Poems inspired by GUERNICA, 1937

A report earlier this year concluded that the number of civilians around the world killed by explosive weapons had risen by 55% in five years.  The humanitarian crisis in Yemen has finally hit the headlines this week – a crisis that has been building for nearly two years due to a proxy war in which the UK government is directly implicated.  Today, the evacuation of Aleppo has been delayed, and airstrikes continue.  It’s hard for young people in the UK to make sense of any of this. It’s harder still, now that what was once called ‘total warfare’ has become commonplace, to imagine what it was like in the 1930s when, during the Spanish Civil War, the first cities in Europe were attacked from the air.



When I met year 10s earlier this term at Sydenham High School to talk about my novel A World Between Us, and British involvement in the Spanish Civil War, we also discussed the difficulties many of them had in understanding the impact of the very first aerial bombardments.  In small group workshops, we explored the response of poets and artists, including Picasso, to the bombardment of Guernica in 1937. After watching and listening to contemporary newsreel footage and press reports, the students produced their own, very immediate poetic responses.  The poems below were all written in the last 10 minutes of a busy hour, packed with discussion, drama and group recitation.  I’m delighted to be publishing them here now.


They fall,


Like dreams falling from the sky


Planting themselves in our lives


They fall,


Destroying everything in their path


Grasping anything near your heart


We fall


Nothing but shadows remain


Knowing nothing will ever be the same


Anya Travassos



Bombs


Bouncing and banging


The ground shakes


Homes break


It all comes crumbling down


Shadows stretch to encompass all


Forcing a world of black and white


Yet colours blend


We shall amend


And take back what is right


Elena Hornby


 


In an ancient town


Everyone’s been let down


Destroyed and destroyed


With people being killed, over killed


With the hole 25 feet deep


With a tragedy beneath our feet


It’s an emotional time for everyone around


Still.  Everyone silent


As they hear the sound of wreck and death and threat in the air. 


Safiyah Borde-Kuofie


   


Bricks crashing upon civilians


Unparalleled for destroying millions


Anticipation filling the air


Children crying in despair 


Niah Hay-Henry and Sally Prifti


 


Silent and still lays the left over debris


Silent and still lay the devastated civilians


Loud and immense as the flames lit the town up


Loud and immense as the people demolish


The breeze runs through the ruthless place


Civilians’ spirits going with it, full of grace


Martha Edwards


   


Stomach churning up


Eyes swelling with water


Heart beating fast


Fists start to clench


I can hear the screams in my head


The anger wants to explode out of me


Thinking how all the dead bodies lay


I felt as deep as the 25 foot hole


The gunshots make my ears bleed


Leaves me with sleepless nights


Tragedy overtaking our town


Terror left in our lives


The relentless banging


Sylvie Locke


   


Terror devours the city


Strangled cries and screams echo


Around the crumbling walls


The chorus of guns shatters down the street


Can you hear her?


She calls for her baby: ‘Where is she?’


The planes’ hum drones on,


Their bombs peel off them.


Ester Schomberg


   


The bombs flying like birds


Swooping down and landing on houses


The light flashing from the window panes


But then came the crashing of the lanes


Mothers and children are heard screaming


While others in the world are day dreaming


The threat from the air is high


But when it gets to you – you sigh


Open your eyes and see the light


Before it turns to night.


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Published on December 14, 2016 05:40
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