|
![]() |
|||||
Today our view of the country is perhaps even darker. Somalia is again host to a foreign army, this time in the form of troops from Ethiopia, who are now beating a retreat in the face of a tenacious Islamist resistance movement - one all too easily compared to the Taliban. Likewise, with U.S. air strikes launched at will against "al-Qaeda-linked" targets in the country, and with the world's press sent into a frenzy of boyish fascination by tales of brigands hijacking supertankers, Somalia seems doomed to appear to us as little more than a land of militias, terrorists, and pirates. Yet there's another side to Somalia. After visiting the country in 1854 disguised as an Arab, British explorer and orientalist Richard Francis Burton wrote in First Footsteps in East Africa that Somalis were "a fierce and turbulent race" - Burton had been badly wounded in an attack by Somali tribesmen - yet also a race of poets. "It is strange that a dialect with no written character should so abound in poetry and eloquence," he observed. "The country teems with 'poets, poetasters, poetitos, and poetaccios:' every man has his recognized position in literature as accurately defined as though he had been reviewed in a century of magazines". Poetry plays a central role in Somali life to this day. Living from ancient times in an almost entirely oral culture - having developed only in 1972 a written form of the Somali language - Somalis acquired (in common with other pre-literate societies) a powerful facility for memory and recitation, and, curiously, married this to a highly competitive attitude toward poetry itself. Indeed, to be hailed as a great poet in Somalia is to be granted a prestige and influence as sizeable as any national politician's, while second only to this in status is to be a skilled reciter of such poetry. Traditionally, a reciter would listen to and commit to memory the works of a poet, and would then travel the country to perform the poems at the campfires of other tribes. In such a way were poems transmitted throughout the land - along with the fame of the poet himself, whose name is permanently connected to his poetry. It is only in recent years that this essential and highly respected role has been partly (but not wholly) supplanted by the tape cassette and broadcast radio. The themes of Somali poetry are as diverse as any nation's. Perhaps the majority of poems speak of daily life: of pastures and camels, of love and sex and marriage. Such poetry has evolved new forms in the twentieth century, including the heello, which added music to the spoken word in the 1940s and a decade later changed the topic from sex to national freedom, and which has since (unsurprisingly) become the favored verbal art form of the country's urban and government elites. The poets speak of war, too. At the top of the hierarchy of Somalia's poetic genres is the gabay, a traditional kind of verse that is reserved for matters of great public importance. As Burton vividly described, such poetry could often be red in tooth and claw: "Sometimes a black Tyrtæus breaks into a wild lament for the loss of warriors or territory; he taunts the clan with cowardice, reminds them of their slain kindred, better men than themselves, whose spirits cannot rest unavenged in their gory graves, and urges a furious onslaught against the exulting victor." One of the greatest of Somalia's poets of war was a man of the nineteenth century, born only two years after Burton first visited his country. Sayyid Muhammad Abdille Hassan, a tribesman and Islamic religious scholar in northern Somalia, was insulted by the vice consul of British Somaliland (who wrongly accused him of stealing a gun from British soldiers) and went on to lead a fierce, twenty-year war of national resistance against the British, Italian, and Ethiopian occupiers of his country. The British, typically, referred to him with a simplistic and demeaning nickname: "the Mad Mullah". Abdille Hassan was a good recruiter, and much of his influence with other Somali tribesmen came from his verbal eloquence and his poetry, which was memorized by reciters and spread from tribe to tribe. One of the most famous of Abdille Hassan’s poems was his Gaala Leged ("Defeat of the Infidels"); his words clearly convey the hatred he felt for his enemies, and also hint at the origins of his anger: To begin with, I had neglected poetry and had let it dry up I had sent it west in the beginning of the spring rains. But let me set forth what prevented me from sleeping last night God's Blessing are more numerous than those growing trees. I will remind you of the victory he gave us Listen to me my council, for you are most dear to me If the unwashed left handed one had died yesterday, if I had cut his throat - may he taste hell in the grave itself And the wild animals had eaten him, he and his ilk would deserve this I would salute the hyena that would gorge itself on his flesh, as it's doing me a favor, it is dearer to me than any other animal of the wild. If could I would reward it every day That deformed one wasted a lot of my wealth since he kept committing wrongs again and again I knew all along that the hyena would devour him It was their insincere refusal to acknowledge the truth that put them down and destroyed them And made me attack their best man with a Dagger If they had not become ungrateful, I would have not become enraged with them I would have not lost my generosity and respect for them I would have not have withheld anything from them, if they desired peace But when they acted disdainfully, death marched straight at them. Abdille Hassan’s resistance movement ended only after a 1920 bombing campaign by the Royal Air Force (RAF), which had honed its skills in World War I and applied them to the Somali Dervishes with decisive results. By then, however, the war had killed nearly a third of northern Somalia's population. Having lived for a couple of years in Somalia, and in Ghana for at least five more, Canadian author Margaret Laurence was deeply struck by the story of Abdille Hassan. In "The Poem and the Spear", a fascinating essay she wrote in 1964 (but which wasn't published until 2003 as part of a collection) Laurence pondered the similarities between the poetry of the Somali resistance leader and that of the greatest of the ancient poets. "The sheer force and sweep of it is sometimes reminiscent of Homer," she wrote, "whose subject was also tribal war and who described it in similar terms of drama, grandeur, and gore." Her observation makes one wonder for a moment whether, when seen through the eyes of more powerful and more unified Mediterranean states, the feuding cities of pre-classical Greece might have looked something like Somalia does to us today, as a land of raiders, petty vendettas, and (as an aside) skillful oral poetry. Today, the gabay has lost none of its influence. The genre is played on the radio and distributed around the country on tape cassette, as well as spoken out loud by a dwindling band of reciters. "It is a common, if amusing, thing," wrote Somali scholar Said Sheikh Samatar in 1986, "to come upon a group of nomads huddled excitedly over a short-wave transistor, engaged in a heated discussion of the literary merits of poems that have just been broadcast while they keep watch over their camel herds grazing nearby." A modern gabay can be as political as anything written by Abdille Hassan in the early twentieth century, and in a poetry-centric society such poems carry a lot of bite. Soon after he became dictator in 1969, Siad Barre tried to ban anti-government poetry, and had two of Somalia's most influential poets arrested; he also threatened to execute Mohamed Hashi Dhama’ "Gaariye" for writing poems critical of the tribal divisions that Barre had encouraged as a way of supporting his rule. Interestingly, Barre was also the leader who caused the Somali language to be written down for the first time, and decreed that it become the official language of education in the country. A ruthless but apparently not unintelligent man, who knew full well that language and poetry were weapons - and who wanted to ensure they weren't pointing at him. The post-Barre period of civil war provided a great deal of material for gabay composers to work with. A member of the newest generation of Somali poets, Abdulqadir Haji Ali Zaji Ahmed wrote one such in 1995; in his references to "Koofil" and "Doofil", colloquialisms that refer to the former British and Italian imperialists, he channels some of the personal intensity of Abdille Hassan, and links that world to our own. Thus, Samadoon: the killing happens, the destruction of the lands creation's burial, refugees' flight from the country as outlaws pass among the people long suffering weak wretches they enter the shade of the dead wood the forest's been destroyed by scorching sand rotten brush, dense dead thicket silvered tree stumps, calls of help help somebody help the women, the children, the frail licked by the red hot spears the tank with lust to launch at even unpeopled places the playful gun sight, the hollow stocked gun the Kalashnikov, the bomb, the shortened jeep the rolling mortars descending from the sky napalm peeling stripping your burnt skin the anti-tank P10, ricocheting ring the RPG7, the smaller bazooka and the ammunition belt at the ready the aloes with their troubles and painful injury standing unmilked and drinking their fill ready for destruction sent by death and guns and gun powder of satan, it's not in your interest this was the testament then of Koofil and Doofil the ones I sent to hell and whose orders I refused the lackey dogs and those of their ilk saying: here boy you countered the contempt of their fathers with it will not be tried on me that they now drag you down from therego it's not in your interest While unfortunately no one would predict that Somalia is soon likely to have any lack of bellicose topics for the male-only composers of gabays to write about, it is surprising and heartening to learn that poetry has been a vehicle for peace-making too, particularly when composed and recited by women - which is something of a happy irony, since in Somalia women's poetry is not taken as seriously as men's, and does not normally get memorized or recited beyond small groups of family or friends. Nonetheless, in 1992 they played a key role in averting a nascent civil war by interposing themselves between two sub-clans in Burao and reciting poems meant to tug at the consciences of their brethren. Within days, a ceasefire was achieved. Oh Dahir! Shatter not my newly mended heart, Force me not to the refugee life, Where cold, hunger, and misery resides. For I have tasted the comfort of home. Oh Dahir! Oh Dahir! Kill not the surviving heroes Who miraculously escaped death. Crush not the handicapped ones, For they have barely recovered. Oh Dahir! Oh Dahir! Young man with the gun, Whom are you shooting? Me? For there is no enemy in sight. Have you ever seriously wondered? What became of our brave comrades? Whatever happened to all our buildings? Oh Dahir! By Ian Garrick Mason We welcome the submission of all articles for possible publication on WardheerNews.com So please email your article today Opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of WardheerNews |