MAIDUGURI NIGERIA
                                               (tanka sequence)
 

                             by Richard Stevenson
 
 
 

"Don't spit," the signs say – 
not that I'd considered it
in the airport hall.
Then the fast of Ramadan . . .
my students will not swallow
 

On their prayer mats
chanting Koranic verses
under tall green neems,
novices at their devotions . . .
wasp bottoms pulse on fruit rinds
 

petrol shortage . . .
pump jockey sucks a litre
from a wreck out back.
"Don't want you to think bad things
about my country," he says
 

Go slow! the man cries,
his broken leg bouncing
inside the hijacked van.
I no go walk again – oh!
Cop's rifle points at the stars
 

The Hausa woman
is startled when I spot her
stealing my water.
I offer her an ice cube;
her eyes grow big as the fridge
 

Pepe or pankay – 
savoury or sweet dough balls
deep-fried while you wait.
How could Tim Horton's staff find
the love in this woman's hands?
 

African potlatch?
As King Sunny Ade plays
and women shimmy,
men slide bills down their foreheads;
women tuck them in brassieres
 

Same sentence for rape
as for smoking gange at school,
the principal says.
The victims are only girls;
their place is working at home

Re verse 3:
Neem: a tall evergreen East Indian tree, transplanted and growing
successfully in northern Nigeria
 

 BACK TO CONTENTS PAGE