Artificial
Intelligence
Rivers overflow
their banks
houses are
demolished
cars swept away
by the raging
waters:
man has
disrupted nature.
In vain
wisdom’s warning
words.
Would a chip,
implanted in the brain,
offer more
wisdom or even more blindness
and
indoctrination?
Useless Prayers
So many
calamities take place on earth
continually and
increasingly plagued
by disasters and
injustice,
although
millions of prayers
are daily sent
to heaven.
But which God,
who speaks all those languages,
can give them a
hearing, when it is man
who disrupts
even the heavenly vault?
A Victim
Not yet closed
but wide-eyed
and full of
horror
the eyes
pursed the lips
because time was
too short
for a farewell
greeting
for a last
prayer.
In Vain
All day long
it thundered and
lightninged
as if heaven
wanted to knock
at whatever door
to be heard,
concerned
about the
downfall
not only of the
climate
but also of
humanity.
Hope
It is winter,
the chilly wind
has torn off
the last leaves
from the trees
which before
were protection
and
accommodation for the birds.
They shiver in
the cold
but still
whistle
because they
also hope
for better
times.
GERMAIN DROOGENBROODT
GERMAIN DROOGENBROODT is an
internationally known poet. He is also translator, publisher and promoter of
modern international poetry. He wrote short stories and literary reviews, but
mainly poetry, so far 18 books, published in 33 countries. As founder of the
Belgian publishing house POINT Editions he published more than eighty
collections of modern, international poetry, organised and co-organised several
international poetry festivals in Spain, co-founder and advisor of JUNPA (Japan
Universal Poets Association), general counsel of the Chinese cultural
Association Huifeng, International Shanghai and founding president of the
Spanish cultural foundation ITHACA. He also collaborates with several
international poetry associations. Several famous artists, such as the Indian
Satish Gupta, made paintings inspired by his poetry and also music was composed
to his poems. He set up the internationally greatly appreciated project Poetry
without Borders, publishing twice a month a modern poem from all over the world
in + 40 languages. Germain Droogenbroodt visited countless times the Far East
and studied Chinese philosophy which inspired his poetry. The Chinese pretend
his poetry is Taoist, the Japanese who published five collections of his
poetry, including two of haiku, pretend his poetry is ZEN. The Indian
poet-publisher Thachom Poyil Rajeevan wrote about his poetry “Your poems have a
serene depth of meaning and experience-a quality quite unparalleled in
contemporary world poetry. Only Tagore in India comes near you in the way you
meditate over words”. Germain Droogenbroodt received more than 30 international
poetry awards and is yearly invited to give recitals and conferences at
universities and at the most prestigious international poetry festivals,
including at the I-Ching Congress in China. He was recommended for the Nobel
prize of Literature 2017.

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