
Heritier
A young poet from Burundi known as 'First Born Poet' who writes and performs poetry to express situations and feel good.
Poet Information
Arrived in Malawi
2017
Biography by
Lisa Gilman
Heritier
Biography
Heritier is a young man from Burundi who fled his country, seeking safety. He arrived in Malawi in 2017, alongside his three brothers. He is pursuing his studies here in the Dzaleka Refugee Camp.
His nickname is “First Born Poet.” He loves poetry so much because his art is poetry. He writes poems and performs them as well. He learned poetry through Branches, a group he joined in 2018. He was taught poetry by Hassan Chilewu and John Kazadi. His friends, such as Espoir, contributed to his journey to poetry as well. He was inspired by Angela, a lady he saw performing in the group. His first time performing was in 2019, in the Branches group, and he has been performing ever since.
When he is writing poetry, he feels good. When he is going through situations, he writes them down and feels good because it is written down on paper. It is also fun. It makes one feel good when he writes. His poem, “Keys of the Better Place,” was written this year on World Refugee Day. It talks about safety. According to him, everyone has the right to be safe. The other poem, “No One Like Mama,” he wrote in acknowledgement of mothers. One can miss their mother and cannot be able to exist without them.
His words to readers of this book and website are “Poetry is good, and if someone has the talent, they must not hide it, because when someone is reciting a poem, they usually feel good. When performing about certain situations that happened in life, it feels good and takes out of the mind and the heart, and you are free. To those who have a chance to support poets or people with talent, you should do so, because when someone has something and they don’t deliver it, that thing usually dies inside them, which is too bad! Thank you!”
Featured Poem: KEYS OF THE BETTER PLACE
Before this distraction Life was a simple word to describe We were used to mingling with different people from different cultures and races.
Our grandpa used to tell us charming folktales when we lit the fire and sat around it. And when the world changed We were called victims of an ended war and now we are called audience of this discrimination, invasion and corruption which destroys our collaboration NOW We are busy, busy like bees searching for a person to solve and end all these gunshots, sounds of nuclear bombs NOW…
We are tired of this life Changing our beautiful identities into one As if we are children of the some feathers, although we don’t flock together, however They said Wherever
Whenever our rights are still the key which opens the doors of the better place Doors of the paradise Doors of the world with gender equality
Which burns inequality Everyone with ability to oppose or propose A world without conflict uses negotiation when solving different questions, and now my book is open .
They said that my future is under a black paper They said that my future is dead cuz of my identity They acted as cruel as death in order to bury my dreams and put them in the coffin
They did everything to show me that Beggars can never be Choosers But I am still standing up, fighting for my rights, but all in all Safeness is the key of the human race, which shines in the darkness YES!!!
I am a refugee But being a refugee doesn’t mean that my rights were written in the middle of the book with 1000 pages 100 letters
in 10 stanzas And 1 individual to read it all NO!!!!!!!
Being a human means having a right to life A right to live a bright and better life which means Whoever Wherever Whenever, everyone has the right to be safe.
Biography collected and written by Lisa Gilman
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