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#ihaveadream
I have a dream Where your dream Is mine My dream your dream The dream of never -giving up I shall never give up You too never should And together we live up Be lit-up Stand up For this dream To stand and stay real                 ©LovelynEyo
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Jul 11, 2019
Jul 11, 2019 at 12:16 PM UTC
Your Dream
I am never not surprised, when someone else has the courage to look me in my eyes, to tell me bald-faced lies, that say I am too dramatized as a white girl trying to equalize and see the world before me rise to say we're not satisfied to say with honesty we despise a government who seems to tyrannize its citizens into fearing they be deprived of food, water, and electricity. So they have to believe in the guise. That we are a nation paralyzed. By lies. I am just a twenty two year old, Caucasian female addicted to the idea I can help you see we will prevail. Our nation teeters on the brink. Help me save our souls, Before they take us out like MLK, Lennon, JFK All with a blink.
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Sep 16, 2014
Sep 16, 2014 at 1:47 PM UTC
I Have A Future Reality,
Sweating on my mat, I curse! As the light dimly flickers Off and on it wavers Like a torch amidst a storm. For the ten thousandth time I wonder What is wrong with mother? My aggrieved home and country Her pain is mine to bear. She has many a tale to tell Troubled much from deep her belly Wonder how much she can endure Till body and soul give in. She was blessed by the heavens Much to the envy of all Yet! Alas, she mourns And weeps in pain untold. Time and again she follows Sheepishly trusting her shepherds She has had a quite a number With tongues unknown and known Her plight is not their vision As she inevitably learns Her wool and meat and milk Are all they dare to care. She breeds enough to share And feed her dying lambs But much is lost to thieves Who lurk in shadows of shepherds. Destined for royalty she was But penury has robbed her glory Awake! Oh mother Nigeria! And reclaim your lost birthright. © Raphael Uzor
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Feb 26, 2014
Feb 26, 2014 at 5:05 AM UTC
My Country, My Pain
*The intermittent, distant rumbling in the skies was suggestive of chronic flatulence. The sun struggled in futility to shine – like a crying child who had been forced to smile. Lightning flashed in quick successions, momentarily throwing brilliant streaks of white light across the room. The angry growl of thunder that followed was enough to send a troop of Howler monkeys scampering for safety. The lights flickered as though unable to make up their minds to stay or not to. But apparently, the wind had zero tolerance for such petty indecisiveness. And like an enraged, stimulated, demented animal, it gusted through the windows and doors, hauling loose papers, light bulbs in every direction, shattering the bulbs to smithereens, as if to punish them for being so fickle. The lights died. Thick black blankets eerily stretched across the skies with gusto, menacingly extinguishing whatever was left of the sun’s brilliance. More rumbles and flashes followed in royal herald of the impending storm. And in no time, slick sheets of rain torrentially came pouring down, cascading the roofs to form puddles almost as soon as they hit the ground. ​I looked in horror, fervently praying that whoever God had appointed to build the ark in our time had not diverted the funds. I was trapped in the office, and I knew exactly what this meant…flood, scarcity of buses, hiked transport fares, heavy taffic and very likely, at least one month of blackout. It would be another three hours of steady downpour before the rain eventually stopped, as gracefully as it had been ushered in. I picked up my bag, rolled up my trousers in earnest anticipation of the inevitable flood, and made my way home.* ​To my utter bewilderment, there were no floods! The lights from the street lamps cast a soft golden glow on the slick roads, seemingly creating mirages of pools of water from afar off. But they were mere illusions. The gurgling sound coming from the underground drainage was proof of where all the water had gone. It was a strange sight. Like some alien cyborg from space had been fiddling with a time machine that had accidentally propelled us twenty years into the future. My new world was a three-fold utopian dream. So surreal! I could see beautiful, high-rise, state of the art edifices with mind-blowing architectural designs that blatantly seemed to defy the laws of gravity. I could see world-class hospitals that admitted ailing dignitaries from around the world and top-notch schools that offered scholarships to deserving indigenous and international students. Sure enough, this was Nigeria! The Nigeria we all dreamed of. And there was light…electricity! - In myriad of colours that seemed to have been dispersed from several colossal disco ***** via “wireless fidelity” technology. I strained to hear the noise from generators, but I was disappointed. I couldn’t even hear the all too familiar cacophony of horns blaring, conductors shouting, loud discordant music, rattling vehicle engines etc. It was like everyone and everything had taken a crash course on orderliness. I saw a vibrant transportation system that included high speed railway lines, paved road networks that looked like a child’s doodles, first-class air strips and efficient sea transportation. I saw a working government - one that had provided the critical infrastructure for her people. I saw a nation with a large industrialized economy, where the dividends of democracy had been delivered to the people by their government. One consciously founded on equity and honesty of purpose, and courageously sustained by unfaltering faithfulness and unwavering patriotism.       A nation whose economic boost did not come solely from crude oil exploration and production, but also from crude oil refining, agriculture, manufacturing, infrastructure, food, services, tourism, automobiles, transportation, education etc. A nation that thronged with international investors from all walks of life, who were not in the least afraid to invest in her. And then, I saw her people. A people proud of their citizenship. A people proud to be called NIGERIANS. A people who were not given to religious, political, or tribal bigotry. A people who individually and collectively, gallantly bore the torch of the vision of their heroes past. A people who earnestly and persistently worked to see only goods “Made in Nigeria” sold in their markets. Where there was once despair, I saw hope. Where there was once fear, i saw security. Where there was once disgruntlement, I saw satisfaction. Where there was once poverty, I saw wealth opportunities and where there was unemployment, I saw jobs. Death had given way to life and life to hope. *I started, as I felt something cold and wet trickle down my forehead. It was droplets of rain from a leak in the roof just above my head. I was still in my office, I never left. The rain had lulled me to sleep. Even more sadly, I realized it had all been a dream. Slowly and regretfully, I packed my things and left for home. It was pitch black outside as I carefully waded through the polluted waters, jauntily holding my bag, more because I was afraid to lose it in the flood than in a hopeless bid to dignify the situation. Two hours later, I crawled into bed. I did not have to turn the lights off…the electric poles had gone for a swim. A very long one.* © ONUGHA EBELE VICTORIA
0
May 1, 2014
May 1, 2014 at 8:19 PM UTC
MY VISION FOR NIGERIA
*The intermittent, distant rumbling in the skies was suggestive of chronic flatulence. The sun struggled in futility to shine – like a crying child who had been forced to smile. Lightning flashed in quick successions, momentarily throwing brilliant streaks of white light across the room. The angry growl of thunder that followed was enough to send a troop of Howler monkeys scampering for safety. The lights flickered as though unable to make up their minds to stay or not to. But apparently, the wind had zero tolerance for such petty indecisiveness. And like an enraged, stimulated, demented animal, it gusted through the windows and doors, hauling loose papers, light bulbs in every direction, shattering the bulbs to smithereens, as if to punish them for being so fickle. The lights died. Thick black blankets eerily stretched across the skies with gusto, menacingly extinguishing whatever was left of the sun’s brilliance. More rumbles and flashes followed in royal herald of the impending storm. And in no time, slick sheets of rain torrentially came pouring down, cascading the roofs to form puddles almost as soon as they hit the ground. ​I looked in horror, fervently praying that whoever God had appointed to build the ark in our time had not diverted the funds. I was trapped in the office, and I knew exactly what this meant…flood, scarcity of buses, hiked transport fares, heavy taffic and very likely, at least one month of blackout. It would be another three hours of steady downpour before the rain eventually stopped, as gracefully as it had been ushered in. I picked up my bag, rolled up my trousers in earnest anticipation of the inevitable flood, and made my way home.* ​To my utter bewilderment, there were no floods! The lights from the street lamps cast a soft golden glow on the slick roads, seemingly creating mirages of pools of water from afar off. But they were mere illusions. The gurgling sound coming from the underground drainage was proof of where all the water had gone. It was a strange sight. Like some alien cyborg from space had been fiddling with a time machine that had accidentally propelled us twenty years into the future. My new world was a three-fold utopian dream. So surreal! I could see beautiful, high-rise, state of the art edifices with mind-blowing architectural designs that blatantly seemed to defy the laws of gravity. I could see world-class hospitals that admitted ailing dignitaries from around the world and top-notch schools that offered scholarships to deserving indigenous and international students. Sure enough, this was Nigeria! The Nigeria we all dreamed of. And there was light…electricity! - In myriad of colours that seemed to have been dispersed from several colossal disco ***** via “wireless fidelity” technology. I strained to hear the noise from generators, but I was disappointed. I couldn’t even hear the all too familiar cacophony of horns blaring, conductors shouting, loud discordant music, rattling vehicle engines etc. It was like everyone and everything had taken a crash course on orderliness. I saw a vibrant transportation system that included high speed railway lines, paved road networks that looked like a child’s doodles, first-class air strips and efficient sea transportation. I saw a working government - one that had provided the critical infrastructure for her people. I saw a nation with a large industrialized economy, where the dividends of democracy had been delivered to the people by their government. One consciously founded on equity and honesty of purpose, and courageously sustained by unfaltering faithfulness and unwavering patriotism.       A nation whose economic boost did not come solely from crude oil exploration and production, but also from crude oil refining, agriculture, manufacturing, infrastructure, food, services, tourism, automobiles, transportation, education etc. A nation that thronged with international investors from all walks of life, who were not in the least afraid to invest in her. And then, I saw her people. A people proud of their citizenship. A people proud to be called NIGERIANS. A people who were not given to religious, political, or tribal bigotry. A people who individually and collectively, gallantly bore the torch of the vision of their heroes past. A people who earnestly and persistently worked to see only goods “Made in Nigeria” sold in their markets. Where there was once despair, I saw hope. Where there was once fear, i saw security. Where there was once disgruntlement, I saw satisfaction. Where there was once poverty, I saw wealth opportunities and where there was unemployment, I saw jobs. Death had given way to life and life to hope. *I started, as I felt something cold and wet trickle down my forehead. It was droplets of rain from a leak in the roof just above my head. I was still in my office, I never left. The rain had lulled me to sleep. Even more sadly, I realized it had all been a dream. Slowly and regretfully, I packed my things and left for home. It was pitch black outside as I carefully waded through the polluted waters, jauntily holding my bag, more because I was afraid to lose it in the flood than in a hopeless bid to dignify the situation. Two hours later, I crawled into bed. I did not have to turn the lights off…the electric poles had gone for a swim. A very long one.* © ONUGHA EBELE VICTORIA
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