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Joined: Jul 2008 Gender: Female  Posts: 104 Karma: 0 |  | Cynthia Buiza « Thread Started on Oct 10, 2008, 3:56pm » | |
Formerly with JRS, an international refugee agency assisting refugees in different parts of the Asia Pacific region, Cynthia Buiza has experienced "living the ultimate irony of an exile helping exiles." Before that, she worked with refugees and the internally displaced in the Philippines at the tail-end of the Aquino Government's total war policy against the insurgents and the gradual departure of Indochinese refugees from Palawan and Bataan. Her work has appeared in ANI, the Literary Journal of the Cultural Center of the Philippines, The Sunday Inquirer Magazine; and in 2 anthologies from the Bikol Region. She is a regular contributor to Our Own Voice.
"Traffic"
Lately, I find myself easily tearful.
It all began when the peso nose-dived again and finally broke its nose.
At dusk, the acacia tree in my front yard shivered, like a portent and a tear in my left eye fell too fast like something running for its life.
I find myself too, sighing too much. as though my lungs are all that is left tangible.
it is worse when I see the moon over Mandaluyong at nine o'clock like a jack-o'-lantern, sinister yet real or when I read the graffiti at the tragic LRT bound for its mission to end all traffic if only we'd stop moving.
yesterday, I spoke with two Batanguenos who came to Bangkok to pick apples in Sydney they never made it past the detention center and they are homeward bound chewing on grass.
I don't know. my sighs are growing longer than my patience, I am shivering like a tree inhabited by carrion crows, while my countrymen hang their pockets on the clothesline waiting for monsoon to end.
*
"Sad Cornelia's Afternoon" The bodies of dead people keep turning up in my backyard. This morning, one corpse bore the marks of a tortured childhood turning purple in its severed hands another, still pink, is still dreaming.
Their arrivals mark the passing of the seasons. Last summer, they came in yellow and green sadness and the smell of the sun on their hair the way their mouths gaped showed signs of interrupted laughter one girl who still hugged her teddy bear was saying goodbye when she was taken.
It is a sorry affair, this attendance.
When the rains came their black raincoats had white holes in their pockets their hands clasped each other with mortal strength making me wonder if they prayed before they died.
*
"Crossing the Road" (for my sisters back home)
If three of us cannot cross this road and one will fail what will prevail?
your hand rocks four cradles while he bays by fortune's rocks!
you spin cobwebs on your hair and wait for tarantulas to breed! 'fuck this town,' you said but you can't seem to leave wedded to bad nostalgia captive to toxic metaphors.
your beloved city is the ghost of a bastard called Legaspi the skull of a dead oppressor still calls you Indio in his grave.
so let us then forgive each other for standing on the street for missing the signs, for shuffling our feet. you might go East, I might head West. I love you, we are all in this together but a speeding truck might put asunder.
Web source: Our Own Voice, October 2004 http://www.ourownvoice.com/poems/poems2004c-buiza1.shtml
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