Tuesday, October 21, 2014

The Spectacle

First they call you exotic
And they adored you
They sung your praises
And showered you with fake love and kisses!

But your fake glories
And your pretensions,
Feed the weakness
So came the fangs!

Spreading lies
And rumours
Pieces by pieces
They tear you apart,
Then they kill you…
A bizarre spectacle!

But you stood up,
You walked, you protested
You cried, and you screamed -
To the glares of ignorant
The amusement of statues,
And you became, the spectacle!

Yet you picked yourself up
Gathering all the strengths left in you
To return back to that old home
In search of the love that you’ve known

Only, to come back
To strange pitiless eyes
And you became a spectacle
- and an eyesore!

In loathing you watched,
The constancy in the blankness
Of the ceiling, a fan spinning
A rope in your hand

Imagining,
A body, hanging
Still, quiet, lifeless -
A violent spectacle!

Yet you linger
For reasons you do not know.
For unseen, unheard, unreasoned –
Hidden somewhere, broken
Is a hope –flickering
Yet untouchable
To all the violence of this world!
And so, you linger…

Saturday, August 16, 2014

One Rainy Day

One rainy day, I walk alone

I’m drenched, puddles everywhere
I can hop and skip, to stay dry and clean
But I jumped on the puddles,
Splashing water like a broken fountain,
And I giggled and then I laughed,
That rainy day, I walked alone
And my heart sung, a song of joy!

One rainy day, I walk alone
And there you are, with your umbrella,
I wanted to jump, on the puddle,
And I wanted to feel the rushing raindrops,
Kissing my skin, fondling my senses
But I huddled, right next to you
Hopping and skipping, puddles after puddles
Giggling and laughing, just like you did...
And I reached home, dry as the sand,
And my heart sung, a song of love.

One rainy day, I stand alone,
In my doorway, where you left me
I watched you leave, walking alone
Under the rain, your umbrella
I watched you run, my heart racing,
I watched you hop, my heart skipping
Fading away, in the pouring rain!

And then I burst, on the rainy road,
I hop and skip, I jump and laugh,
Kicking a storm, out of puddles,
I am drenched, raindrops cuddling,
My true body, the sensation, of pure sweet love
And my heart sings, a song of joy,
A song of love, and I am dancing, on the rainy road

Monday, July 28, 2014

MIGHTY ME

Standing there in the beach
The mighty ocean bellows
Furiously it rolled, threatening
Showing off its might with every tidal wave.

I stayed there, calm and small
Mesmerized by the mighty roll
As if it were calling me out
For what that I don't know.

But I stand there watching
As the waves guarded the ocean
Shouting and screaming,
Daring me to make a move.

So I said to the ocean,
Why are you threatening me;
Have I ever done you any harm?

Then the infuriated wave rose
And in one swept took me away
I fight with the ocean, cursing and crying
Till all the strength and life in me drained away

Then comes the swimmers in their boat
Propelling through the angry waves
And dragged me back to the shore

As I lay there in the beach
I saw the boats and the swimmers
I saw the coastal embankment and the hotels
I saw the light house and the ship anchored away
And suddenly I realize what the ocean said

I stand there watching as the oceans rolls
Threatening, screaming and crying, helplessly,
A thousand years of humiliation to cover,
Caused by mighty me and my kind.


Thursday, May 22, 2014

Of the secrets, lies and the closet

A walking radio, a head of mouths
A casual encounter, a day in the counter
Says 'I know you, I know you'.
A talking head, a head of mouths
Screams ‘I know you, I know you’.

But how can anyone know me
When I know that no one truly knew me.
May be I told you tales
Perhaps tall tales...
Perhaps a day in my life.
But how can you know me
When I never told you of my secrets?

For I'm a keeper of secrets
And I have countless secrets
Secrets I never told
For I'm a keeper of secrets.

So how can you truly know me
A life full of hidden secrets
A life that's a lie
For I no longer know what's secret and what's lie
And what lies cover what truth
Or what truth is hidden in that lie?
I'll never know...and I can never know.

So how can you know me,
When I don't know who I am?
How can you truly know me?


Thursday, February 13, 2014

Racism: Why I am a reluctant Indian!

It is scary being a minority in India but it is intolerable being a racial minorities.  (A quote from one of my blog post in 2007)

Growing up in the hills of Manipur, I never have had any problem calling myself an Indian. Every once in a week, in the private school I attended, we would be asked to sing the national anthem of India and we would mumble the words through despite not having the slightest clue about its meaning. As a matter of fact, I don’t remember ever questioning my nationality while I was living in the North-east, not even a single time.

But once I left the north-east to pursue higher education in Delhi, I was constantly forced to answer the question regarding my nationality. I don’t have any problem with curious people asking my nationality –if they ask, I can always clarify.  But it is just too much to tolerate on everyday basis the ignorant masses that are too stupid to have any curiosity or the audacity to ask, yet still call you all the names that they can think of.

You can dismiss them as ignorant, but when they chose your facial features or skin colour to call you names, it’s nothing but pure racism.  What most people don’t know is that racism can be mild, coated or blown-out abuses, or that it can come in the form of silence or unspoken gesture.  One of my blog posts in 2008:
In India, more than the majority doesn’t even know what racism or discrimination means. The lower caste people are so used to the abuses they only cursed their lot instead of fighting for justice, while the upper castes are used to abusing the lower castes who legitimatize by accepting the abuses. So you can forget about expecting anyone from knowing what little and minor things, words, expression and gestures constitute racism and discrimination. (Read the full article here)
Around 2007-08, I used to blog about my ordeal (see my blog posts here) in Delhi, but what hurt me the most at that time was the ignorance and self-righteousness of the Indian masses, including the media.  The piousness and self-righteousness of the media over their own racism at that time was almost nauseating.

In 2008, I wrote:
Mainland Indians’ anti-racist gestures come out of the woodwork only when they perceived themselves as the target, or if it happened in the west. Just take a look at the Shilpa Shetty’s or the Lakshmi Mittal’s issues.
They stereotyped themselves only as possible victim that they forget to look home and notice that they are ruthless perpetrator themselves. If you don’t understand what I meant, you don’t have to look further than the 10 pages of matrimonial advertisements coming with your newspaper every morning. (read the full article here)
Despite the fact that I have lived over a decade in mainland India now, I continue to face the question of my nationality. But now I work in the rural areas and interacted mostly with children, I used it as an opportunity to build rapport or to start a conversation, so it benefit me with my work, and they too learned something.

But I’m tired, tired of being questioned about my nationality all the time. I'm tired, tired of proving my Indianess every time.  Because the more people ask me about my nationality, the more they make me feel alienated. And forgive me if you think I am not a patriotic Indian no matter what I really feel inside, because I cannot, and they would not let me be an Indian! 



Thursday, January 16, 2014

The Land I Once Knew

The land once familiar to me,
The roads I've walked,
The fields I've surveyed,
The trees I've climbed,
The hills I’ve hiked,
Were no longer familiar to me.

I failed to remember when
The land is coarse and dusty
The fields are barren and dry
The trees are old and creepy
Or that I am but a stranger!

Perhaps we've parted our way
One early morning, long ago
When I left the land,
In search of a dream,
Only to return a decade later, or so.

The land had been my dream,
In the day, and in the night,
And I promised myself
That I’ll return one day, soon
To live with the land.

But later in a sleepy slow
And the tricks of the sadist memories,
Little by little, the dreams began to change
And get buried away, deep
The land, with other memories!

A decade later that dream resurfaced
About a land that I once knew,
It tugged my heart,
And it tugged my soul,
Until one late hour in the setting sun,
When I finally kissed its feet.

But alas, the land has forgotten me!
I had walked these roads, pleaded I,
I had surveyed these fields, screamed I,
I had climbed these trees, begged I,
I had hiked these hills, cried I,
But an eerie silence was my answer!

So I walked the roads and surveyed the fields,
I climbed the trees and hiked up the hills,
But the missing feeling of belongingness,
Can only gulf the sense of being forgotten.

So I made this promise that one day
The land will never forget me again,
For I'll be one again with the land
Head to toe, bone and skeletons,
Never to part again, one and whole,

deep in the heart, in mother earth!