ARRIVING AT THE NIGHT FIRE
(by Dorian Haarhoff)

in Motetema, Limpopo Province
I feed the teachers,
morning to late light,
a feast of stories.
as the sun sifts the room
one ladles a question
onto my plate.
it lies there like the pap
we ate at lunch.
Who did you inherit story-telling from?
a big meal question.
he watches me chew. first response,
inside, I say, No one. It started here.
but this Lazarus has raised a ghost.
I take his question down to my gut
to search for one who hands down gifts.
who multiplies fish and bread.
I answer his gaze. when I tell,
the story comes from somewhere else,
through me. You see this?
he slowly nods and smiles.
a match strikes a woodpile.
Europe and Africa
blood and belonging
reconcile in the telling.
it is the ancestors who story through me.
a night fire ignites my belly.
© Dorian Haarhoff





3 voices:
This is a poem with amazing guts. The rawness of truth rings clear.
I love the gruff voice of the narrator spelling out the only story that needs telling eternally.
Gemma
"as the sun sifts the room
one ladles a question
onto my lap"
"Europe and Africa
blood and belonging
reconcile in the telling.
it is the ancestors who story through me.
a night fire ignites my belly."
Stunning. Thank you for posting this, Rethabile.
I have a specific affinity toward this poem, and would give a lot to read or hear more of Dorian's work.
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