Proxy of Demescia
TNPer
- TNP Nation
- Demescia
Nasıım walks through the nave of the shadowy church, his boots clapping against the laced rug that covers the aisle. A chandelier hangs high but only somewhat illuminates the arcade of cobblestone columns and the men and women in tatters who sit beneath it. They all gaze at Nasıım Mbensa, the pensive man in the green beret as they know him. He does not look back into their eyes until he reaches the altar, backgrounded by a colorful apse of Messianist paintings from long ago.
There, he surveys his audience: a congregation of fetid, bruised refugees—the kind he used to be a few decades ago. The glow of the chandelier highlights his medium complexion—his high cheekbones—his baggy eyes from the nights he toiled, both in his homeland and here in Naizerre. Pastor Mätâdi stands to his left, dressed in his usual black robe that manifests his corpulent figure. To his right is former Colonel Abie, still wearing the colors of the Naizerri uniform as well as stern glower that was typical of him.
Mbensa raises both of his hands towards the crowd. “Nzoni gango,” he says, the crowd greeting back with “balao.” “Seeing that about everyone is here,” he starts, “Mätâdi will begin prayer.” He steps aside and lets Mätâdi claim the floor. Everyone bows their heads and recites the Lord’s Prayer from the Holy Book, except Mbensa and Abie. Messianism reminds them too much of the struggle that they’ve escaped from long ago…a struggle that the first world does not know and is not meant to. A Kanadian wouldn’t know ndâmasüa about sweatshops.
The prayer finishes and Mbensa returns to his place in front of the silver altar decorated with flowers and candles. “I, as a traditional animist, don’t believe in the same God you do, but whatever powers that be…they be on our side. Last night was a miracle mission, treacherous but nonetheless another blessing unto Ubgandia.”
“We smuggled fifty-eight slaves into Naizerre, one of our most successful exoduses,” says Abie in his rich deep voice. “Thank you, Mister Temitope,” the bald man was smiling from within the crowd, “for allowing us to use your trucks for this undertaking, and thank all of you for taking us one step further towards a repressionless Ubgandia.” The crowd snaps quietly in substitution of applause.
“Aye, Colonel Abie. The path ahead is turbulent, especially as the Hems grow wise to our tactics. We lost several volunteers that night. It seemed soldiers were camped in the mountains where we were. Families of the casualties will be compensated; your blood did great work.”
“We need better camouflage,” a woman speaks up from the crowd. “I saw a couple of caves to hide in during our last run.”
“That could work…if META doesn’t give them drones.” The outlanders erupts into babel. They have all heard the news about the Somaad application to the association. Mbensa commands the volume to lower with his hands. “I am as outraged as all of you. Free trade of products reaped from bleeding is a step in the wrong direction. That is why we must all do our part in telling Mboto Jones not to say ‘aye.’ I do not know how many of you can pay bus fare, but next Sunday you will find me in the square of Togbata making myself heard in front of the masses.” He garners a round of snaps.
“I’m going there too!” a man says.
“Me three,” says a woman. In moments about a dozen people stand up and volunteer.
“I’m glad to see that our morale is as much as our thirst for justice. While the rest of the world does not take action, ladies and gentlemen, we do. It doesn’t matter how many bullets the Hems send, how many drones they send,” everyone starts snapping, “or how many dogs they send. We will not rest until the Somi Union ceases their wicked ways and until every slave in a factory or on a plantation is free and equal.”
There, he surveys his audience: a congregation of fetid, bruised refugees—the kind he used to be a few decades ago. The glow of the chandelier highlights his medium complexion—his high cheekbones—his baggy eyes from the nights he toiled, both in his homeland and here in Naizerre. Pastor Mätâdi stands to his left, dressed in his usual black robe that manifests his corpulent figure. To his right is former Colonel Abie, still wearing the colors of the Naizerri uniform as well as stern glower that was typical of him.
Mbensa raises both of his hands towards the crowd. “Nzoni gango,” he says, the crowd greeting back with “balao.” “Seeing that about everyone is here,” he starts, “Mätâdi will begin prayer.” He steps aside and lets Mätâdi claim the floor. Everyone bows their heads and recites the Lord’s Prayer from the Holy Book, except Mbensa and Abie. Messianism reminds them too much of the struggle that they’ve escaped from long ago…a struggle that the first world does not know and is not meant to. A Kanadian wouldn’t know ndâmasüa about sweatshops.
The prayer finishes and Mbensa returns to his place in front of the silver altar decorated with flowers and candles. “I, as a traditional animist, don’t believe in the same God you do, but whatever powers that be…they be on our side. Last night was a miracle mission, treacherous but nonetheless another blessing unto Ubgandia.”
“We smuggled fifty-eight slaves into Naizerre, one of our most successful exoduses,” says Abie in his rich deep voice. “Thank you, Mister Temitope,” the bald man was smiling from within the crowd, “for allowing us to use your trucks for this undertaking, and thank all of you for taking us one step further towards a repressionless Ubgandia.” The crowd snaps quietly in substitution of applause.
“Aye, Colonel Abie. The path ahead is turbulent, especially as the Hems grow wise to our tactics. We lost several volunteers that night. It seemed soldiers were camped in the mountains where we were. Families of the casualties will be compensated; your blood did great work.”
“We need better camouflage,” a woman speaks up from the crowd. “I saw a couple of caves to hide in during our last run.”
“That could work…if META doesn’t give them drones.” The outlanders erupts into babel. They have all heard the news about the Somaad application to the association. Mbensa commands the volume to lower with his hands. “I am as outraged as all of you. Free trade of products reaped from bleeding is a step in the wrong direction. That is why we must all do our part in telling Mboto Jones not to say ‘aye.’ I do not know how many of you can pay bus fare, but next Sunday you will find me in the square of Togbata making myself heard in front of the masses.” He garners a round of snaps.
“I’m going there too!” a man says.
“Me three,” says a woman. In moments about a dozen people stand up and volunteer.
“I’m glad to see that our morale is as much as our thirst for justice. While the rest of the world does not take action, ladies and gentlemen, we do. It doesn’t matter how many bullets the Hems send, how many drones they send,” everyone starts snapping, “or how many dogs they send. We will not rest until the Somi Union ceases their wicked ways and until every slave in a factory or on a plantation is free and equal.”