CAIRO TRAFFIC

 

The streets are jammed

with old cars, luxury cars,

battered trucks, buses, 

microbuses, motorcycles,

bicycles, donkey carts, 

and stray cats and people 

weaving through stalled traffic.

 

Men in faded, colorless

clothing, are attempting 

to sweep into pitiful piles

desert dust infused with 

grimy gasoline gunk, 

candy wrappers, crushed 

water bottles, twisted straws, 

 

soda cans, flattened bottle caps,

cigarette packs, broken lighters, 

dried leaves and old newspapers 

but with the slightest of breezes

their futile efforts scatter sands

whirling and climbing in swirls

while empty plastic bags,

 

rising like untethered kites,

cling to ornate iron railings

and straggly trees just trying

to survive. But isn’t that what 

we are all doing, just trying 

to survive in places more 

and more inimical to life?

 

Where are the parks 

for children to dig holes to China

or to replay a lost battle, 

but with a different ending? 

Where are the lush gardens 

for worn-out workers and their

tired wives to refresh and refuel?

 

Not here, not here, screams 

the traffic, not here.  Such 

luxuries are only for the 

privileged in distant, closed 

compounds outside the city, 

not here anymore.