Tuesday, September 6, 2022

Dr. Jedidiah's Diary Episode #91. Guns and Gems

Dr. Jedidiah’s Diary

Dr. Jedidiah is a psychiatrist who loves traveling, meeting new people, and exploring different cultures. As a single father who lost his wife to drug overdose 10 years ago, he has not been his old perky self for the last decade. During those hard years, he has met hundreds of, thousands of people from various walks of life around all over the world. Meeting new people and listening to their stories outside his office have given him different feelings from the ones through the formal encounter groups or being truly honest with himself. Here is Dr. Jedidiah’s monologue that has left him with some food for thoughts in life…. .or a fodder to justify his own mistakes in the past.

 

Episode # 91. Guns and Gems

Each time I think about the Liberian boy Morris, my mind turns into a place strewn with all different kinds of emotions. Sometimes I feel blessed to have known him, because he helped me feel better about myself; but at the same time, I sense indelible bitterness creeping up from deep down inside, because Morris could not have become such a torn lad had it not been for crooked and insatiable minds of the adults. He always thanked me for bringing him all the way to America, but his sad, big almond eyes were telling me the truth of what he had to go through without a clue in the past.

 


I was one of the visiting M.D.s from the medical exchange program to treat Liberians. The stuffy and humid air mixed with wind-borne sand dust was welcoming our medical team to their mysterious land. A lot of my patients that I met there were from Sierra Leone. One boy that caught my eyes had no left arm from the elbow down. It was cut off by RUF soldiers. The boy named Morris said he was still feeling twinge of pain in his lost forearm. When he asked me if it was only his delusional symptoms, I wasn't able to answer his question on the spot. It was not because he already lost his arm, but because the pain must still feel way too raw, deep, and unbearable for the little boy to resume his carefree life like a normal kid. Although Morris was very lucky to be brought to Liberia by his uncle, his bloody memories in the war zone still kept lingering on. Many of his cousins in Sierra Leone were recruited and forced to dig up diamonds night and day, and this young one always told me not to buy and give a diamond ring to my loved one. I can’t forget the wrath and despair in his eyes when he said diamonds would be cursing anyone who owned it. 
 

 *Picture Source: https://ukdhm.org/sierra-leone-amputees-turn-to-art-2002/


As I was wrapping up the exchange program with my colleagues there, I was strongly determined to take this smart boy to the States so he could live his life as a happy child, ….otherwise a kid with a better place to breathe. He stayed with a foster family for a year and was adopted by them. Morris’ adoptive parents said he was selected as the Young Poets of Town, and many of his poems were even published in the national poem book of authority later on.

 

This is one of his pieces that I cherish in my patients’ files. I get speechless and full of thoughts about Morris’ childhood.

 

Guns and Gems


by Morris Kamara Smith

 

The smell of gunshots

Keeps the darkest days in my memory.

Sometimes it is like rotten eggs left in pots

And some other times, it hollers at me in my head to let it be.

 

I was a little soldier, but not an innocent swain.

Forced to kill and take other souls like there’s no tomorrow.

Totally drain in the swamp of human bloodstain,

No  xenial smile could soothe my sorrow.

 

On the day when my cousin Jo came back with a stolen diamond

My aunt cried a river and asked him not to steal the gems anymore.

She looked at me without an arm and said to Jo “Wanna end up in that horizon?”

Moms could eat no more, sleep no more, and laugh no more.

 

Guns and gems make me moan.

Soldiers in the war zone and cognoscenti at jewelry shops

Always remind me of lost souls in Sierra Leone.

I hope to live as a farmer who could be happy with his seasonal crops.

 



Expressions

    1.  (be) strewn with…: spread or scattered here and there

 

    2.  had it not been for something/someone: without or in the absence of something/ someone

 

    3.  insatiable: impossible to satisfy

 

    4.  wind-borne sand: sand moved or blown by the wind

 

    5.  RUF: Revolutionary United Front is a rebel group that fought a failed eleven-year war in Sierra Leone, beginning in 1991 and ending in 2002

 

    6.  swain: a young lover/ country youth

 

    7.   cognoscenti: people who are considered to be especially well informed about a particular subject/ expert

 

 

 

 

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