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Three poems on peace and warBy Adrian Mitchell, September 2005 To all in the so-called defence industry Arms trade workers, here’s an early warning You might wake up tomorrow morning And find that this is the glorious day When all your jobs will just melt away Because the people of the world are going to make sure There’ll be no more, no more, no more war So now’s the time to switch your occupation From dealing in death and desolation Don’t hang around now you’ve been told The international murder trade’s about to fold You won’t have to maim, you won’t have to kill, You can use your brain and use your skill. Peace needs workers of all kinds- Make artificial limbs instead of landmines. Tricycles instead of tridents, Violins instead of violence, Lifeboats, hospitals, medicine, drains, Food and toys and buses and trains- Come on, there’s plenty of work to be done If we’re going to make peace for everyone.
Peacetime Haiku Try one hundred years Without any wars at all - Let’s see if it works! Slavery and War The planet earth in 1787 AD More than three-quarters of its people Were in bondage of some kind, Including serfdom and slavery, 80.000 Africans were chain and fettered and taken to the new world every year. There was no anti-slavery campaign. On May 22nd 1787 Twelve men met in London printing shop. The campaign against slavery began. There were slaves and free activists, Quakers, atheists, And men, women and children Who loved freedom. They were mocked as wild, impractical dreamers. They had no e-mails or TV, No radio or telephones, But they found ways of showing the world The obscenity of slavery. So they abolished First the international slave trade And then slavery itself. It was hard work. It took them about fifty years. Only fifty years. Today we can use e-mail and TV, Radio and telephones. We can abolish First the international arms trade And then war itself. It’ll be hard work. Might take as long as twenty years. (Written after reading Bury the Chains - The British struggle to abolish slavery by Adam Hochschild. Macmillan: £20) Please support Red Pepper, make a donation today |
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