Under the weight we bloom

The following poem by Purvi Romdhari of Hamirpur, Himachal Pradesh won Ten Thousand Rupees in Wingword Poetry Competition 2026.

In the restless lanes of India,

where the dust remember empires

and the sky carries both prayer and protest, the youth walk

we walk, not lightly,

but with histories stitched into our skin


we are born between headlines

of growth and devastate, 

of satellites touching the moon

and minors laboring in factories.

we inherit a tricolor flag

and a thousand unfinished sentences.


we are told 

"be engineers of dreams''

but not of dissent.

"be doctors of bodies"

but not broken systems.

"be proud of the past''

but do not question the past


and so  the voices begin

voices of comparison 

marks that measure worth,

entrance exams that decide destinies

before a heart has even chosen its rhythm.

In cities like Mumbai and Delhi,

dreams rise in glass towers

while doubt sleeps in crumped rooms

beneath the unsteady glow of a sputtering bulb.


The shadows of caste remain,

older than the constitution,

older than the freedom itself,

curling quietly 

into classrooms, into boardrooms,

sometimes hidden in a surname,

sometimes disguised as preference.


It lingers

in who is welcomed without question,

in who must prove, and prove again,

that they deserve space

in rooms built

by the toil of our ancestors 


corruption does not always arrive

wearing arrogance.


sometimes it arrives as a advice.

sometimes it arrives as a blessing.

sometimes it arrives as desire dressed as authority.

sometimes it arrives as a smile, 

calling suppression ''guidance'',

calling control ''concern'',

portraying restriction as ''realism''


and yet,


beneath this layered weight,

beneath the slow decay of self-assurance,

beneath voices that insist

we must remain manageable,


something remarkable survives.


not loud rage.

but a ruin that knows its limits.


something quieter

something patient.

something unbreakable.


Tenacity.


a generation that studies not only textbooks

but the architecture of injustice.

that memorizes formulas by day

and questions foundations by night.

that learns silence,

and discerns with clarity 

when silence should yield.


we are not rising to burn cities.

we are not rising to replace one corruption

with another dressed in new slogans.


we rise,

to bear witness


to prove that worth is not inherited through surnames.

to prove that dignity does not require endorsement.

to prove that integrity cannot be bribed into shrinking.

to prove that excellence can bloom

even in soil compacted by prejudice.


we rise in libraries heavy with old pages.

in cramped rented rooms

where single bulb fights darkness stubbornly.

in notebooks filled with rewritten futures.

in quiet poems, dancing on the edge of dawn

when uncertainty screams and,

belief is thin as smoke.


we rise, invisible but certain,

choosing honesty.


when temptation sparkles in plain sight.

choosing compassion

when discord lures with faster power.

choosing persistence

when fatigue hums a sirens lullaby.


we rise not with weapons,

but with works so precise

it cannot be dismissed.


not with hatred,

but with excellence so undeniable,

it unsettles those

who tried to confine it.


they attempt to break us impassioned

with comparison,

with corruption,

with inherited hierarchy.


but they forget

that pressure does not only crush,

sometimes,

it crystallizes.


history has never belonged

to those who guarded comfort.

It has always shifted

toward those who endured long enough

to write it differently.


we are not the noise.


we are the shift beneath it.


we resist in quiet, not for spectacle.

we are proof,

that even under steady corruption,

even beneath ancestral shadows,

even when voices command

''remain small, remain grateful, remain silent''.


he human spirit bends,

but never breaks permanently.


it expands.


and one day,

when tomorrow finally opens its eyes

without fear,

without permission,

without an apology,


it will not ask

who tried to silence us.


it will stand tall,

unwavering and unashamed,

calling to the world,


because we survived and became the tomorrow,

they could not silence.