Poets Talk: 5 Questions with Isah Aliyu Chiroma

The sensitive craft of writing poems flows to me randomly even at odd or awkward moments. For me, it is a form of a relationship, a bond between me and the words flying in my mind as I would feel the immediate need to attend to it whenever I get the inspiration.

The sensitive craft of writing poems flows to me randomly even at odd or awkward moments. For me, it is a form of a relationship, a bond between me and the words flying in my mind as I would feel the immediate need to attend to it whenever I get the inspiration.

Konya Shamsrumi: What is the process of writing a poem like for you? Is it a lot of hard work or easy?

Isah Aliyu Chiroma: Writing comes to me at any time. It comes randomly, in just about any condition I find myself in. Sometimes, I might be walking, even eating, and see something that I need to pass on to others. I write anytime I want. I do write poems in my head and when I get paper, flush them out to have some ease. I can’t live a day, two days or maybe probably three days at the most, without crafting something. Most of my poems arise from personal experience, what I see around.

Konya Shamsrumi: Please describe your sense of identity in this or any possible world in imagery or metaphor?

Isah Aliyu Chiroma: A garden. I flow with my words, creating a garden where my hungry mind will have peace—like nature, to write on the clouds visible to the world. I am the smoke that moves randomly through the mind of readers, telling them what I saw. I am like the bird’s eye that sees what cannot be seen from the sky. Enfolding my life and flipping through verse, I find inner peace.

Konya Shamsrumi: If any of your poems could literarily save a person’s life, which poem would it be and can you describe the person whose life you think it would have saved?

Isah Aliyu Chiroma: One of my poems that could save a person’s life is titled “off like a prom dress”. It gives advice to budding writers like me, when we then lived together at the threshold. It shows how sad it was to find yourself in that moment. And at last, I gave them advice before waving goodbye. It can save the lives of some budding writer who has passion.

"Off like a prom dress"
(c) Isah Aliyu Chiroma
 
We loom
In mud
Of dreams
 
When tears
Gush out
Cascading
 
 
It flashes memories
From the centuries
Like the rainbow
 
The bone
Was chewed
Under the sand
 
In a cave
Covered by strings
Like the spiderweb
 
Catch the train
For it will rain
In the garden of words
Isah Aliyu Chiroma

Konya Shamsrumi: What does Africa mean to you, as potential or reality?

Isah Aliyu Chiroma: Africa is a whole world filled with all you need; a place so beautiful to live in, with different traditions and cultures. A place filled with nature and peace of mind, place with a philosophy that tells you I AM because YOU ARE, a place of serenity and happiness. It is the home of the giant poet, Wole Soyinka, who touched the world with his words; home of the Black Rock, with a legacy that can rule the world. We are bestowed with a lot of gifts, and I hope we use them more effectively in the future.

Konya Shamsrumi: Could you share with us one poem you’ve been most impressed or fascinated by? Tell us why and share favorite lines from it.

Isah Aliyu Chiroma: The poem I have been most fascinated by was a poem by Rumi titled In your light I learn how to love. These beautiful lines, written by Rumi, reminds me of some moments in my early days of writing when I found myself in the ocean of love to quench a thirst. But it was a different story in the end. My favorite lines from the poem are:

In your beauty, how to make poems
  You dance inside my chest
  Where no one sees you
  But sometimes I do
  And that sight becomes this art

Isah Aliyu Chiroma aka The Hungry Mind, is a poet, short story writer and essayist from Bauchi State. He is a student of Usmanu Danfodio University, Sokoto, who derives pleasure from reading and flipping through pages. His work has appeared in some anthologies and he self-published two anthologies titled Ocean of Love and Bliss In the Greens (themed on nature).

Richard Ali
Richard Ali is a Nigerian writer whose poems were first published in 2008. He has served in the National EXCO of the Association of Nigerian Authors and sits on the board of Uganda’s Babishai Niwe Poetry Foundation. A member of the Jalada Writers Cooperative based in Nairobi, his work has been published in African Writing, Jalada, Saraba Magazine and elsewhere. The Anguish and Vigilance of Things is his debut collection, was published in 2020. He practices Law in Abuja, Nigeria.