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Writer's pictureZanele Chisholm

epigenetics

Tell me of our mother


Epigenetics: The inheritance of generational trauma


Tell me of our mother

And of how we had once been her sisters

Lay distilled and suspended

In our grandmother’s womb,

Tell me of her screams


Do you find God to be bizarre?

In the way his breath creaks like

A forest in comatose

Like a hustler’s bleeding belly,

Gunshot charcoal hailing the almighty

Through the psalm of burning wind


Do you dream of our father?

Of his lips, barb wired

Do you grapple with the stench

Of his dissent uprising

And the lack of our mother's consent

From which we bloom


If you were a flower, would you bee ilanga

Your face pickled with brown stumps slathered

into the circular motion

of cyclical rage, subdued,

The river leaking from stoned eyes

Cautious, they are, of a fury eclipsed in your poetry


The trembling of our dialect

quaking in patois

Through dreams not your own,

Slumbered in a decimated tongue,

That of our mother’s mother’s mother


Can you not hear the sea?

with pulp from the Atlantic,

thick and battered with the flesh of our ancestors


Were you born enraged?

Black Woman

Were you born dying?

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