From the ashes and dust We rise again Bearing the scars of death As we count our lost From the bones and graves around Many have fallen And the sword is red
We march through the village square Bearing more corpses Looking for a place to rest From the raging sword of the invaders We seek the face of the gods
Why do we dance on their graves? Like masquerades in the village square The kings come from afar And we take them to the shrine The invaders helped us built And none shed a tear… None raised a wail… And none grieved Because it’s not their lost
They said we wail too much For the lost was small A tiny drop in the ocean of blood That has flooded the land
Our contribution was small…yes, small contribution Or how else could we justify this ceaseless carnage? So they took more More women…more children More boys…more girls Some pregnant…some suckling A sacrifice to make up for the rest
We thought our shrine was big enough To pacify the gods and save their wrath But we were wrong Their white regalia is not red enough The blood is not deep enough for a swim But why desire blood as one seeks for water in the desert Oh sword! When will you rest?
The king is coming Maybe he will see the mountains of graves And the waiting dead—candidates for mass burial Maybe he will say it is enough And the priest can take the blood And pour on the altar of the gods So the living can rest And the land will know peace And the sword be no more red May the gods be pacified This sacrifice is enough
A reaction to the many killings Fulani Herdsmen in Benue State and the nonchalant attitude of the Federal Government to the situation. And the political pilgrimage that followed afterwards to the site of the mass graves of the victims.