In this stirring Swahili poetry of Nuhu goat, the voice of urgency rings loudly and clearly: "Vajaji, Amkeni!" The Easter season, often happiness and festive time, also becomes a moment of vulnerability for many children. While the parents are caught in the festival, many young spirits slip through the rift -uncontrolled, without thinking -sores, and highlight the effects that want to shape them for a worse. The poem reminds us that love without appearance, and care without boundaries, is a silent form of abandonment.
The goat's message is a powerful cry against decency. The roads do not wait. The internet does not stop. In today's fast-paced world, every moment a parent is absent, there may be a moment that is lost from the chaos of colleague pressure, addiction, or identity crisis. He challenges the parents not only to provide, but also to protect - not only for discipline, but to the disciple. Because children are not just growing; They are being formed - from something or something. And if you are not you, then who?
This poem is more than a warning; This is a plea. A argument to rise above the convenience for parents, to trade passive parenting for emotional participation. Easter, symbol of hope and renewal, should also be a moment of reflection: are we really directing our children to light? Or are we drifting them in the shadow, not anyone's attention and ignorance? The voice of the goat echoes through silence - urging every parents to act now, before it becomes too heavy to take regrets.