human rights poems

The Second Son of Nasir Ahmed | Katelyn Thomas - Read Poetry Online by Talented Contemporary Poets

The Second Son of Nasir Ahmed | Katelyn Thomas

She brushes his becalmed lips before
she lifts his spirit-slipped
shell into her husband’s hands.
What do her neighbors say
as they anchor, hearts furled?

Take comfort as if your womb does not
still clench only months after he gasped
his first salutation to the world.
Your son is but a small ship that
has been impaled upon a huge
iceberg of misinformation
and now floats upon the ocean of
blood that flowed in our streets as
he joins those who have already
been broken and shattered on the rocks
jutting from the shores on the far
side of the Bay of Bengal.

The Fire Flower | Mintul Hazarika - Read Poetry Online by Talented Contemporary Poets

The Fire Flower | Mintul Hazarika

There will be a day
When the Modar flowers burn the sky
And then, the people
With sickles and hummers
Would alleviate
A destiny in the course.

These people know how to rebuild
On the wreckage of the old

To repeat:
These people also know
How to demolish a chateau

It is just sequence of time
And one day, that will happen
Modar flower would bloom
The ribcage of the burgess
Would turn into ashes.

(Original Assamese poem Translated by Pabitra Das.)

Inquisitive Mind | Julia Hones - Read Poetry Online by Talented Contemporary Poets

Inquisitive Mind | Julia Hones

Why do we talk about women’s rights?
When shall we consider them human rights?

Why do we put up with a man
who calls a woman “disgusting”
when she wants to extract from her body
the precious fluid that helps her baby think and thrive?

Albert Einstein said we should never stop asking questions,
but if he had been a woman,
her statement might have been trashed.

More at https://juliahoneswritinglife.blogspot.com.

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