PREAMBLE
For the second successive day, the Poetry World Cup brings together South Asia and West Africa. Yesterday’s match-up was one of the highlights of the round so far: Pakistan (Mehvash Amin), marginal pre-tournament favourites, began with a tough game against Ghana (Kwame Dawes). After a strong start, the momentum shifted and Pakistan were on the brink of an early exit with only a few hours of voting left. A late surge in support carried Mehvash Amin’s poem over the line in a game that neither poem deserved to lose. Today, India will be hoping to join their neighbours in the second round by seeing off the challenge of Nigeria.
Our Indian poet is Shikha Malaviya, the founder of The (Great) Indian Poetry Project. She also founded Monsoon Magazine, the first South Asian Literary Magazine on the web, and organised ‘100 Thousand Poets for Change — Bangalore’. Her first collection of poems, ‘Geography of Tongues’, was published in late 2013.
Nigeria will be represented by David Ishaya Osu, a poet, journalist and street photographer based in Abuja. His poems have appeared in several national dailies, and online journals including African Writer and The New Black Magazine.
I give my phone unwanted attention
scanning numbers   friends who don’t matter
I count down the traffic light   59-58-57 seconds   then feign sleep
knuckles wrap against tinted glass…
~ Shikha Malaviya
For La Llorona
spring out of
the Yellowstone riverbed…
your twins wait
for you here
come when the rains
will not stain your
lily-white shroud…
~ David Ishaya Osu
RESULT: India won by 8 votes
Editor’s note: If, for any reason, you’re unable to vote in the poll, please leave the name of the poem/country you’d like to vote for in the comments.Â
The (Great) Indian Poetry Collective.
‘Poetry of Life’, a TEDx talk by Shikha Malaviya.
Chaithali Pisupati interviews Shikha Malaviya.
The Hindu‘s article on 100 Thousand Poets for Change.
Soniah Kamal interviews Shikha Malaviya.
Three poems by David Ishaya Osu in Gobbet.
Fussion Express profile of David Ishaya Osu.
David Ishaya Osu interviews Sylva Nze Ifedigbo for The New Black Magazine.
Poetry International Web page for Nigeria.
Nobel Lecture by Wole Soyinka, the first Nigerian winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature.