Afro Poetry Times

Editors Note

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THE EDITOR WRITES

The problem is that when I read the news, I take everything to heart — the sob stories, the tragedies, the snide debates. And because most people want a fixed world, it happens that occasional­ly, one becomes as negative as the doomsday stories one ingests.

As i was writing this note, I felt so pessimisti­c, so overwhelme­d by my moroseness, that I trawled my own writing for clues to a pattern. Found it quickly. “I’m fed up with being fed up” ,I wrote in 2016. Nothing much has changed. Being fed up is always a good place to begin: having had enough of yourself, you become better.

The online Buzzfeed community was once asked to share favourite lines from literature, whether famous or obscure. The results were astounding; what we most like to read is that which uplifts us, buoys our spirits, triggers our innate appreciati­on of nature, beauty and love.

It’s as Cassandra Clare says in The Infernal Devices: “One must always be careful of books, and what is inside them, for words have the power to change us.” That holds for thoughts and words, too — and not only if you’re a put-out, pouty politician with axes to grind and ballots to grab.

Words, which are simply thoughts taken out of mouths and either spoken or placed on a page, have the absolute power to not only lift us out of a personal mood, but to stop wars.

Reading through the Buzzfeed list of most beautiful quotes, I found not one that described aggression, rivalry, jealousy, murder, robbery, suspicion or skuldugger­y. Obviously — since that is not really, truly who any of us is. Instead, we want to gape at the mysteries and pleasures of love, the universe and a life lived wildly, colourfull­y.

We love things such as this: “Beauty is an enormous, unmerited gift given randomly, stupidly.” (Khaled Hosseini, And the Mountains Echoed) and “She wasn’t doing a thing that I could see, except standing there leaning on the balcony railing, holding the universe together.” (J.D. Salinger, A Girl I Knew).

Side by side with food, shelter and arms to love us, we all need words to shape the infinite potential of who we are and may become. An impoverish­ed child, living hand-to-mouth, is as emotionall­y available to the mysterious chemistry of words as anyone else; a story of courage and strength in adversity could be the very difference between life and death for that child.

We should, I wrote, revisit the necessity of books — and the people who turn their thoughts into words to place in them — and how we really do have the power to change our worlds by speaking wisely and about stuff that actually counts.

Farai Diza, EDITOR

Email: faraidiza@gmail.com, Twitter: @faraiblogg­er

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