Showing posts with label Amar Mudi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amar Mudi. Show all posts

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Loose Translation of a few couplets from the great poet: Amir Khusro

Don't overlook my misery
Blandishing your eyes
And weaving tales.
My patience has over brimmed
My beloved!
Please take me to your bossom.

Tossed and bewildered
Like a flickering candle
I roam around
Burning in fire of love.

Sleepless eyes and restless body;
Neither she comes,
Nor she sends a message;
Using a thousand tricks
The enchanting eyes robbed me
Of my peace and tranquility.
Is there anyone,
Who would care to go and
Report this pitiable state of mine
To my beloved?

The night of Separation
is like long, labyrinthine curls of your tresses,
The moments of our union
Is short like the life itself.
How do I survive this dark period of separation
Without your face before my eyes?

- Amar Mudi
My father does a lot of poetry and has also published a collection of short poems in Bangla, 
He has also translated several English and Hindi books to Bangla and vice-versa. 
He is a theater enthusiast and a playwright. You can reach him at amarmudi@yahoo.com 
and leave your comments and replies for him.
I will keep linking his books and poetry as his books are not always available everywhere in the world...

Monday, July 01, 2013

The Shadows

The vultures in the sky do not cast any shadow on the earth,
Neither the ghost, witches or spirits.
But the shadow of God has darkened the horizon today,
Though he is not entitled to have a shadow of his own.
He lives in his castle up above the sky;
His kingdom and subjects tremble in fear.
His writs are enforced by his ministers in to,
Send the offenders to him through hell of fire, and
Faithful servants to heaven, together in one explosion.
The shadow of God gets longer, darker.

- Amar Mudi
03/03/2013

My father is an author, poet, bengali translator and is worse than me at maintaining blogs. So i keep posting some of his poems on my blog from time to time. Please do read and comment. 
You can also email your response to amarmudi@yahoo.com to get in touch with him tell him your opinions.

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Retribution

For last few days
I am asking myself a question-
Why, why such things happen:
Thousands of unsuspecting lives
Perish in nature's fury,
Mountains tumble,
Rivers desert the course
They themselves charted?

Something within asked me
A counter question:
Why didn't you try to feel
The unbearable pain I endured
For hunderds of years
To give birth to beautiful meadows,
Majestic trees in the jungle,
Or that divine fragrance of Kasturi
In the navel of the nimble footed deer?

You choked the meadows with
Torn packets of Gutkha and chips;
Soiled the banks with excretas
While enjoying a day of rafting;
Put the junle to fire to plunder the woods;
I didn't like it.

I replied: I wanted to enjoy the nature.
It said: So be it. Enjoy!



- Amar Mudi


My father is an author, poet, bengali translator and is worse than me at maintaining blogs. So i keep posting some of his poems on my blog from time to time. Please do read and comment. 
You can also email your response to amarmudi@yahoo.com to get in touch with him tell him your opinions.

Friday, February 01, 2013

Germination

It's a rally out there, Shouting:
Silence the lone shrill voice of protest!
Long live the noble thoughts!

Wipe out the blots,
Slowly build up the slogans-
Sharper, finer and focussed.
One stroke should be enough
To open up the skull of dissidence.
Let it live till it is on the screen
Let it be in headline for sometime.
Once it goes to the archives
Who bothers?

It's a crowd out there;
The lonely corpse in a bolted room,
The bullet hole on the saffron robe, or
On the widow white cloth,
Or blood stained sharee of a virgin
Spread over the bush on a barren land.

It's a procession of ghosts out there.
Come together from each corner of the earth;
Holding each others' hands in a chain.
The awakening of the dead soldiers of freedom.

It's a chorus out there:
All singing in unison in a moonlit night.
It's the warm lap of rain drenched earth,
Dark shadows of leafy trees guarding the fence.

It's the kingdom of ghosts.
It's the only hope of the chained souls;
The misfits and the weaklings
Who also inherited the earth.

- Amar Mudi
an old poem by my father and I will put some of his other poetry up too. 
He is now writing a english fiction "The savages" I shall keep putting some extracts and a link for people to buy the book.  Not that i think he wants to make money out of it, but he loves writing and im sure some of you will really like his stuff. 

Saturday, January 05, 2013

Outlook

When the bat whacks the ball with perfect timing
And footwork it is a sixer!
Rukmini, you are Chris Gayle of literature.
Taslima is at best a Sehwag-
Tried to touch a ball
Outside the off stump,
And was out caught behind.

That legend of a bowler was past his prime,
Lost his guile and the googly;
Many a stump had been uprooted in his heydays
Even before the batswoman could retract her foot.

But, sixer is a sixer!
The bowler has been dropped from the team.
- Amar Mudi

My father is an author, poet, bengali translator and is worse than me at maintaining blogs. So i keep posting some of his poems on my blog from time to time. Please do read and comment. 
You can also email your response to amarmudi@yahoo.com to get in touch with him tell him your opinions.

Padma

You sailed in your boat alone on the river Padma,
Crossed the turbulent river rowing your boat with all your might
And carried along a generation of reptiles,
Who tugged their rope around the hull of your boat.
They knew the foolish, drunkard voyager well enough
And you knew these vultures too.
They wanted to cross the river in the comfort of the mast,
For you they were the jesters adorning the Court
You presided over, shouting "All is Well", "All is Well".

You sailed along the riverine course
Charted within you like the palm of your hand;
When you heard the rumblings of the sea
Didn't you know the hungry tide awaits you?
Everyone else knew.
Your ears warned you, so warned your eyes.
But the blood of Chand Banik revolted within,
Marshalled the remnant of the strength

To put up the last fight.
The birds had picked up the crumbs by then,
And left the mast to set out for another boat.
The foolish voyager was all alone in the leaking boat.
He looked up at the sky before drowning and smiled.
The heaven is full of voyagers down the ages,
foolish enough, and perished like him, fighting the hungry tide.


Amar Mudi

One of my favourite poems by my father. Please do read and comment. You can also email your response to amarmudi@yahoo.com to tell him your opinions. 

Tuesday, January 01, 2013

Happy New Year

Beginnings
Time is the most remorseless machine.
Like it or not the stomach churns at nine and nine
no matter whom you have lost forever.
the earth will revolve around the sun
regardless, who brought down the axes on whom.
the old year will give way to new one
you accept it or not.



- Amar Mudi
My father does a lot of poetry and has also published a collection of short poems in Bangla, 
He has also translated several English and Hindi books to Bangla and vice-versa. 
He is a theater enthusiast and a playwright. You can reach him at amarmudi@yahoo.com and leave your comments and replies for him.
 I will keep linking his books and poetry as his books are not always available everywhere in the world...

Wednesday, August 01, 2012

Farewell

Even before I settled down on my desk, the phone rang. It is a nineteen forty vintage instrument with Black Pagoda like structure. The smooth and heavy receiver and krring…..krring… sound are the two things I always associate with the word ‘telephone’, and therefore refuse to part with it. My colleagues have got swanky push-button phones and flaunt their colorful instruments at the centre of their table. I keep my instrument on the side table, hidden from the visitors as far as possible.

The tired voice of the operator in the Old-age Home is very familiar to me… a call from my mother. She never calls on my mobile. I am not sure she has my mobile number noted in her diary even. She always gives the refrain,‘I can’t hear when you speak from the mobile’; She never admits that these days she can’t hear properly.

The old man is still mumbling something; Why is Maa not coming on phone? Is she not well? I hadn’t bothered to listen to the old man so far. I never ever did; Usually Maa comes on the phone after one or two sentences. How could I ask him now to repeat what he has already said? My silence irked him. He asked in a very matter of fact tone, “So, will you be able to come? Or, should we go ahead with the funeral? In that case, we don’t want to delay her last rites.”

It took me few seconds to work out the riddles from the words I heard now from the old man and infer that Maa is dead. Now, I have to give an answer to him relying on the inference and, that too within the few seconds of patience left in him. Without much thought I answered, “I am coming”. No response from the other side. After sometime only ‘beep’… ‘beep’… He had disconnected the line.

I heard some commotion and looked up. My colleagues gathered around my table. Once they heard the news they worked out the whole days program for me, including the number of days of leave that I required, the arrangement of money, train-bus-taxi and the list of dos and donts for a son at the time of his mother’s funeral. Knowledgeable people, I must admit. One senior colleague accompanied me to the boss; the other fetched a rickshaw for me to reach railway station on time and they were at the gate to see me off.

The first thing I did, after I was out of their sight, was to light a cigarette. The bitter taste and foul smell drove away the cobweb of emotions from the head. Maa never liked to display her emotions even when social obligations or propriety demanded. When my father died we were very young, me and my sister Sona. She left for Kolkata immediately after the rituals leaving us with our grandparents. Within a few months she got a job in my father’s office on compassionate ground and shifted out from the village. All along it was only cold, steely resolve, no argument, no emotion. She practically severed all relations with her in-laws and even her parents from the moment her husband died.

The train left Kharagpur at 12.05 hrs. It will take at least three hours to reach Howrah. The Old-age Home at Sodepur is another hour from there by taxi. I managed a window seat and looked out. Small and big houses near the railway track were like small islands. In one house a young bride is putting her clothes to dry, in another, a man is carrying a bucket god knows where. Only I could see each of them like a kite looking down at the earth from the sky, and longed for a simple life like any one of them: wife, children, cows, pond…… I should call Sona, did they inform her by now? She picked up the phone as if she was waiting for my call. She wept silently, then said “Bhai, I am not coming. She never bothered about us, put our house on rent and lived in the Old Age Home rather than staying with us. Paritosh uncle was everything for her. Now, there is no point in reciting some ‘mantras’ over her dead body.”

The local trains have one advantage; one can have tea and snacks any time. I asked for tea in a plastic cup. Paritosh uncle! He was a colleague of my father. He came to our house for the first time, when Sona had been critically ill; called the doctor, got the tests done, brought medicines and then onwards became a frequent visitor. A bachelor, with no immediate family, he became a part of our joys and sorrows, but not a part of the family. Initially, tongues wagged all around. But, everything has an expiry date. The scandal also died its own death.

It takes about an hour to reach Sodepur from Howrah, but it is difficult to get a Taxi for that part of the city. At last one Sardarji took pity on me. He even permitted me to smoke….. Things changed when Sona got married. She asked Maa to sell the house and stay with her. Maa didn’t agree. Sona got wild, “Do you think we are deaf and dumb? We know why you don’t want to move out of Kolkata. Both of us will be away. Now, you two won’t have any problem to stay together. Have you ever thought how we will face the society?” Maa remained silent but Sona went on and on. At last Maa got up and said, “It was my mistake that all along I thought exactly like you. Once you are married you became a part of the society. Where were you and your society all these years? Where do I go from here? ……Become your liability! What about Paritosh? Now that my son has a job and daughter is married I should forget him and go back to society as a successful mother. Isn’t it?” Sona never came back to Sodepur thereafter.

By the time I reached the Home it was five. They were waiting for me in the office. I was offered a glass of water. It tasted bland. I was longing for a cleaner bell-metal glass, very cool and comforting; Maa said it was a gift for me when I first tasted rice on the sixth month. Suddenly I felt a shiver ran down my spine. She is lying there in the Hall, waiting for me to light the pyre. She had held my hand when I lighted the pyre of my father. Now, who is going to do that? I got up and slowly moved towards the Hall. I pushed the door ajar, and saw him stooping over a human form covered with white cloth. He was whispering something; in the silence of the mortuary each word distinctly audible: “he has just reached. I made all arrangements; Fruits, sandesh and tea in the flask….. He will come. Wait a little while more! Try to understand his pain! He has lost his mother; Mother!”

Helpless rage engulfed me like wild fire. I held his shoulder with both hands and turned him towards me. “What do you know about pain? Have you ever felt it? You had been a dumb fellow all your life. Even today you are behaving like a fool, talking to dead, cold body. Yes! She is dead today, but even earlier she had been cold throughout her life, to me, to you, to herself.” Paritosh uncle smiled, as he used to in difficult situations and said, “Khoka, she never liked displaying her love and emotions; she used to convey it through her actions. Unfortunately, we seldom recognized it. I have got so much from her that I won’t be able to repay it even in my next birth, if at all it exists.”

My throat choked, my vision got blurred, and I could not speak. Paritosh uncle hugged me tightly and whispered in my ears, “Khoka, now you have to take over and see to it that she gets a beautiful farewell. I shall come tomorrow and hand over the bank papers, the ornaments and her will.” He moved one step closer to the plank, where the woman was lying inert, closed his eyes for a few seconds and left the room in hurried steps. I wanted to shout “stop!”, but couldn’t. he saw my outstretched hand, came back and said, “calm down! I know you will understand.” I removed the white cloth from the face. I could guess she must have been seeing someone or something beautiful when she died from her half-closed eyes and smiling lips.

- Amar Mudi

My father is an author, poet, theater enthusiast, bengali translator and is worse than me at maintaining blogs.
 So i keep posting some of his poems on my blog from time to time. Please do read and comment. 
You can also email your response to amarmudi@yahoo.com to get in touch with him tell him your opinions.