Nebiy Mekonnen 
Translator

on Lyrikline: 1 poems translated

from: amharique to: anglais

Original

Translation

#evolutionarypoems1

amharique | Mihret Kebede

በጸጥታ መኃል…. አርምሞ ለሰማ ጸጥታ ወግ አለው…. ሚኒሊክ እንዳለው
አሁን እኔና አንተ… አሁን አንተና እኔ ካወራው ሁላ የትኛው ተወዶ… የትኛው ተጠላ ?፤
ይሄው ከላይ መንደር
ሰው ከቀየው ጋራ… እንዳይነጋገር ወገኛው ወዳጄ…. ለራሱም ያልበጄ ወግ ለሌለው ሃሳብ …ወግ እያሳደደ የመንደሬውን ሃቅ …ቁርሾ እያደረገ
ኮሽ ባለ ቁጥር …. ስንት ማቲ አስፈጄ ? ?
ኽረ እንዴት ነው ጎበዝ …ምንድነው ባገሬው እየሆነ ያለው… ይሄኛው ከተማ…መኃል ሀገር ያለው
የሚለው እያለው… ለምን ነው ዝም ያለው ?
እያልኩ ደጋግሜ…. እሞገተዋልሁ ታሪክ ላጣ ቀየ… ታሪክ እመዛለሁ
እንደዚህ እላለሁ……በጸጥታ መሃል… አርምሞ ለሰማ ጸጥታ ወግ አለው… ሚኒሊክ እንዳለው፤
እንግዲህ ሃሳቤ… በሃሳብ ተቀጣ
ስንት ንጉስ ይንገስ…ስንት ንጉስ ይምጣ
ጸጥ ያለው መንደሬ ….ተንጦ ተንጦ ቅቤ እንዲያወጣ ?፤ አሁንም እዚያው ነኝ… ያልተተነተነ ብርቱ ጥያቄ አለኝ ጸጥ እረጭ እያለ …ቀየው ያወጋኛል
በዝምታው መሃል… ታሪክ ይነግረኛል ታሪክ እየበላ ….ታሪኬን ነጥቆኛል፤
ሳንጃው ጎረቤቴም እንዲህ ያወጋገኛል “የድሮ ዝምታ የድሮ ዝምታ
ለንጉስ መብረቅ ነው ለአምላክ ሹክሹክታ” እያለ እያስባለ…ተስፋ  ያስቆርጠኛል ኑሮየን በነበር … በዜሮ እያጣፋ….
ትረካውን ነግሮ ….ታሪክ የማይሰራ ትውልድ ያደርገኛል፤ እኔ ግን እዚያው ነኝ …እኔ ግን እዚያው ነኝ
ከከተማው መሃል …ከተማ ጠፍቶብኝ ሰርክ የምፋለመው ብርቱ ጥያቄ አለኝ፤ “ኽረ አንተ ከተማ …ኽረ አንተ ከተማ
ጸጥ ካለው መንደርህ… ከቅኔው ገጽህ ላይ…. ወርቁን እንዲያወጣ
ስንት ዘመን እንፍጂ…. ስንት ሀሳብ ይቀጣ ጸጥታ ሚያዳምጥ…ንጉስ እስኪመጣ ? ? ?”

© Mihret Kebede
Audio production: Haus für Poesie, 2022

#evolutionarypoems1

anglais

For he who listens silently to silence, amidst serenity so tranquil,

amidst those silenced, and silence spoken through tales of how Menelik aptly said: silence has its

own say!

From what you and I talked about, so far, so long, which one is left to love, which one is left to hate?

From the status cue above, from that forbore talking to the villagers from above,

and to the person made of talk, with no benefit even for himself,

who by a void thought to try to shadow tales spying on the very truth of the people.

Woe to him, who by a slight sound became a coward, inflicting hidden injury,

letting thousands get killed.

Countrymen! What is this mishap, this catastrophe that rained on our people? Is a stronger silence

needed to be heard?

Why is the city at the centre of silence while it has some truth to tell?

Should I challenge what reigns with new telling stories telling silence on behalf of the people who

lost

their voice to history?

And I say vehemently,

as Menelik aptly said: silence

has its own say! Still my thoughts punished by other thoughts, thinking how many kings shall we

expect,

how many tales shall sound unheard silence anew?

Now my country whips a cream like butter extracted from shaken

milk. Still, now, here I am

with a stringent question

ever unanalyzed ever unanswered.

Though thought so silent, so through thought so unquiet, so the neighbourhood tells me its tale in

tranquility, so narrating

its history, dissolving its history and stealing mine. Now

my old neighbor’s old tale tells like a dagger: ‘The mere ancient silence,

a bolt from the blue for the king, a whisper to God.’

So said the old neighbor, so made us in despair, so nullifies my life, so by a zero cancelled.

So he, by telling his tale of past

silence was loud enough to be heard. And this reduces me to a non-acting generation

that can’t make its own history its own history.

And yet, here I am, still here, still losing a city within a city. Still asking a question that I fight

still in each passing day:

‘O! Dear city, dear city,

In your silent village, you are within a “Wax – and – Gold” complexion.

And to distil the Gold, how many eras shall we exhaust?

How many thoughts shall we crush until we raise a sound king,

who can

listen to our silence.’ 

Translation from the Amharic by Nebiy Mekonnen & Eric Ellingsen