Cape Town 1990 Poem by Adiela Akoo

Cape Town 1990

Rating: 5.0


I rode the train to work today,

my first day on the job.

Friends offered to kindly show me,

a quick way to get to town.



"Nie man! Kom hier! "

they said, grabbing me by the wrist.

"You can't go there! "

they said, pointing to a sign that read:

"Whites Only / Slegs Blankes"!



So they pulled me away, from the pristine

first compartment,

to the broken down

"Third Class"!



I rode the church to work today,

the Pastor dancing up and down the isle.

The congregation packed liked sardines,

on torn seats, others holding fast

from falling out open doors,

while we clickety clacked along...



The people smiled and applauded,

as his words whistled through missing teeth.

But more than that, he made us forget,

the degradation of our skin!

Tuesday, November 20, 2018
Topic(s) of this poem: discrimination
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
Life in apartheid South Africa, just before Mandela became president.
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Edward Kofi Louis 28 November 2018

No one comes here! ! Reading the sign; Discrimination! Thanks for sharing this poem with us.

2 0 Reply
Adiela Akoo 29 November 2018

Thank you for taking the time to read it and comment, Edward

0 0
Chinedu Dike 20 November 2018

A well texted, well thought-out poem. An evil system that is Apartheid is aptly captured in the piece. Focused and factual. Thanks for sharing Adiela.

2 0 Reply
Adiela Akoo 25 November 2018

Thank you, Chinedu

0 0
READ THIS POEM IN OTHER LANGUAGES
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Adiela Akoo

Adiela Akoo

Pietermaritzburg
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