Tag Archives: Pakistani

Lahore City

Lahore city, the girls so pretty
Lahore city, the girls so pretty
The girls in your city are pretty I’m sure
But in Lahore they’re pretty just a little bit more
Lahore city, the girls so pretty
Lahore city, the girls so pretty.

When you want to get away from every vulture
Take a trip to Lahore, city of historic culture
The jewellery quarter has diamonds and pearls
But nothing as precious as the golden girls
All the parks have peacocks strolling on the lawns
All the gardens have ladies parading their finest gowns
The flowers in bloom will make your heart sigh
You can have heaven without having to die

Lahore city, the girls so pretty
Lahore city, the girls so pretty
The girls in your city are pretty I’m sure
But in Lahore they’re pretty just a little bit more
Lahore city, the girls so pretty
Lahore city, the girls so pretty.

Early in the morning when Lahore is bathed in sunshine
Or at dusk when she seems to be wearing silk so fine
Listen and recite, there’s a poem on every street corner
Every sight and sound sings a song in her honour
Taste the food so lush it has certain powers
Her perfume is sweeter than all the flowers
Every pretty girl you see will make you cry
You can have heaven without having to die

Lahore city, the girls so pretty
Lahore city, the girls so pretty
The girls in your city are pretty I’m sure
But in Lahore they’re pretty just a little bit more
Lahore city, the girls so pretty
Lahore city, the girls so pretty.

Every sense, every emotion magnified
Every nerve in my body electrified
I am wired to every star in the sky
My heart is a kite ready to fly
If you want further proof
Meet me up on the roof
Look at all the sweet angels walking by
You can have heaven without having to die

Lahore city, the girls so pretty
Lahore city, the girls so pretty
The girls in your city are pretty I’m sure
But in Lahore they’re pretty just a little bit more
Lahore city, the girls so pretty
Lahore city, the girls so pretty.

(c) Satori Publishing, 2017.

Do Not Ask Of Me For That First Love, My Beloved

Do not ask of me for that first love, my Beloved
As I understood it, having you here makes Life so luminous
Sharing your woes, I have no quarrel with sorrows of the world
Your radiant beauty blesses the earth with eternal Spring
What does this world possess to compare with your eyes?

If you were mine, Fate would bow to my command
It was not so, though I wanted it only to be so
The present time has other torments besides mere love
Other pleasures besides the thrill of coming together

Dark spells threaded on the brutal loom of Ages
Woven in silk, satin and brocade
Hand over fist, bodies sold in alleys and bazaars
Bathed in blood, shrouded in ash
Bodies forged in furnaces of pestilence
Pus oozing from their festering sores …
What can I do? My gaze keeps turning to them too
But what can I do? Though your beauty is ever attractive

The present time has other torments besides mere love
Other pleasures besides the thrill of coming together
Do not ask of me for that first love, my Beloved.

(My take on a poem by the beloved Faiz Ahmed Faiz)

(c) Satori Publishing, 2016.

A Paki Still

My father came to this country in 1952
Worked like a dog, swept the floor, other jobs
The white boys turned their noses up at
Paid half the money, twenty men sharing a house
Sending money back home — work, sleep, work
Built this country — damp, foggy, miserable
No roads, no cars, no shopping centres, no Empire;
By the time he was old this was a different land
He helped to build this country, but got no credit for it
When he died he was still a Paki.

I came to this country, a young boy, in 1966
Educated here, went to work, raised a family
Read, write, speak, understand English better than …
Taught to walk the straight and narrow
Do the right thing, in my father’s footsteps …
But I am still a Paki.

My son was born here, English to the bone
A beautiful young man, the apple of my eye
Intelligent, athletic, loving, respectful
I may be biased, but none can come close
But he is still a Paki.

One day he will have a child
He will pass on the lessons I taught
The wisdom of Ages I learned from my father
Work hard, be good, think of others, smile
Whatever he does, he will be
A Paki still.

(c) Satori Publishing, 2015.

Generally

General Bigstick : “What is Constitution?
A document of twelve pages …
I can tear it into pieces
And throw it away!”

Generally speaking, there are documents
That can tear a man into pieces
And throw him away.

Or, speaking in General,
There are key documents
That can blow your plane into pieces
And throw you all over the sky.

(c) Satori Publishing, 2014.

Thicker Than A Paddy

I will kill you
So that I can live
I will take your life
So that I can have a better life

Personal satisfaction
The desire of every creature
Self – preservation
The first law of Nature

Plant the bomb
And walk away
You fight to kill them
To live another day

Now here is the jest
To make your jaw drop
Paddy never wore a vest
Paki blows HIMSELF up.

(c) Satori Publishing, 2014.

Terror

We’ve done it, we’ve pulled it off
They fell for it without a murmur
They swallowed it hook, line and sinker
We’ve gotten away with murder

No one asked why when we told the Big Lie
“The terrorist was cooking up a curry and rice bomb”
The mixture in every kitchen is pie in the sky
“We foiled the plot by shooting the vindaloo bum”

Not a question asked, not a doubt raised
No one bothered to look past the smokescreen
Our security forces were all highly praised
Hand on heart, singing, “More profit to the Queen”

Our Media will sugar-coat the pill
Our way of life is preserved
The little pigs will eat this swill
The Paki got what he deserved.

(c) Satori Publishing, 2014.

Poison In Slow Motion

Continue reading Poison In Slow Motion

Paki From Brazil

Bang! Bang! Bang! Bang!
Bang! Bang! Bang!
Seven, hollow-point, in the head
Just to be sure he is dead

Bang!
One in the shoulder
Trained by Israeli instructor

Bing! Bing! Bing!
Three, point blank, miss
Next time, more practise

Ooops!
Are you kidding me?!
But he looked like a Paki!!

Whoops!
Kill a Paki, send out a message
Dickhead, will open her passage

Bling! Bling!
Liar One, Liar Two, ham acting twin
Soap stars, both planning to cash in

Sing! Sing!
A verse so Free, a chorus so Democratic
Oil, gas, heroin –- it’s a box-office hit!

(c) Satori Publishing, 2013.

Rivers Of Come

Welsh descent, only child, upper working-class
Grammar school, Cambridge, double starred First
No interest in politics; Nietzsche ‘Will To Power’
Learnt Urdu, intending to be the Viceroy of India …
Youngest professor in the Commonwealth
Always had ideas above his station
Always felt he was born to lead the nation;
During the war, a Private, in the kitchen
Promoted, leg up, and over, the youngest Brigadier
Hated America, “…they intend to bury the British Empire”
Served in Egypt, loved liberating the little boys
Like the other Poor White Trash before him
Felt like a king, his birthright, a royal white skin
Posted to India in 1943; LOVED India and the Indians
“I fell head over heels in love,” my ass in the air
“I soaked up India,” a blow-job beyond compare
Many, many casual flings, ejaculating ecstasy
Two intense love affairs had him writing poetry :
Yes, he was an Indian Muslim so gay
But he nailed my cross five times a day
I wish I had come to India a hundred years earlier
I would have lived, loved, and been buried here;
Slumming with Wogs, and playing doubles
Foaming at the mouth, I love to blow bubbles
Rivers of come, I love to swallow scum
Especially after it’s been up my rectum.

A life in broken verse … or is there more
Closet front, but who came in the back door :
A little MP for a small Midland town
Not far enough from where you were born
You always, always aspired to get much higher
You would not fail to set the world on fire
As Minister of Health you recruited West Indian nurses
Sail to gold-paved England and wipe white arses
The English are too good to do such dirty work
Import the Darkies so we have more time to jerk;
An Immigration Bill passed, you said not a word
You did not object, your voice was not heard
You were too big, you would lead the herd:
In 1958 you got the Treasury team to resign
In 1963 you refused to serve your captain by design
In 1964 the Tories lost the election with your help
Your bedpost got nailed with another scalp
In 1965 there was a Party leadership contest
You did not campaign, or promise to feather the nest
Or tickle every MP who went to Boarding School
Or offered to service each one with your tool
They knew, they recognised you as one of their own
But you were a peasant who lusted for Golden Brown
You were a cream-puff who did his best to irritate
You got fifteen votes out of two hundred and ninety-eight.

In 1959, in Hola Camp, Kenyan political prisoners
Refused to work, clubbed to death for being sinners :
Asking for Freedom, and their Land, we must rehabilitate
Stubborn monkeys must be forced to co-operate
Not political, not economical, just a voodoo cult
War crimes? Illegal? It is all their fault;
Mau Mau is not a Kenyan word (bitter tears, anguished cries)
Only English voices were heard (propaganda and lies)
English MP’s said the Kenyans were ‘sub-human’
Fires of hell must be used against the demon;
In that day and age, in that climate of hate and ire
In the Mother of Parliaments, you threw water on the fire
You risked your career, risked being branded a traitor
You stood up and laid claim to your finest hour
You stood up for Truth, for Justice, for the Humane
You stood up and spoke like a Righteous Man
You appealed to the Heart and Soul with your Word
You inspired the few to break away from the herd …
And the herd? Nothing is more dangerous
Than a Englishman on his high horse
He will scorch the earth, pillage, commit genocide
Quote the Bible, and say God is on his side
Invade a country, and force his rule
Proof the Darkie is a goddamn fool …
Does that apply to you too, Mr. Enoch Powell
When it suits you to spread your shit with a trowel?

From those heights, from that mountain top
It was you –- you chose to take that drop
In your heart of hearts you knew it was a mistake
Yet you continued till you were lower than a snake …
By 1968 you could no longer wait, soon be too late
Worse than death, you would have to resign to your fate
To never be the leader, never be the Prime Minister
Bitter, bitter, the pus in the wound did fester
Who to kick, who to blame -– point the finger
It’s the Paki, the Paki, the brown nigger
(The youngest Professor, the youngest Brigadier
And hoping to be the oldest Prime Minister!)
Drowning, drowning … you clutched the last straw
The Wogs are to blame for your fatal flaw
A sad old queen who wants to be king
Deafening, deafening … you want to hear the choir sing
Noise! Noise! Let there be even more Noise!
Blow the bugle, bang the drum, drown out the Voice …
Like a cheap tart you decided to stick out your tits
A flash of your knickers, a promise of warm juicy bits
Find a spin doctor to brew the potion drop by drop
The Media will build it up, build it up, buttercup
The people will hail you as a Messiah sent to deliver
Apply the balm to the pale brow to heal the dark fever
All will hail you as a saviour, a Star of stage and screen
And to top it all -– an audience with the real Queen.

To this day your poisonous legacy of hate
Threads from the Palace, to the City, to the council estate
You stoked an atmosphere of fear so malevolent
You appealed to the lump, the dung, the ignorant
The marching dockers unloaded ships coming from where?
The marching meat porters would never escape from there
Factory workers really know what makes the world go round
Wage-slaves think the treadmill is a Merry-go-round
Would they have marched for you if they had known
About your secret taste for sweet Honey Brown?
Picture this all you low-life English pigs
Enoch Powell with a Darkie as he digs and digs
( Little white boy, you talk of your England as if you wear a crown
Tell me, please, which part of England do you actually own?
Big white boy, the sun set on your empire many moons ago
Shine a light, shine a light, the East rules the world now )
The good old days … please raise your glass
To Enoch Powell swooning in a Brown Ass
“Mr. Powell, if petty England is going to the dogs
Simply because there are too many Wogs
If sunny England is going to the Darkies
Especially raining down with too many Pakis
Then why do you suck brown cock?”
When you speak of love, speak low, whisper, Enoch …
The cock may be brown but the semen is white
And, you know, white makes everything right.

When Rule Britannia sails to their lands it is Ordained
The very Thought of them coming here should be banned
We will be swamped by the alien
Too many of the Wrong Sort of Indian
( The right sort had a tight drum
Were well hung, and swung like a pendulum );
Thanks to you, Paki-bashing became a national sport
Sticks and stones, innocent people were badly hurt
A father tried to shield his nine year old son
The child took years to unravel the web you spun
( The phantom letters, old white woman’s ghost
Only white girl in her class, they were lost in the post )
Staged — caught in the act — a perfect little scandal
You played the innocent when it got too hot to handle …
Many people have analysed, excused, and explained
History has now judged, Time has apportioned the blame :
It was not racist, Mr. Powell, it was just your selfish orifice
It was a betrayal, you were unfaithful, desiring the Highest Office
You were a narcissistic poof who couldn’t see further than your knob
You betrayed the people you once loved, angling for a better job
The people remained the same, your black heart saw the change
Now, on behalf of all the fathers, I will take revenge -–
Faggot in the earth, may you never, never rest in peace
As in life, big brown worms up your boney white arse
Shout it out loud the world over
Enoch Powell was a Paki Lover!

(c) Satori Publishing, 2013.

Paki Corner Shop

 
Fatima Bhutto knows that your father
had her father killed.
And your mother knew it.
 
Do you know that your father
had your mother killed?
Your mother knew it.
 
In the instant the bullet entered her fatuous skull
In the instant her fat arse lost sphincter control…
She knew it.

(c) Satori Publishing, 2013.