CHRISTMAS IN BAMENDA
6:00 a.m.
The sun is risen as usual
But with this excitement in the air
It is impossible not to know
What day of the year it is
Speakers are turned up high
Blasting BONEY M’s “Christmas Album” to the four winds
Children are especially happy
Awake much earlier than usual
Smiling from ear to ear
Restless for a reason they think is known only to them:
Today is that fateful day
The day they finally have access to Mama’s tasty goodies!
Mothers are especially busy
Putting finishing touches on housekeeping or cooking,
Barking out warnings to distracted children
Who don’t seem to be taking seriously enough
The importance of church on this day
Or calling out impatiently to tardy fathers
Who are frenziedly searching every nook and cranny of their homes
For that bible they remember keeping
On some shelf or pile of books
On this same day last year
9:00 a.m.
The dusty streets are filling up
With people on their way to church
So keen on looking and staying neat
It’s hard to believe they’re going to the same churches
They’ve been going to all year:
Hair shaved or made in different, more flamboyant styles
Wigs in different colors and shapes—and sizes
Shoes and clothes bought just for this day
a.k.a “Christmas clothes”—
From the classy, to the bad, to the downright ridiculous
All in a (purported) bid to properly welcome
The newborn King of Kings
12 o’clock
By afternoon
The King has been officially welcomed,
His guests in different venues banqueting
Clanging spoons and plates
And the occasional laugh
Audible from near and far to the interested ear
The near-silence proof that tongues sometimes
Get too busy with other things
To waste precious moments forming words
2:00 p.m.
The streets are almost deserted now
The unrepentant afternoon sun
And the Harmattan’s furious, brown winds
Mostly braved by “Christmas visitors”:
Unabashedly rapacious children
Who are visibly contemplating
How much space their little stomachs have left
And where their next stop for the day will be,
Intent on seeking out that last chicken slice
That will leave them as bloated as the balloons they carry
7:30 p.m.
Alas, time is a nimble thing
And darkness falls ever so quickly
Chicks must go to sleep
Early birds must now retire
And leave the town for the night owls
Whose parliament tonight
Is overflowing with fledgling members
Who’ve decided to leave the comfort of their nests
For various joints
To fully indulge in some guilty pleasures
Without fear of judgment
Where all can see and hear
At least once before the year ends