By Emmanuel Raju, Director, Copenhagen Centre for Disaster Research, University of Copenhagen, Denmark; Extraordinary Associate Professor, African Centre for Disaster Studies, North-West University, South Africa
The monsoons and the trees
the colorful umbrellas come out
for some a pleasant time
on the balconies with chai and pakoras.
The rains get intense
the roofs for fly away for some
saving the rice bags, saving the little pieces of paper and identities.
Ah!! Did someone think it’s a flood?
Did they call it a flood?
Oh wait, flood for some and not for some.
And when they call it a flood
came the global banks
came the saviours of the world
with bread and water
with cash for the week
with tin for the roofs and an air of hope.
She wanted to move on
hoping the next monsoon arrives
but one that doesn’t take her roof.
The promises of a new home, in an old city
for the compromise of her land, her identities and her memories.
She moved…
‘you are safe here’, they said
‘you can build a new home’, they said.
Looking for a new livelihood
hoping for a new air of hope
moving on became a myth
stuck in the waves of the past
hoping for a new air of hope.
Until the next monsoon.
oh wait, in anticipation of hope
only until the next flood comes.