Romeo Oriogun, born in Lagos, Nigeria, is the author of the poetry collections The Origin of Butterflies and Sacrament of Bodies (University of Nebraska Press, 2020). He is an MFA candidate in poetry at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, where he received the John Logan Prize for Poetry.

The Niger Sings of Blood

by Romeo Oriogun
I was born in 1966, at the beginning of the Biafran-Nigerian Civil War, and the war ended after three years. And I was growing up in school, and the federal government didn’t want us taught about the history of the war, because they thought it probably would make us generate a new generation of rebels.

—Chris Abani

I can’t hold a face
held before dawn
& not see behind the eyes
bullets still rattling,
these sounds a war cry
not from a soldier
but from a small child,
his hand cupping the sun
as his voice rises & breaks
the bush into a burning altar.

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