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Home Human Rights in China

Winners of Friends of Falun Gong Poetry Competition Announced

May 13, 2023
in Human Rights in China, Pantoum, Poetry, Poetry Contests, Villanelle
A A
14
poetry/mantyk/poetry contests

.

FIRST PLACE

.

Tooth and Claw

a pantoum

by Susan Jarvis Bryant

Observe the tooth and claw of savage deed.
Beware the ferric breath of looming dread.
Don’t let the taunt of terror sow its seed—
The heartless reap a harvest seeping red.

Beware the ferric breath of looming dread
On ill winds wafting from a shady shore.
The heartless reap a harvest seeping red—
The truth is leaking neath the Dragon’s door.

On ill winds wafting from a shady shore
Ghosts whisper of the fate of Falun Gong.
The truth is leaking neath the Dragon’s door
To ring from every bold and golden tongue.

Ghosts whisper of the fate of Falun Gong
In pleas that rise in prayers for those in pain
To ring from every bold and golden tongue,
To tell of horror’s fierce and hellish reign.

In pleas that rise in prayers for those in pain
Let’s speak for brave hearts robbed of song and sound.
Let’s tell of horror’s fierce and hellish reign.
Let’s stand for meek souls beaten to the ground.

Let’s speak for brave hearts robbed of song and sound.
Don’t let the taunt of terror sow its seed.
Let’s stand for meek souls beaten to the ground—
Observe the tooth and claw of savage deed.

.

A Reading of Susan Jarvis Bryant’s winning poem in this episode of Classical Poets Live:

.

.

SECOND PLACE

.

The Gentle Ones

(for Falun Gong victims of CCP torture)

and. . . those that followed their doctrines
met with hatred and were killed

—Justin Martyr, about the Stoics

by Monika Cooper

The gentle ones are not always the tame.
The tyrants fear truth tellers most of all:
A movement they can’t understand, a name
Unknown to them or theirs the people call.
We know the Stoics, men of discipline
And calm, who met with hatred and were killed.
When hate meets virtue, which of them will win?
When flowing movement, meaningful, is stilled,
Arrested, bent into a wrenching pose
Designed by enemies to double pain,
Your limbs not free to hold the wheel, compose
Your soul into the lines you learned again.
Recall the poems. Say, deep within, the name.
The gentle ones will never be the tame.

.

.

THIRD PLACE

.
Bad China

by James A. Tweedie

On Christmas and Thanksgiving, the good China’s what we use.
It makes the food taste better, whether turkey, ham or stews.
All other times the ordinary China’s “good to go,”
It’s sturdy and reliable, more “practical” than “show.”

But hidden in the cupboard, back behind our plastic ware,
We bury the bad China that we don’t trust anywhere.
For though its surface looks just fine and dandy to the eye
Its glaze had lead and other stuff that could cause folks to die.

And underneath each plate is stamped a question in red ink:
“This dish was made by Falun Gong and Uighurs, don’t you think?”
It also says it’s “Made in China” in a workcamp jail.
The red ink’s from the blood of folks they won’t let out on bail.

Bad China chips quite easily, with edges that are sharp
Enough to excise and transplant a person’s lungs and heart.
The pattern on each plate seems fine and elegant as well—
A pattern swiped from someone else’s copyright, do tell!

And so, we eat and drink our fill and go our merry way,
While with our blinkered eyes we blindly live from day to day.
And on and on and on we go through life without a care,
As long as we pretend that our bad China isn’t there.

.

.

FOURTH PLACE

.

The Real Cost

a villanelle

by Joshua C. Frank

We close our eyes to China’s Holocaust
And funnel money to their torture stations
Because we like to buy at lower cost.

Good Falun Gong practitioners are tossed
To killing floors by Chinese regulations—
We close our eyes to China’s Holocaust.

We look past slaughter with our hearts of frost,
Comparing price in icy calculations,
Because we like to buy at lower cost.

While we, on “made in China” phones, accost
With slogans backing brown-skinned populations,
We close our eyes to China’s Holocaust.

To buy cheap, blood-stained goods from them, we’ve glossed
Over screams and dying lamentations
Because we like to buy at lower cost.

The cause of life, is that forever lost?
The Dragon’s fire is fueled by richer nations—
We close our eyes to China’s Holocaust
Because we like to buy at lower cost.

.

.

HONORABLE MENTION

Read the Honorable Mention poems
on the Friends of Falun Gong website here.

.

“In a School of Transformation” by Paul A. Freeman

“A Continent Away” by Cheryl Corey

“I Must Condemn the CCP!” by Roy E. Peterson

“Falun Gong’s Plight” by Ofilwe Maloiso

“Falun Gong” by Kevin MacAlan

.

.

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Comments 14

  1. Petlwane Molotsi says:
    3 years ago

    Congratulations to all the winners … The work of 26 magic symbols of written communication.

    Reply
  2. Michael Pietrack says:
    3 years ago

    Congrats! What a line-up!

    Reply
  3. jd says:
    3 years ago

    I join in congratulating all. Bravo!

    Reply
  4. Paul Freeman says:
    3 years ago

    Congratulations to the winners. Well done!

    Reply
  5. ABB says:
    3 years ago

    A lot of great poems here in the name of a good cause.

    Congrats to Susan—another feather in your cap!

    Reply
  6. Norma Pain says:
    3 years ago

    Amazing poetry for a very good cause. Congratulations on your win Susan.

    Reply
  7. James Sale says:
    3 years ago

    Congratulations all – good to read such fine poetry.

    Reply
  8. Margaret Coats says:
    3 years ago

    Congratulations to all for your beautifully effective writing, and for the special effort you made to produce it, in honor of those pictured above and for all who are still suffering.

    Reply
  9. Joseph S. Salemi says:
    3 years ago

    All the winners have produced excellent work, and each poem zeros in on the horrible persecution of Falun Gong, and the unmitigated evil of the Chinese Communist Party. Since coming to power, the CCP has murdered more persons through starvation, forced labor, executions, and concentration-camp confinement than the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany combined.

    Reply
  10. Paddy Raghunathan says:
    3 years ago

    Congrats to all winners! Also, an honorable mention to everyone who participated.

    Best,

    Paddy

    Reply
  11. Joshua C. Frank says:
    3 years ago

    Congratulations to all winners and honorable mentions, especially Susan!

    Reply
  12. Susan Jarvis Bryant says:
    3 years ago

    I am over the moon! Thank you for all the kind comments. My congratulations to all the winners and honorable mentions – it is a real privilege to be among you in a competition that draws attention to pure evil so readily swept under the carpet in the interest of politics. The truth matters.

    Reply
  13. Mike Bryant says:
    3 years ago

    Congratulations Susan. Your poetry always shines for freedom, truth and beauty.

    https://fofg.org/competitions/2023-poetry-competition-winners/

    Reply
  14. Monika Cooper says:
    3 years ago

    Congratulations, Susan and all. I pray justice and liberty for Falun Gong practitioners and all Chinese people. End the CCP!

    Reply

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