Poems And Verses Lost in the Crowd of Actions and Demonstrations at Monas
Poems and Verses Lost in the Crowd of Actions and Demonstrations at Monas
By,Jacob Eresete Freelance Journalist
In the blessed month of Ramadan, in our village there used to be an impromptu food market to break the fast. But this year, what has emerged is corruption and bribery articles.
Not a few of them are recycled, such as food so that it doesn’t go stale, it can be marketed again when needed.
The law is also often used as a menu, for anyone who is no longer visible.
Information that has not been confirmed, those who have become political hostages due to being entangled in corruption articles are bargaining to exchange cases that you have heard about.
That is the new black market that is increasingly brightly opening up stalls for buying and selling articles with quite tempting discounts.
Every now and then there is an open auction just to enliven the transaction atmosphere so that it can continue to be profitable.
There is indeed no opportunity for those who don’t have a lot of money. Because the lowest nominal value is the same as one of the cheapest private banks. Hopefully, it can slightly overshadow the value of 1,000 trillion that is mined from the oil refinery that sucks the earth’s belly from our village too.
Although the Village Head looks hot and restless, he can take a short vacation anytime and can go anywhere as freely as when he was in power.
After all, his descendants have become guardians who can guarantee the safety of his life until death comes with a burial ceremony that is unclear about the prayers read for his soul.
The excerpt of the writing above is clearly quoted by a poet from a wall that is scrawled with graffiti scattered in various cities, when he was looking for his poems and verses that were lost amidst the exhausted crowd after the first round of action was carried out. In fact, he would read his poems and verses in the action and demonstration event before the dark night due to the social theme of the action carried out by the students who were already hot in college.
Today, the action and demonstration groups are actually led by mothers who are angry because the price of basic necessities and LPG gas has disturbed their concentration and made their cooking half-cooked. And with their actions and enthusiastic speeches, their hunger with their families can be poured out along the street.