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Shadows over Benue

Mark_Obaji_Ejaka
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
These poems form a poignant collection centered on the ongoing sociopolitical and humanitarian crises in Benue State, Nigeria, particularly the farmer-herder conflicts, violence, displacement, and calls for resilience and peace. Drawing from historical events like colonial boundary disputes, massacres in areas such as Agatu and Guma, and recent escalations up to 2025, the works blend lamentation, historical reflection, and defiant hope. They evoke the cultural heritage of ethnic groups like the Tiv, Idoma, and Igede, while critiquing systemic failures, including governmental inaction and ethnic tensions. Themes include bloodshed, loss of land, the erosion of communal harmony, and the unyielding spirit of the people. The language varies from solemn, historical narrative to raw, emotional outcry, often using natural imagery (rivers, soil, yams, cattle) to symbolize both abundance and destruction. It collectively serves as an elegy for Benue's suffering and a plea for justice.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: Shadows over Benue

The sun still rises over hills,

But fear walks first through farms and mills.

The market stalls are half-abandoned,

Eyes scan roads once taken for granted.

In Guma's fields and Logo's plains,

Hope withers under unmarked chains.

A knock at night, a sudden sound

Each heartbeat pounds like war drums now.

Children learn to run before they read,

Mothers pray more than they feed.

Men who once knew soil and sweat,

Now know the grip of silent threats.

We speak in whispers, guard our doors,

No one's sure what fate still stores.

Strangers pass and are not named,

Familiar faces now feel strange.

The herds still roam, the borders blur,

Justice sleeps, its conscience slurred.

Who holds the gun, who draws the map?

Who profits from the farmer's trap?

But still, within each broken fence,

A seed survives, a stubborn sense

That peace is more than just a word

It's action loud, not silence heard.

Benue bleeds but will not fade,

Its spirit carved in hoe and blade.

One day these hills will sing again

Not of loss, but of regained reign.