SELF-PUBLISHED POET LAUNCHES NEW BOOK
By
Margaretta wa Gacheru
Ouma Don Collins
sounds like a modest man when he described himself, on the last page of his
book, ‘Morning Shall Come’, which was launched last weekend at Alliance
Francaise.
He simply
states,”Ouma Don Collins is an African Writer and Social Entrepreneur from
Kenya (Nairobi).”
Yet
throughout his new collection of 50 poems, Ouma reveals himself to be a deeply
thoughtful man who has much to say about many facets of life. He is also a poet
who studied bio-technology, not literature, at Kenyatta University.
“I have been
writing poetry for as long as I can remember,” he told Weekender on the
day of his launch. “But publishing a book of poetry isn’t easy to do in Kenya,
so I chose to self-publish my first book,” he adds.
He also took
charge of the book launch, which was well-attended, largely by fellow-writers
and spoken-word poets who waited patiently for the ‘show’ to begin.
Ouma was
there in time for the lengthy program to start on scheduled at 2pm. But as per
‘Nairobi time’, nothing got going until 3pm. After that, there was a stream of
spoken word poets, including three young girls (ages 8, 10, and 13) who stole
the show for me. All three were poised, their performances polished. But it was
the 10-year-old who tore it up by speaking from the perspective of a child
who’d been sexually abused and now endures the injustice of being a child
having a child. She complained of being robbed of her innocence and even blamed
her mother for not preparing or protecting her from such abuse.
The launch
became a platform for that stream of ‘curtain-raisers’ who were followed by a
panel. But apart from the moderator, UON lecturer Apido Sidang, the three
panelists mainly read several of Ouma’s poems.
All this is
to say the apparently modest poet who understated himself in his book was more modest
than necessary by allowing other poets to constitute the bulk of his launch. I
wanted to hear more about his motivations for not only ‘self-publishing but
also selecting the poems that he did
Nearly half
the poems in ‘Morning Shall Come’ were in praise of women, including one
dedicated to his mom. Whole poems were given over to the poet’s affection for
everyone from Nelima, Kossi and Doti to Chella, Mbuki, and his ‘Three Strong
Women’ who retained their anonymity. It is often their beauty that the poet admires,
but he also has specific reasons for his affections, making him as much a
storyteller as a poet.
Don’t get the
notion that ‘Morning must Come’ is essentially a collection of love poems,
which it is not. And while one of the panelists, the published poet, Munira
Hussein, suggested the overriding tone and theme of the book were positive and
hopeful, there are several of Ouma’s poems that have political as well as
spiritual undertones.
For
instance, in ‘Lamentation’, he cryptically alludes to those who have been ‘maimed
and preyed’ [upon]. He wrote: “My heart, my land, my soul, they took it all
away/with all my freedom and rights.” He doesn’t identify ‘who-done-it’. But he
notes he might be shot with impunity anytime. And in contrast to the upbeat
spirit that he expresses in many of his poems, including the collection’s
title, he actually laments in one poem that it looks like “morning will never come
again.”
The poet is
also concerned with the problem of power and how it can be misused. In “Power”,
he lists all the ways power can be abused when mixed with evil rather than
good.
But Ouma
tends not to let his poems end on a dark note. In ‘Power’, he ends in the hope
that his power will lead to his offspring’s happiness and “abundance for
everyone.”
There is
also an element of spirituality implied in many of Ouma’s poems. For instance,
in ‘Hush the Tussle’, the peacemaker in him counsels against revenge and for
peace. He even appeals to a Higher Power when he writes: ‘To the Almighty your
soul we pray/ And to us His blessings to reign/ in our hearts you shall forever
remain.’
Yet Ouma is
no priest. He admits in his Preface that he’s ambitious. He also advises his
readers not to downplay their own ambitions. Instead, he says, they should “dare
to dream, dare to win and dare to be great. When all is said and done, morning
shall come and the sun will shine.”
No comments:
Post a Comment