![]() Zeitgeistlyrik: AMan's Soliloquy (Satis Shroff)A Poem by Satis Shroff![]() The poet feels the pulse of pulse of Europe and the issue that moves the Europeans and the world at the moment. In his Zeitgeistlyrik the poet asks questions and seeks answers ..![]() Zeitgeistlyrik: A MAN'S SOLILOQUY (Satis Shroff)
A MAN'S SOLILOQUY (Satis Shroff)
War or peace? That is the question. Is it better to see the warriors of the islamic states, Wantonly overrun villages, towns and countries? 200,000 people have died in Syria, And the editorial team of Charlie Hebdo, With the is-message of death To the disbelievers in this world. Or shall the world take to arms, Against this threat and injustice? Till now it was a distant, military operation, Against the self-proclaimed and misled warriors, With aerial bombardments, Carried out by Jordan, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Turkey, of late, All coordinated by the USA.
Mission accomplished, Collateral damage: women and children. In Germany the collective psychosis follows them, As they take to the streets; Under the banner of pegida: An astonishing mix of people, From the middle of East German society, Rubbing shoulders with outright racists and extreme right wing.
The dean of Cologne Cathedral Norbert Feldhoff, Said after he'd put out the cathedral lights: 'By switching off the floodlights we want to make Those who march stop and think. It is a challenge: Consider who you are marching alongside.' Even Dresden's opera house turned off its lights, During an earlier pegida march. An opinion poll revealed: Only one in eight Germans Would join an anti-Muslim march.
Many people are concerned About asylum-seekers entering Germany, Which rose to 200,000. Net immigration is a 20 year high.
But the real enemy still remains: Face-to-face combat has become a reluctant task. The shiites fight with western arms, But the US refrains from a direct involvement.
The trauma prevails. The people in the west Suffer from restless dreams: Insomnia caused by the is. Sleepless nights caused by those Jihadis, Returning with kriegstrauma from Syria and Iraq.
The collective psychosis follows those Who take to the streets; And the patriotic image of the pegida, Which is for the white mainstream., Against other coloured streams of humanity, To mingle with the neonazis And so-called soccer hooligans. An uneasiness spreads across these European lands.
Politicians blame each other For their emphasis on wrong political issues, Meaning the fear of the common Teuton Has been ignored for too long.
The Jihadists use social networks, Spread videos glorifying is-fighters. The fear of losing jobs, Of too many alien refugees to feed. More than 34,000 asylum seekers Have come from Syria alone, Makes the rounds.
Why, Sweden has more refugees But asylum-homes burn there too. The Jewish community is busy leaving, And prefer Tel Aviv to Paris, For it has become unsafe in the City of Love.
Germany this great nation, Has an obligation and tradition, To give shelter to refugees, Who have fled because they were persecuted.
A heated debate goes on: Shall the refugees be given jobs, And grant citizenships? The market says: 'We need workers,
For the nation's getting old.' 'We need specialists for our economy.' The angst of losing a prosperous, sheltered life, Is bigger in the hearts of the masses. The fear of a society, Whose religious structures might be changed by another, Gets stronger.
The fanatic fighters of the the is, The trauma of decapitated journalists, Bombed cities and raped women, Has made the rounds. This is the diabolic side Of monotheistic religions.
The very integration of aliens Has begun to be questioned, By those who take to the streets. But there is hope in this society, For there are others who also have their slogans: To strive for peaceful solutions, Withe tolerance, mutual respect, Together in their hearts.
They who know that prejudices Prevail through association. A 9/!! does not mean all Muslims Are fanatics and terrorists. Those are honest, hard-working Muslims, Who live here for the benefit of the west's national gross income, Who live their lives near us and pray, For as long as there is spirituality and prayer, No matter in which tongue, There is hope.
These and other religious people Shun fanatism and believe In mutual understanding, Togetherness, despite the diversity.
Let us not be deprived Of our inheritance of ethics, Morality and humanity.
Live and let live is the message, We ought to spread everywhere, Ase join forces to fight Against fanatism, Whether in religion or politics, Within And without.
* * *
THE DANCE OF THE BIRCH TREES (Satis Shroff)
The naked white birch trees Stand close to each other, Waiting for the music Of the Dreisam Valey wind To begin.
A gust comes, Followed by another, Making the trees sway, Like a wise white woman's long tresses, The thin, supple twigs That almost reach half the size of the trees, Have a faster rhythm of their own.
The hurricane-like wind Gathers its energy for the finale. Ah, the upper branches With capillary-like twigs, As they anastomose, Developing into a canopy, Become intensive In their movements to and fro.
In the background you see The blue Black Forest hills, With homesteads like dots On the snow-covered hillsides, That are lit now.
The blueish-grey clouds which were on the move, Have taken a prussian blue hue. A weak yellowish light, Manages to break through, Above the snowy-clad peaks. A semblance of a sunset In the Schwarzwald.
* * *
A TRAIN JOURNEY (Satis Shroff) A screaming train, What unfurls is a memorable Bergblick: A moment of revelation in life, A feast for the eyes of the beholder, * * *
MY MOM'S GARDEN (Satis Shroff) THERE'S a microcosmos My Mom loved and grew roses. She grew cabbages, salads and lentils, * * * WIN THE DAY (Satis Shroff) WHEN you withhold yourself Give in, * * *
STORM IN THE NIGHT (Satis Shoff) I walke up and peer from my cosy room. The waves thrash on the cliffs, Oblivious of the storm in the night, * * * MAN'S FOLLEY (Satis Shroff) Bloody colonial migrations in the West, Gred-driven ranchers and gunslingers, Rights? The clash of haves and have-nots, (c)Catmandu: drying the dyed wool to weave Nepalese carpets * * *
(c) The Swabian Gate, Freiburg
(c) A letter from Patan-Catmandu Valley FREIBURG AND CATMANDU (Satis Shroff) Freiburg: the finest spire in Christendom, Old men pulled carts with their belongings, The GIs returned years later to admire Catmandu: the all-seeing-eyes The hippies have long left The Gurkhas still die under foreign skies, * * * THE ADMONITION (Satis Shroff)
The motley moth moth Warns the young butterfly: 'Beware of the candle's Flickering flame.'
The frolicking butterfly reples: 'It's so warm and fascinating.'
Golder, flickering flame, Spending warmth, light and music. It enjoys the dance, As the circling wings sway, And the inaudible music Reaches its crescendo. Flying around the burning candle, In a trance like a Dervish dancer.
In its merry ecstatic rounds It forgets the words, And is singed by the flame, When a boy opens the window.
A frail frivolous butterfly That didn't heed, The warning of an elderly moth. Wasn't the admonition Of Daedalus the same?
* * *
THE UNKRAUT (Satis Shroff)
On the fields are the traces Of harvested maize. Where the btebnder flowers were, There are now brown, russet leaves, Scattered by the wind, From the Vale of Hell.
The leaves that gave joy In their autumnal gaiety, Now strewn upon the earth, To be thrashed by the rain, Trodden by feet in trekking boots.
An elderly lady on high heels Wobbles and breaks her dainty femur, Over the trecherous unkraut. The lady is picked up By an ambulance from the Maltese Cross.
The leaves remain to rot. No one bothers, As cars speed to and from The Black Forest.
* * *
MERRY TAVERNS (Satis Shroff)
There are taverns in the hamlet, Where the wine and beer Make men merry, And women in deep decolltes, Cast glances; Moving their eyelashes.
I leave them to themselves, As I flee and shun them. My heart wants Ruhe, I'm dying of pain, Of longing for you.
* * *
YEARNING (Satis Shroff)
Women are like flowers: Jasmine, tulips, Rhododendrons and roses. But need you plucks everyone?
How wonderful to admire them, Take delight at watching them, As they bloom and wilt.
I see the Schwarzwald stream, With its refreshing cold water, Therein I see my countenance, A pale man with white sideburns. Then I see you, A peaceful mind overwhelms me. My heart begins to glow With yearning for you.
* * *
ENDURING PAIN (Satis Shroff)
Nights I wake up With terrible pain; Despite the potions from the apothecary, Capsules from Novartis, tincture opii, Pancreas powder with amylase, Lipase, protease, Oxalis mixture, hyoscyamus, Valeriana cocktail, Depotspritze, Rounded up with Lormetazepam. I'm in Schmerz.
I kept a stiff upper lip, When the chirurg solemnly said: 'Your tumor is like an iceberg, We only see the top. Below it's growing wantonly. I'm afraid I can't operate. If we begin we'll never end. Too many mines in this battlefield.'
I'd been brooding after the computer tomography. I didn't wince. I was in shock. The realisation of the diagnosis Sank slowly in my mind. I decided to make the best of it. No use reeling under The shattering words.
When will my anaotomical ruin fall? That wasn't my problem. Till then I had time to live, Every day to the full, With my senses, With my thoughts and words.
To borrow a line from John Keats: 'The poetry of earth is ceasing never.' The beauty and delight of living Far exceeds the pain from a tumor, As big as a fist.
* * *
SNOW IN KAPPEL (Satis Shroff)
At 2 o' clock in the morning, I look out of my window: It's snowing in Kappel, In the Schwarzwald.
I see the white snowflakes, Falling ceaselessly, silently, stealthily, Made visible by the dim yellowish treet lamp.
A car comes crunching down the curve, Its red rear-lights glowing. The rooftops and house railings are covered, As with powder sugar.
The clouds are veiled, And Heaven has become frosty. Ah, I sleep and wake up again, To find the lovely hamlet Ringed with hills and meadows, Covered with a thick mantle of snow. Dazzling whiteness where you look.
On such a Sunday morning, I take my snowspade, To clear the winding stairs: For common courtesy demands That passersby shouldn't slip and fall, On the street before your house. We all have to kehr, Lest others despair.
The shepherd from the Molchhofsiedlung Has left the once-green meadows, His hundred sheep don't bleat anymore, Below Maier's Hill. With my snow-chores done, Followed by a hearty Black Forest breakfast, I take a brisk morning walk, Over the snow-clad landscape, Respire and enjoy the refreshing Bergluft.
* * *
© 2015 Satis Shroff |
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Added on January 16, 2015 Last Updated on January 16, 2015 Author![]() Satis ShroffFreiburg, Baden-Wuerttemberg, GermanyAboutI'm a German of Nepalese descent based in Freiburg, and have worked in Kathmandu(Nepal) as a features journalist (The Rising Nepal) and wrote commentaries for Radio Nepal. before coming to Germany for.. more..Writing
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