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Form of the week: Balwo"
The Balwo (Somali for "misfortune") created by
Abdi Sinimo is a genre of poetry and music expressing unhappy love in short verse with "striking imagery". *Wikipedia. After reading several Balwo's, it appears the structure of the genre is between 2 and 5 lines, most commonly 4 lines. The content expresses pain or loss from some misfortune of life, followed by a transition to expressing loss of love.
Abdi Sinimo, a Somali of the Reer Nuur subclan of the Gadabuursi first employed this genre in 1945 while working as a lorry driver for the Djiboutian Port Authority. He was driving his truck and he had the "balwo" or misfortune of the truck breaking down in bush country. Though being a skilled mechanic, after a lot of time and effort, he was unable to repair it. Finally, he sat down and composed this:
Balwoy! Hoy balwoy
Waha i baleyey mooyaan
Waha i baleyey babur
Waha i baleyey berguba.
Balwoy! O Balwoy
I know not what made me suffer
It is a truck that made me suffer
She is berguba [a girl's name] who made me suffer
The elements of the Balwo are:
1. Short, a poem in 2, 4 or 5 lines, the most common appears to be 4 lines.
2. chant like rhythm which is at the discretion of the poet.
3. a misfortune of circumstance is expressed
4. followed by a loss or pain of a particular love.