Tag: winners

  • 2018 Winning Poems

    2018 Winning Poems

    These are the winning poems of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s 2018 Barbara Mandigo Kelly Peace Poetry Awards. For more information on this annual peace poetry contest, and to read the winning poems from previous years, click here.

    First Place Adult
    Carla S. Schick

    When Birds Migrate, They Follow Nature
    (after Salgado’s photos of Migrations from Rwanda)

    Birds migrate; they instinctually know their path
    A woman, skin down to bone, rests on a vacated train track.
    Hiding in the bush, she gazes out at the photographer,
    Covers her mouth as her child, tied to her back, tries to rest.

    A woman, skin down to bone, sits on the side of a train track,
    Young children stare past smoking trees.
    The mother covers her mouth as her child tries to rest, looking up;
    The children bear no guns, one stands cross-armed, others look bewildered.

    Young children stare past the smoking trees;
    In the distance people are moving trapped in a genocide
    These children carry no arms, look out, look bewildered
    Endless cycles of war chase them down, forced migrations.

    In the distance people are moving trapped in a genocide
    Centuries of colonial destruction inflame conflicts
    Endless cycles of war chase down all sides in forced migrations
    The woman wears a wedding ring, but sits alone among dying children.

    Centuries of colonial destruction inflame internal wars
    Dysentery, bullets, cavernous quarries of wealth robbed
    The woman wears her wedding ring; at her side are dying children
    She draws her awakened baby closer to her warmth, wrapped in a checkered cloth.

    Dysentery, bullets, cavernous quarries of wealth robbed,
    She waits and looks back at the photographer with deep eyes
    She draws her awakened baby closer to her warmth, wrapped in a checkered cloth.
    Human remains scattered everywhere as they try to escape from certain death.

    She waits and looks back with deeply sunk eyes at the photographer;
    He is invisible in their lives and cannot deliver safety although he sends out warnings.
    Human remains scattered everywhere on the path away from a certain death
    We never see the expression on the photographer’s face or his hands.

    While images from Africa float before us in a New York gallery
    His body bears the illnesses from the deaths he has witnessed.

     

    Honorable Mention Adult
    Madison Trice

    Their Families Wore White

    if i had a dollar for the times i’ve been distrusted
    because i am not cynical enough
    because people say i am all hope, that if you ripped me open, i would bleed sunlight
    so people poke and stab and jab and tear
    asking impatiently, “why would you choose such a futile cause”
    master of hopeless causes, i will put the hope in hopeless, against all odds
    i will hold the hope like a butterfly between my fingers, gently, gently, and hold it up to my heartbeat to remind it that it is alive
    i will cradle it in war zones, between buildings hollow and shaken
    i will hide it away in government-given housing in far away places
    and when i am told to stop holding on
    i will release it, into a jar, with little holes in the lid to allow it to breathe
    and my butterfly and i will share the same air
    because i cannot afford the freezer burn of logic and detached conversations about the rationality of letting situations deteriorate,
    sitting in sections with people who have never met someone from the regions they debate
    no, i can’t afford to let go

     

    First Place Youth 13-18
    Stephanie Anujarerat

    Sleeping, Over

    We are restless in the dark,
    bright-eyed gold-painted by sodium glow swallowing faint moonlight
    whispering wonder at the black between stars.

    The weight on our tongues:
    Friday’s shooter drill, where we

    locked cardboard doors
    pulled down paper blinds for early dusk
    squeezed ourselves to roots and shrapnel in shadowy foxholes

    children to embryos to paintbrushes in plastic wombs or coffins.

    Now, like then, silence rattles in our lungs.
    Meanings spill from the dictionary of war:
    v. to press a finger tightly to bomb-shocked lips, quivering chin
    v. to steal the edge off the telltale scream of a gun
    n. the immutable heaviness of death and earth.

    You take my hand so we can fall asleep, together.

    Walkout day, mourning gathers outside the garden gate.
    The flag flies overhead. In the quiet
    you pluck petals off a shriveling crimson geranium. I count

    Seventeen for the lost.
    Seventeen for how many desert winters we’ve survived—
    lived, it should be. Rust flake petals, crumpled cardinals neatly
    ended, fluttering
    down.

    A promise.
    As we grow up and grow old we will plant gardens with white roses.
    We will not need them for early
    funerals, for hate that drives people to hate.

    We close our eyes, listening to each other breathe
    steadily, like courage.

     

    Honorable Mention Youth 13 – 18
    Emily Cho

    The 38th

    There are mountain gorals
    and deer and rare cranes that walk
    the breadth of soldiers and their boyhoods.
    Their fur smells of wetness and rain,
    and this is what snouts the canopies of barbed wire
    that crawl the spaces of blackened history.
    June 6th to July 7th, when my mother tongue was not Korean
    anymore, vernacular capitulated into shallow cries and
    even the sky writhed against the painful
    speed of fighter jets, oblique organs of
    white metal splitting cities into buildings
    into rooms into children into bad smells.
    If at night a northern boy
    wakes from a nightmare and watches the moon,
    my greatest concession is that I cannot feel his loneliness.
    In the morning, his small face may squint at the
    sun, his hand stretching toward that vast distance where soldiers crouch
    and whisper about home.

    I think of visiting, sprinting the sparse miles between two sister
    nations, estranged under a great wrongness, outrunning these
    historical truths, old letters and vernacular and crooning songs
    over military loudspeakers, wanting to savor that feeling of origin.

    I do not know when I will return to you,
    your staggering mountains and mukungwhas and
    mothers and fathers. The programs on television that
    show reuniting siblings: How much I have missed you.

    But in all my wrongness, in the ways my tongue
    and eyes and soul will have hardened,
    will you still take my hand?

     

    First Place Youth 12 and Under
    Milla Greek

    The Silence

    In the last hour of the last night, the shadows will dance away,
    and as the final candle flickers out, never to be lit again, the stars will fall away
    and past, present, and future will be enveloped in the newly midnight sky.
    The frostbitten mountain tops will fall into a deep sleep,
    and the snow will melt away, leaving the rivers to flow for the last time.
    The trees will whisper their final farewells into the wind before they, too,
    are silenced by the heavy darkness that will fall over them like a blanket.
    The low hum of the scattered rocks will cease as darkness falls,
    and with the darkness, the beautiful, calm, and silent darkness,
    everything will heal, the earth will come back together where it has been torn apart,
    the sky will lose the brown haze that has choked it for so long,
    and the air, the beautiful, essential air, will return to how it was when it was born, and be crisp, cool, sweet, and clear.
    All that is not wanted will go, and go silently, until all that is left becomes one, one with the world, the planet, the quiet and forever dark sky.
    The sun will set, and then all will be silent, silent and asleep.
    We will go softly, and calmly without making noise, and simply cease to exist,
    just like all other things unwanted.
    When all has rested, it will rise again, like a phoenix from his ashes. The snow will fall and the rivers will flow from the mountains to the seas, and the trees will whisper in the wind. The stars will return to the sky and then the sun will sing its beautiful song, and time will arise, and begin again.