Sunday, 15 May 2016
VINYL SUNDAYS
A-Track
We genuflect.
Men dressed by their wives in their Sunday best
kneel on planks of uncross.
Women pass over bread to their children
to deposit in pass-around plate
for confessional clean slate.
Samoan choir sing praises to Jewish mythology.
Tangaloa spits an eye for an eye at our irreverence
He laughs, foreseeing
my first taste of dipsomania lust
is sipping the blood of Keriso.
B-Side
After church
men smoke rollies in the carpark
their backs to the ‘No Smoking’ sign.
Women with backstabbing eyes
smile neon lipsticks
as if painted jujus can mask bullkaka.
I only sing at night because La envies me.
Once, it growled, Suga, stop stepping on my dick!
and tried to burn my voice.
My hymns now flicker
along Masina whispers.
Published in 'Ika 4' 2016
GRIPPING SAND
My feet sink into the sand
as I tramp across the tanned shores
of my grandmother’s village in Samoa.
Waves do not rush in to greet me
I have been away too long and
this slice of the Pacific Ocean
does not easily forget.
I stop and look out into the sea
pristine as the travel brochures portray
no need for Photoshop
no government development plans
no colonisation
I close my eyes and wait...
The messenger wind breezes
salty words into my ears -
You may have taken your first breath
on the fanua of my kin, Aotearoa
but you have neglected the umbilicus sands and waters
where the kenese of your
existence is rooted.
The cool breeze leaves me then
to be beaten by the sun’s rays.
I did not notice I was gripping the sand
until I felt silk granules spill from
the Va between my toes;
grains of late yearning
slipping into a lost past.
Published in 'Ika 4' in May 2016
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