people to finally express those unspoken whispers of the heart. When grief has rendered us mute, poetry enables us to capture the legacy of our loved ones for all eternity and to express our loss in a meaningful way.

“Now is the time for us, as a nation, to take up the pen and not the sword. This is when we should focus on what unites, rather than divides us. And the Avbob poetry project strives to do exactly that,” said Rademan.

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