By Faisal Abdi
January 23, 2008
While the rest of Somalia hopes for and sees glimpses of peace, Mogadishu remains a place where the dead come out at night. It has become a prey field for all citizens, no matter how young or old, or whether you are male/female. It has become a nightmare where shaitans (Satan) wrestled at night. The place where millions once called home is now a ghost city with wild dogs and remnants of human bones. It is a shelter for thugs who have gotten used the killing and sucking of the human blood for years. They see no hope nor do they even know the quality or potential of human life. Their main goal is to kidnap, kill, rob, and humiliate the society. Mogadishu deserve better?
Is the soil that made this seaport town the haunted place it has supposedly become? Are the people of Mogadishu the one's that should be blamed? The answer to both questions is No. because at one time there people who used to call it Hamar Addey. Mogadishu remains in every Somali nationalist heart as a symbol for all of us. The destructions it suffered touch every one of us, and we all wish it would become the peaceful Mogadishu that it was before.
I dedicated this Poem to Mogadishu
You were as bright as the sun is;
You were a symbol that secured the Somali name.
Your breeze was breathed by all.
You were a sign for peace and unity.
While sounds of conversation surround other capitals,
A siren of speed shells shakes you at night,
River of bloods and sounds of artillery becomes your signature.
Almighty Mogadishu you don't deserve this.
Beautiful towers are all that remains of deserted town;
Dust and the burn of gun powder have become your smell.
And the world is still watching you.
Almighty Mogadishu you don't deserve this
May Allah shine Nour on you again;
And give you a lasting break of peace;
May Allah give you your dignity back;
And forgive your soil with a new Hasanna'
And may Allah unify us again as a nation.
Faysal Abdi is junior at Marian College and independent Nasheed artist.....
I can be reached at following addresses.