Saturday, October 22, 2005

The Calabash

Last night when you cried
It was because you were thirsty
Neither for water nor for wine
For the caress on your tiny neck.

Why do you lament
The torment of the whiteman's bottle?
They say you are the black man's symbol
Yet your word exist in several languages.

Now you have fallen on the lost rock
Your parts scattered around the clock
Those who have accomplished this feat
Celeberate their endless defeat.

Abuja stoops to conquer you
To take the breath from your nostrils
And your heart covered with morning dew
Smiles at the wounds of their entrails.

Do not smile, Do not smile
It is not a mark of greatness
To watch your people die or starve
It's not a thing of pride to be a slave.

The bangles of freedom
Sounds from the warm and eager hand
But the children of Sodom
Have taken over rule in our land.

The calabash is broken, is broken
And the token of the future lies
Abandoned, like J.P. Clark's casualties
The calabash is broken, is broken

Tell it to the palm tree, so let it mourn
Let it cry tears for Chima and for you
Who do not realise that the corn
Planted in the farm will soon be few.

Dele-Israel Ikeorha
Kaduna, Nigeria

Wednesday, October 19, 2005

Tribute to Chima Ubani - By Dele-Israel

Sonnet of the Morning Light

Every glorious turn of history is made
By wheels of sacrifice,hearts of greatness
The tears we shed, the joys we share express
Our being shining before the morning light.

The marks we make on sands of time resound
Our names as fragrance rise above the stress
And what deeds are remembered are no less
Virtues on which nations entrust thier sight.

The flowers fly amidst the sunny sky
And sway above the mortal winds display
The answer to hope is just another why
The world's new light enfolds with love today.

Peoples advance on a culture of change
Men, by living beyond the common range.

Dele-Israel Ikeorha
Kaduna October 19, 2005

Link

Sonnet of the Surreal Shadows: My Niger Delta

Lost in the woods somewhere poor Niger Delta
Men and women in red and black chanting
Their dreams consumed, fortune lost in ranting
The youths inflamed, runing helter skelter

When I schooled in you many years ago
We saw the world with eyes of paradise
We saw Nigeria's painted canvas
A wortheir work than Michealangelo

The shadows I see today saddens me
The wasted generation celebrates
Mediocrity shines, the crooked crown
They will not hear thy plea or cries of thee
O Mother Africa! By thy gates
Your children cry, thier leaders dance to town.

Dele-Israel Ikeorha
Kaduna, 19 October, 2005

Monday, October 17, 2005


Offiaji Dele-Israel Ikeorha, Ambassador for Peace Posted by Picasa

We played in the waters, and danced in the nude

I

We swam your rivers and drank your waters
We slept on your bossom and sucked thy breasts
We dreamt of tomorrow and hoped for the best
We played in the waters, and danced in the nude.
We were young, and we were innocent.

There was no fear even in the thick of midnight
There was no shame, boys and girls we bathe together
There was no lust, and we were not lost
There was hope and it looked forever.
But there was 'them' the evil class.

The leeches they suck us dry
And dare us to ask them why
When we do they laugh at us
But their children will be slaves
And they know not.

II

They fill thier barns with plenty
Stolen waters from our nation's cistern
They defile our virgins with money
And not one pang of conscience or pain
The nation groan, they grow
Yet they believe they are great.

Many die in the clinics that are graves
Hunger plague another million
Disease writes epitaph on the tomb of many
They barter in mockery and trade in treachery
Yet the price of 'fuel' sways the waves.

III

We swam your rivers and drank your waters
We slept on your bossom and sucked thy breasts
We dreamt of tomorrow and hoped for the best
We played in the waters, and danced in the nude.
We were young, and we were innocent.

Now there is fear even in the heart of morning
There is shame, boys and girls no more bathe in innocence
The altars of lust have many disciples
And the shrine of despair many worshippers
But they will not hear the people's cry.

They trade in hunger and prosper in cruelty
They scatter hatred and triumph
When thier people beg
The mark of their greatness
Is that the poor never find soccour
But they are not God.

Dele-Israel Ikeorha
Kaduna, Nigeria October 19, 2005

Friday, October 14, 2005

Making Comments to this Blog

Many have called to ask about how to make comments on this blog and pay deserving tribute to Chima. It is simple and easy.
Once you open the blog page www.tributetochimaubani.blogspot.com locate and click on COMMENT at the bottom of the blog page/post. In the comment page enter your comment then select 'other' if you wish to enter your name and maybe a website or select anonymous. You can also include your contact info in the comment if you so wish. You can also forward the page by email to your friends by clicking on the icon beside COMMENT.

SPREAD THE TRIBUTE

Wednesday, October 12, 2005


Even in deep deep darkness
In the very heart of the black hole
Those who share the sweet stories
Mingle with others with lesser role
And others, the pure purple pain
Are sometimes oblivious of the gain

Chima Ubani, like all greats
You trode the path conscious of the thorns
Focused on the flower and the bloom
Found in every rose.
The tenacity, commitment and courage
Marks the northern star, the cause
Martin Luther King Jr spoke of you
Of men and women like you for whom
The world lies less sublime to tyrants

Something to live for is something to die for
You have done your bit well
Whether the nation glues together, or
breaks apart, or embrace social hell
You have done your bit well
The rest is upto us now.

How we die is just a punctuation
In a very long novel story called Life
What we live and die for, is not just diction
It's what counts, when glory is rife.
The many greats standing on the mountains of history
Very few had the fortune of dying in their beds
From Socrates to Jesus Christ to Ceaser and Alexander

Our legacies what will they be?
Yours is now curved in ivory, diamond and
In every precious stone and history worth reading.
When our deeds are sieved like wheat
What would be left behind?
When our deeds endure the refining fire
Will they shine as gold or burn untold?

Your story now is known, rest my friend
When we saw last at Kaduna during the retreat
When Aso Rock met the people's rock
To fashion a platform for Government-civil society partnership
You spoke with the tongue of Mark Anthony and
The heart of Ghandi
That was September 15.
Who could have known but God alone
That in ten days, your earthly sourjourn would be complete.

You have paid the ultimate price
in your struggle against tyranny
You lived and died well
And still tolls the bell
In our hearts and in our nation's history
You Live Still, Unforgotten.

The tyrants are silent
that is their epitaph
And You
Your sunshine still shines.

Add to, Fill these pages
O Ye who read these lines
With tributes, stories, memories
Pictures, poems, articles, lines
That would remain posted
In the heart of the net and of all
Who value the struggle of freedom.

Dele-Israel Ikeorha
Executive Director, Development International
http://developmentclinic.tripod.com
Mobile: +234 (0)8035999921
Tel: +234 (62) 246201-4, 246253-6 Ext 2303
deleisraeli@yahoo.ca