Poetry X Hunger
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Create!

That's the purpose of this section. You are encouraged to read the poems

posted here and elsewhere on the Poetry X Hunger website, to look 


at 
the historic accounts of hunger, famine and starvation, or consider the

​prompts suggested and then... write some poetry about hunger.
 

Poem by Kim B Miller

1/16/2021

6 Comments

 
The Hunger Dialect
​

We sip on tea flavored with righteousness indignation
Add a touch of honey dripping in our own gluttony
While we slowly speak the dialect of hunger
We claim to be ambitious on solutions 
But truth says we have never met
We spread lies evenly
As if, evenness eliminates detection 
Hungry people see a world of excess who view starvation as avoidable
Victim shaming is our specialty
This dialect of deception is clearly recognizable
The language we lie with is so bitter, even when dripping off of sweet religious lips
We can’t feed everybody
Here comes the lie
We embrace the acceptance that doing nothing is equal to trying
Yet we continuously knit together new excuses with old lies 
We shame hungry people on full stomachs and then we rewrite the narrative
Imagine a world that throws away enough food to feed the hungry complaining about loss
While the population who has food insecurity is waiting to be found 
Empty stomachs are not looking for empty words
We need long term, right now, sustainable actions
Let’s plant fruits and vegetables and let freedom be the gardener
Allow people to pick fresh food from their community greenery
Have community barbeques and well placed public pantries
Donate to trusted restaurants so they can offer free meals to those in need
Create central areas for restaurants to bring food instead of throwing it away
Let’s reinvent how we distribute food
Make it easier to ask without asking
And no more pretty phrases for ugly things
Starvation is not “food insecurity”
Is death “breathing insecurity”
Our appetite for synonyms seems high
Hunger has many levels
And a need to make hunger definable to all is needed
Let’s make sure we are not using it to avoid saying words that sting
Starvation is a “life insecurity”
Action is the cure
But we’re too busy slicing up excuses
While hungry people look at an empty plate full of indecision
We don’t even offer them a cup of hope
Click on the file below to listen to Kim reading her poem:
audio_only.m4a
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File Type: m4a
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Picture
Kim B Miller is an award winning poet. She is the Poet Laureate for Prince William County, VA. She is the First African American Poet Laureate for PWC. Kim performed nationally in person and internationally online. She is the author of several books. You can find more about Kim at www.kimbmiller.com

6 Comments

Poem by Milton Carp

1/16/2021

2 Comments

 
HUNGER IS A SYMPTOM

WAR AND A RAVAGED LAND,
CORRUPT AND INEPT GOVERNMENT,
DROUGHT AND PESTILENCE,
BOTTOM LINE ENTERPRISES STRIP
THE LAND OF OLD GROWTH FOREST,
AND MINERALS ARE THE GENESIS
OF HUNGER.

THE BENEFACTORS OF HUNGER
ARE THE PEOPLE, THE POOR AND
DOWNTRODDEN. THOSE MOST
UNABLE TO FIGHT BACK, THE HELPLESS.
THE MOST HELPLESS ARE THE CHILDREN
WHO BEAR THE BRUNT OF HUNGER.

SO AS ALL CAN SEE, HUNGER IS BUT A
SYMPTOM OF MAN’S INHUMANITY TO MAN,
OF GREED AND POWER WHICH FEEDS THE
PLAGUE OF HUNGER ON THE MASSES.

IT IS A HUMANE ACT TO DOLE OUT MEALS
TO THOSE IN NEED, BUT WHAT ABOUT
TOMORROW? THE CANCER IS SYSTEMIC.
THE CURE IS NOT AN EASY ONE. IT WILL
TAKE TIME AND MUCH EFFORT. WHAT IS
EASY IS TO START, TODAY WOULD BE GOOD.
Picture
Milton Carp from Fort Lauderdale, Florida is a 91 year old who has been writing poetry for a little over a year.  He lost his wife of 68 years in 2019, and is reinventing himself through the perfect vehicle of poetry. 

2 Comments

Poem by Debbi Brody

1/10/2021

0 Comments

 
There are people  in the world so hungry that God cannot appear to them except in the form of bread.
-M S Gandhi

They helicopter in hay for cows in Chama
stuck in nine feet of snow covered grazing
land. Cattle huddle together for warmth,
less organized than arctic penguins, these girls 
continuously shuffle towards the center.

Where they once grew rice, Haitian 
families buy mud cookies to fill
their bellies, the cost of real fare
impossible.


Behind the train station in New Delhi,
small children, shorter than your waste,
scavenge in dumps for scraps of food,
fight off dogs for every morsel....

Yet,
we
count
sheep
before
we
sleep.


"It is good people who make good places."Anna Sewell
Picture
Debbi Brody is an avid attendee and leader of poetry workshops throughout the USA’s southwest. She has been published in numerous national and regional journals and anthologies of note including Poetica, Broomweed, Sin Fronteras.  Her newest full length book, In Everything, Birds, (Village Books Press, OKC, OK, 2015) and her chapbook, Walking the Arroyo (Cyberwit, 2019) is available at independent bookstores, on-line book sources and through the author for signed copies.

0 Comments

Poem by Zane Yinger

1/10/2021

0 Comments

 
My Hunger is Real
 
My hands itch 
With the want to tear into a fresh loaf 
To have nose tickled by the warm yeasty steam 
 
My hands itch 
With the want to peel the rind from an orange 
And feel its succulent lobes part under my teeth 
Sour sticky juices dripping from my chin 
 
The nail of my finger scrapes into the fleshy pad of my thumb
Anxiously sniffing and searching my empty hands 
 
My guts ache and roll like anguished worms 
I try to breathe, though my eyes go glassy 
As I choke on empty pain 
 
A passing man offers me a magazine
Promising hot gossip and tantalizing entries 
 
How dare the world offer me brain candy 
Whilst my knotted stomach threatens to eat itself into nothingness 
Like an ancient snake 
 
I want real candy 
For my real stomach

Click on the file below to hear Zane reading their poem:
hunger_poem.m4a
File Size: 451 kb
File Type: m4a
Download File

Picture
Zane is a 2nd year college student studying botany and Spanish. They are an artist and newfound poet. They hope to use their art as a platform to communicate and share real struggles and experiences.

0 Comments

Poem by Martha E. Snell

12/20/2020

0 Comments

 
Atrophy in Madaya, Syria

The grandmother refuses morning meal today and
yesterday. Again tomorrow. The young ones
must have more in their bowls she says.
The bag of rice flops over, level
of bulgar falls. She ceases eating,
moves only in planned ways.
Two neighbors die, the ribs
of her grandchildren
are outlined
in flesh.

Kwashiorkor, I have to look it up, hear it
pronounced, until I remember pictures
of children from Biafra, Vietnam, the
Holocaust, this famine and that,
further back than cameras.
Images show flies on their
faces, swollen bellies,
listless people
who wasted,
vanished.
​
The moon in daytime
spirals across the sky,
little noticed.
​
Click on the file below to listen to Martha read her poem:
jamestown_dr_2.m4a
File Size: 724 kb
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Picture
Martha E. Snell's poetry appears in or is forthcoming from journals such as Ninth Letter, Moon City Review, Cutthroat, The Poet's Billow, and Streetlight Magazine. She received the Mary Jean Irion Prize from Chautauqua Literary Arts Friends in 2015 and was a finalist for the 2015 Bermuda Triangle Prize (The Poet's Billow) and the 2019 Patricia Dobler Poetry Award.  A professor emeritus at University of Virginia's Curry School of Education, she earned an MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts in 2015 and has since completed two residencies at the Vermont Studio Center. She lives in Charlottesville, Virginia.

0 Comments

Poems by Linda Trott Dickman

12/15/2020

0 Comments

 
For The Students For 60,000 On Their First Trip to Nicaragua
For Pete White, and all those students.

They got off the plane
stuffed with good intentions
ready to change lives
make bricks
build houses
teach lessons
feed the hungry

The trash from the last of their snacks
disposed of responsibly.
Next stop was after the bumpy
unpredictable ride.
The expectations of primitive
conditions, unfamiliar places
to relieve their bodies,  rest their heads,
Unfamiliar cooks, bellies used to plenty,

met by very excited children.
One weary traveler remembered 
there was one more snack in her bag.
She pulled out two oranges.
The ones she had been saving for herself.

such a sad offering for the small group.
Before she could make a decision
one spirited boy grabbed one.

She watched open mouthed 
as he painstakingly peeled back
the covering, carefully dividing
this juicy treasure among ten.

She wasn’t hungry after that.

©2021 Linda Trott Dickman
Click on the file below to watch the video:
pxl_20210929_202945851.mp4
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File Type: mp4
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​The Hands That Prepared It

For Priscilla Drake Solomon
For all those for whom a crust is a feast
​
She started from a full heart.
Mixed all the elements
Kneaded, working her floured quilters hands
Into the dough, folding shaggy into smooth
Sticky into soft.

Working into a promising mound
Covering with a cotton shroud, 
Letting the dough ferment

Reshaping,
Dividing, cross sectioned
Tucked into bundles
anointing with butter
Cover once more

Rise again like Easter morning.
Bake, remove from oven
deliver with warm wishes
kind words.
A starter for so much more.
Click on the file below to listen to Linda read the poem:
linda_trott_dickman_the_hands_that_prepared_it.mp4
File Size: 6435 kb
File Type: mp4
Download File


For all those still seeking a good meal in the dust.


If the chicken knew what lifted her, 
she could not say, 
strutting in the sun, 
looking for food, then
propelled across the farm
into the dark.

1.
Incredible luck.
A murky tidal wave crashed
across the plain.
I saw it coming,
closed all the shutters.

It looked like the judgment,
dark powdery angry rolls,
rushing toward me.

My defense as effective as my
six year old fighting to bite a thin carrot
with two front teeth missing.

A rust colored film
breaking in to the smallest crack,
the slimmest crevice,
coating everything.
The winds sixty miles an hour or more.

I was grateful my Billy was in school,
they had a storm cellar.
I got that call before the cacophony of the heavens.
The sky now the color of melting Baker's dark chocolate.
And then it was over. 

I heard the cluck and looked twice;
there stood a plump white Leghorn wearing a rusty coat.
Dinner!
Family too thin, eating the last of the root vegetables.
A miracle!
The chicken looked dazed, I wasted no time.

It was a job lifting my eyelids, lifting my arms was easier.
The dust gave me an edge, a better grip on the twiggy legs.

2.
He heard it too. Hungry, out of work,
on the road for days, he started past the house
he needed water, he needed food.

He saw the hulk of dust approaching,
ran for the barn.
This farm had nothing
more than he had left behind.
Undetected he climbed aloft
Listening to what sounded 
like a dump truck was loosing its load overhead.
He waited till the soil stopped raining down.

When it ceased, he heard it.
A surprised cluck.

He would have kept going, 
but for that promising sound.

He heard the pursuit,
the capture
the final strangled cluck,
then the danse macabre in the yard;
wings extended, 
legs in a great hurry, rushing nowhere,
covering ground she had never covered in life.

He watched the woman drain, pluck, sing.
He heard “as I went down in the river to pray” coming from the kitchen.

I put the pot on to boil,
“studying about that good old way.”
Chicken baptized, rinsing the storm off the last of the turnips, onions, carrots, parsnips.
Peeling and singing,
“and who shall wear the starry crown, oh Lord show me the way.”

He waited. 
“Oh Lord show me the way.”
she moved a basket of laundry
out to the line,
the last of the elephantine cloud
lumbering away. 

Shaking the residue
loose from the line,
I lifted the sheets, towels
knowing it would be tomorrow's refrain, 
“oh sinners lets go down
lets go down, come on down
down in the river to pray.”
I smiled for the first time in days.

He whistled soundlessly,
picking up the air...

By the time I returned, more than the storm had blown by
the chicken
the pot
gone,
though he'd had the courtesy to turn off the stove.

If the chicken knew what lifted her, 
she could not say, 
strutting in the sun, 
looking for food, then
propelled across the farm
into the dark.
Click on this LINK to listen to Linda read her poem.
Picture
Linda Trott Dickman has been writing poetry since her first sleep-away camp experience when she was ten years old.  Linda is the author of Robes,  The Air That I Breathe and Road Trip. Linda’s poetry has been published on-line, in Pratik Journal and in several anthologies.  She is the current coordinator of poetry for the Northport Arts Coalition (Northport, NY.),  has taught poetry to children for over 35 years and leads a poetry workshop for adults at Samantha’s Li’l Bit O’ Heaven coffee house in East Northport, NY.  ​

0 Comments

Poem by Anne Harding Woodworth

12/15/2020

0 Comments

 
FAMINE
​

    . . . the body is dyed
    by illness like a piece of cloth
    by an extraneous color.
            —W.G. Sebald

The dyer makes the linen
a deeper color of dug earth,
boils it in water with acacia
until the natural mole’s-back gray-tan
becomes peat-bog purple.

The well-fed lord is not pleased
with the linen’s new color
and wants it changed back.
The dyer replies that once a beginning unfolds,
recovery of what was is not possible.

And he feels helpless walking home that night
to his beyond-hungry child.
On a cot she lies fevered,
her hair fallen out, her mouth without saliva.

Transports come by every evening
to gather the dead, and they jostle
over the river to a far-from-town field,
where blackened by illness tubers also rest.

The dyer lies down next to his daughter,
and while she sleeps,
he tries to solve the undyeing of a piece of cloth.

from Anne Harding Woodworth,
Up From the Root Cellar, Cervena Barva Press, 2006


Click on the link below to listen to Anne read her poem:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/96j6z8srj1rrsg8/Woodworth%E2%80%94Famine.m4a?dl=0
Picture
Anne Harding Woodworth, author of
a sixth book of poetry, The Eyes Have It,
with a seventh, Trouble, coming in late 2020.

0 Comments

Poem by Eileen Trauth

12/15/2020

1 Comment

 
Famish

On the starving plate you filled a hungry
heart with empty food and left a hunger.

You served up soup instead of sympathy,
your way to say what still left a hunger.

You baked a bridge of bread that just revealed 
what you could not cross; it left a hunger.

You offered roast beef that never appeased 
a craving for words, which left a hunger.

You wrote letters with your meals, meant to speak
your silence. Unsent, they left a hunger.

Your dazzling dishes did not nourish; feast
turned to endless fast that left a hunger.

In stillness, as you passed the salt and we 
ate our détente, I was left a hunger.
Click on the file below to hear Eileen read the poem:
famish.m4a
File Size: 1410 kb
File Type: m4a
Download File

Picture
Eileen Trauth is an author, inclusion advocate and Emeritus Professor of Information Sciences & Technology at Pennsylvania State University. She has published ten nonfiction books, many articles and one play. Her creative writing includes poetry, historical fiction and screen writing. She lives in Cincinnati, Ohio. www.eileentrauth.com

​

1 Comment

Poem by Argos MacCallum

12/15/2020

0 Comments

 
Almuerzo

in the summer heat
halted by an insolent red stoplight
I see a man sitting on his haunches
on the opposite curb
of the t-bone intersection
compact dark and round-eyed

cradling a lunch on his knees
as solemn spoon rises to solemn lips
solemn as a state dinner
the curb a timeless throne
within an anthem of silence
an island in the roar of the world

a feast of rice and beans no doubt 
fit for both fisherman and pharoah
spoon rises and dives like a bird of prey
the cardboard bowl the living earth
the serpent of hunger is driven away
and won’t be back again today
Picture
Argos MacCallum is an actor, director, carpenter, theatre manager, and co-founder of Teatro Paraguas, a bilingual theatre company promoting Latinx plays in Santa Fe, New Mexico.  He has lived the past 50 years in his homestead in the shadow of the Cerrillos Hills off the Turquoise Trail outside Santa Fe, where the coyotes party all night long.

​

0 Comments

Poems by Naima Penniman

12/14/2020

1 Comment

 
Listen to these powerful poems by Naima Penniman, program director of Soul Fire Farm. As written by Naima:

"This is poem I wrote and performed that speaks to hunger: These Gardens Are Blueprints
Video: https://youtu.be/KcL1wlC7-rM

Here are 2 other poems you might enjoy:
Being Human - Mama Nature's mirror
Video:  https://youtu.be/EdMHqjN4Wtw

Black Gold tells some U.S. history of the food system and land justice through the voice of the soil."


Picture
1 Comment
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    Poets

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    A.G. Kawamura
    Anne Harding Woodworth
    Argos MacCallum
    Blair Ewing
    Brenda Bunting
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    Debbi Brody
    Don Hamaliuk
    Ed Zahniser
    Eileen Trauth
    Emily Vargas-Barón
    Eric Forsbergh
    Evan Belize
    Gayle Lauradunn
    Glynn Axelrod
    Grace Beeler
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    Heather Banks
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    J R Turek
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    Kalpna Singh-Chitnis
    Kari Gunter-Seymour
    Kathamann
    Kim B Miller
    Kitty Cardwell
    Kitty Jospé
    Linda Dove
    Linda Trott Dickman
    Lindsay Barba
    Lisa Biggar
    Lynn Axelrod
    Margaret Brittingham
    Martha E. Snell
    Michael Glaser
    Michael Minassian
    Milton Carp
    Naima Penniman
    Nan Meneely
    Naomi Ayla
    Philip Harris
    Robbi Nester
    Robert Fleming
    Sharon Anderson
    Sherrell Wigal
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  • Home
  • Hunger Poetry
    • 2021 World Food Day >
      • Poems Submitted for the 2021 World Food Day Poetry Competition
    • Poets Speak Back to Hunger
    • Now more than ever! >
      • Now more than ever: Submitted poems
    • 2020 WFD Poetry Competition >
      • 2020 World Food Day - submitted poems
      • 2020 World Food Day Poetry Competition announcement
    • World Food Day Poetry Competition 2019 >
      • World Food Day 2019 - Submitted Poems
    • World Food Day Poetry Competition 2018 >
      • WFD 2018 - Submitted Poems
    • Maryland Poets
    • International Poets
  • About
    • About the Initiative
    • Initiative Founder
    • Advisory Board
  • News & Blog
    • Events
  • Young!
    • Poems by Young Poets
    • Videos
    • Materials for Teachers
  • Library
    • Extent of Hunger >
      • Global Hunger: Progress & Challenges
      • Hunger in the US
    • Historic Accounts of Hunger >
      • Africa
      • The Americas
      • Asia
      • Europe and Russia
    • Historical Poems
    • Interviews
    • Recent highlights
  • Create
    • Prompts to help you get started
  • Contact/Submit/Take Action
    • Submission Guidelines
    • Call to Action
    • Resources & Donations >
      • Global resources
      • US resources
      • Maryland resources