The Soil has been watered

By Nicodemus Minde

The soil has been watered

with patriots’ blood—

lives split open

by bullets that tore through

the very soul of a nation.


A country is born anew

in that trembling courage,

in the fear once swallowed

by the cry for justice.

Blood sinks into the earth,

and from it rises

a braver demand—

for the simple, sacred thing

even the fallen longed for:

a home for all.


Yet now, they turn away—

deaf, denying, defying—

while the ground drinks more blood

from a people who refuse

the chains of the oppressor.


And now everyone,

even they,

carry a quiet weeping inside—

hearts pierced

by bullets meant

to silence breath and memory.


You know.

I know.

We have a neighbor gone,

a kindred missing,

a life snapped short

by a single shot.


A nation stands wounded

but unbroken.

The soil, heavy with blood,

has learned how to cry—

and when it does,

the people gather

with a courage never seen before.


This blood-wet earth

is renewing the nation.

From the heights of Mwanza

to the quiet fields of Mbeya,

from Makambako’s roads

to the heart of Dodoma,

from Dar es Salaam’s shores

to the eternal watch

of Kilimanjaro and Serengeti—

the land carries the echo

of a nation’s sorrow.


Yet still,

as once was foretold:

Weep not, Tanzania.

Not now.

Never shall the blood of patriots

be spilled in vain.


For in this soil, dripping red—

while some bury their loved ones

and others have none left to find—

live the names we must not lose:

the missing, the fallen,

the heroes whose sacrifice

will one day

renew the nation’s soul.


November 2025

Nairobi