ग़ुलामों की बस्ती | Deepak Ahuja

THE FOLLOWING POEM BY DEEPAK AHUJA FROM NEW DELHI WON THE FIRST PRIZE IN WINGWORD POETRY COMPETITION 2023’S REGIONAL CATEGORY.

ग़ुलामों की बस्ती में, आज़ादी का क्या मोल,

मन मे व्यथाएँ हज़ार, लबों पर बस दो बोल।

किसने सीखी यहाँ पर, राह-ए-उल्फ़त कभी,

जो रास्ते हुए मयस्सर, एहसास रहे थे तोल।

कोई हसरत बुझती नहीं, बेड़ियाँ पहनने से,

सय्याद बेरहम है, पंछी न बचता चहकने से।

ख़यालों के ग़ुलाम, चेहरे से लगते बिस्मिल,

कोई सरपरस्त नहीं, क्या फ़ायदा कहने से।

सिर झुकाए चलते, ये जिस्म, बेजान लगते,

अपनी ही क्षमताओं से, अब अंजान लगते।

जागते-जागते सो रहे, बेहोश और गुमनाम,

गुमान नहीं, नज़र-नज़र से, परेशान लगते।

फ़राहम नहीं हिम्मत अंदर, न कोई फ़रियाद,

नसीब हांक रहा बैलों की तरह, राहें न याद।

न कोई ज्वाला, न कोई लौ, न कोई शम्अ,

जी रहे कठपुतली जैसे, ज़िन्दगी न आबाद।

हुक्मरान का सितम, मन की दशा बदलता,

जो सहता ज़ुल्म, ठंडी छाया में भी जलता।

ऊपर देखता आसमान में, कोई चिराग़ नहीं,

जब देखता भीतर, अंतस् में साहस पलता।

रास न आया ग़ुलाम को, सूरज का उजाला,

अंधकार भरी रातों में, जन्मों से विष पाला।

ये ज़हर पी कर भी, हाल-ए-दिल न बताया,

एक चिंगारी ज़हन में, ये दर्द ऐसे संभाला।

बादशाह का गुरूर, ग़ुलाम करते हैं क़ुबूल,

ये बस्ती मजबूरी की, इश्क़ करना है भूल।

क़तरा-क़तरा बह जाता, लाख ग़म छिपाए,

साहस को परखना, यहाँ पे मिट्टी और धूल।

वो आवाज़ न उठाता, सितमगर के ख़िलाफ,

जो टुकड़ा-टुकड़ा हो रही, वो रूह है साफ़।

ये गीत उभर रहे, इस तन्हाई के, साज़ पर,

क्या इस सरगम को मिलेगा, कोई इंसाफ।

भेड़-बकरियों जैसे चल, बने जी का जंजाल,

एक दूसरे के पीछे, कैसे है अजब भेड़चाल।

कोई आज़ाद आँख न दिखे, रौशनी में भी,

कुछ तो ऐतबार कर, ख़ुद पर, बन विशाल।

उड़ती पतंगे, बहती पुरवाई में, पता पूछती,

अपनी बनाई ज़ंजीरों से, ज़िंदगी है जूझती।

अजी ग़ुलामों की बस्ती में, सिर कौन उठाए,

जो उठाए एक नज़र, वो नज़र गिरती टूटती।

शिकवा, शिकायत करके भी, क्या फ़ायदा,

इस कड़वे फल का, शहद न बदले ज़ायका।

एक वजूद, एक अस्तित्व, एक ही मैं मन में,

कैसा ख़्वाब, कैसी ख़्वाहिश, कैसा क़ायदा।

साथ न किसी ज़माने का, कैसा ये वीराना,

जो साथ चल रहा, वो ख़ुद से भी अंजाना।

ग़ुलामी पसंद शख़्स की, न कोई पहचान,

बस वो तलाशता, मर-मर जीने का बहाना।

गिर रहे सुर्ख़ ओले, जकड़े हाथों के तल पर,

पिघल-पिघल सोना बने कुंदन, ऐसा असर।

अंदर जीवन, मन की हसरतें, न बनी ग़ुलाम,

कैसा खेल जगत का, इंसान नाचे बन बंदर।

इस संसार में कौन है, जो पैदा ग़ुलाम हुआ,

हर किसी की माँ ने, वात्सल्य रस से छुआ।

ममता की नदी तो हमेशा, आज़ाद ही रहती,

प्यार की, सबसे बड़ी मिसाल, माँ की दुआ।

ग़ुलाम तो जिस्म है, मन को कौन बांध पाए,

हर बशर के अंतर्मन में, बसते नूरानी साये।

अब कोई बस्ती मिले उल्फ़त वाली, मन को,

जहाँ उन्मुक्त आत्मबोध की, कथाएँ सुनाएँ।

ऐ क़ल्ब-ए-रूह इस तरह, तू बेज़ार नहीं हो,

जीवन के मायने समझ, ख़ुद को पहचानो।

जो पानी पीया, मुहब्बत का, प्यास न बची,

आम इंसान बनकर, ये स्वाभिमान संभालो।

एक ग़ुलामी स्वीकार है, उस परमात्मा की,

वो रब तो शाश्वत है, प्राण ऊर्जा आत्मा की।

घट-घट में वो बसता, नयन पुतली से झांके,

वही तो साहिब, साहिबा, हर जीवात्मा की।

जब नैन नम हो जाते, वो मालिक पुकारता,

उस दर पर जाके, ग़ुलाम नसीब संवारता।

तेरी शक्ल देखकर, बंदा नायाब बन गया,

झुक कर, सजदा करके, अहम् से हारता।

मौकापरस्त ज़माना, ये मन प्रभावित करे,

पैरों की बेड़ियाँ टूटी, सब मन पर वार करे।

एक ढाल बनकर, ज़िंदगी आज़ाद रखना,

ग़ुलामों की बस्ती का, कोई तो उद्धार करे।

बहार का मौसम भी, पतझड़ जैसा लगता,

ग़ुलामी का जामा पहने, कोई नहीं जगता।

सांसारिक सामान, जैसे माया की दुनिया,

डूबकर अपने भीतर, आध्यात्म में रमता।

कोई नाम नहीं, इस भीड़ में केवल चेहरे,

इस शरीर पर लगे, तपती निगाह के पहरे।

सभी चाहते जीना, बिना किसी बंदिश के,

लेकिन ये अरमान तो, सहमे ठहरे-ठहरे।

साँसों की ये कश्ती, अविरल डोलती जाती,

अंधकार में डूबा, बिना दीपक और बाती।

वफ़ा तो दिल से होती, डर से होए दिखावा,

कोई आहट आए, दिल में उम्मीद जगाती।

सौंप कर, अपने को किस्मत पर, नाच रहा,

इस दिल की रम्ज़ को, कौन है जाँच रहा।

बिना बोले नहीं जान पाता, संसार व्यथाएँ,

पिंजरे में बंद हो, ज़हन के बंधन काट रहा।

काट कर तन देखा, सिर्फ़ मुहब्बत है पाई,

फिर क्यों यहाँ पर, पल-पल मिले रुसवाई।

अजब रीत जगत की, कौन बच पाया यहाँ,

मन की गहराई जान, आज़ादी हुई पराई।

नि:स्तब्ध होके, ग़ुलाम बस्ती को सलाम है,

जग में इंसान कम, यहाँ पे सिर्फ़ इंसान हैं।

क़ैद में मुस्कुराते, ज़ुल्म-ओ-सितम से परे,

अजब खेल सरकार के, हम सब नादान हैं।

About the poet

Deepak is a former corporate professional and is now an entrepreneur. Fortunately, the voices of his mind go beyond these tags and call him a poet. That's what he identifies most of his personality and character with.

He believes poetry is not a mere expression of thoughts and feelings through words. It is a much deeper confluence of art, perception and understanding.

The mundane aspect of his education is that he did is graduation from Shri Ram College of Commerce, University of Delhi and post graduation from Fore School of Management. The exciting aspect of his education lies in his ability to observe and think in an imaginative way, which is continuous.

He feels very passionately about the inner dimensions of life. Something, which can be felt but not seen. People call it spirituality, a very clichéd word these days. He just calls it a way of life.

Kalyug | Muskanpreet Aulakh

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

Gunah ki patri par sabhi chal rahe hain

Naye halato ke nayepan mai sabhi dhal rahe hain.

Insaf nahi mang pate to nainsafi ki jati hai

Yaha greebo ko bewajah saza di jati hai.

Khuda ko bhool bethe hain sab

Khud ko khuda mante hain.

Kehte firte hain hame sab pta hai

Koi pucho inse akhir ye kya jante hain.

Tumhe uski shakti ka anuman hi kaha

Vo sansar ki bate bata gaye

Tumhe uske ilawa kuch pata hi kaha.

Usse ucha uthne ki bate karte ho

Uske bina yeh jahan, asman, ek shavas bhi kaha.

Puri srishti ka srijan vo kar gaye

Badle mai kuch manga nhi

Tujhe sahi rah dikhaya hamesha

Teri galtiyo par bhi tujhe danta nhi.

Tu kehta hai itno mai bhool gya vo mujhe

Magar vo to sabka khayal rakhta hai

Kabhi akele reh jao to jana uske dar pe

Tujhe tujhse bhi zyada vo pyar karta hai.

Uske diye tohfe to sambhale nhi ja rahe

Moh maya mai faskar sab reh gaye

Inhe ab tak samajh nahi aya

"God is one" har dharm ke guru keh gaye.

Usse pana chahte ho to pyar rakhna hoga dil mai

Par pyar ke to sabhi dushman bane bethe hain

Yeh kya jane pyar kya hai

Yeh to bazaro mai bikne wale ko pyar kehte hain.

Is kalyug mai rishte bhula diye sabne

Ma bap ko dhakke mare jate hain

Khuda se bat to bas kuch hi log karte hain

Beshak mandir masjido mai to sare jate hain.

Izzat to bas paise ki hoti hai

Use sabse upar ka darza mila hai

Jo bach gaye is lalach se

Bas unhi ko khuda mila hai.

Can't Digest | Rimmi Kaur

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

You love me, I can't digest it.

Why would you, what you see in me?

Is this your way to humiliate me?

Make me stand in front of the crowd.

Accept I was a fool to think you were into me.

Would that give you satisfaction?

Would that make you popular in the jungle?

You took my love for granted.

Acted like we got along.

No wonder you were pretending to make me yours.

You acted so good I felt this could be forever .

But,

I almost believed you trusted you

After a long fight with logic I embraced you.

I am sorry I doubted my brain.

Look heart this happened again.

Next time I won't argue, just listen to my brain.

Hey did you see that guy he winked at me today.

No brain heart is right we should have a taste.

Not again.

Heart not again.

A Slice of My Sky | Somedutta Chakraborty

My sky was infused with wisps of cotton,

It was a brilliant blue ,like the one flowing in my baby's eyes;

The colour ,fresh, like a Spring that lasts forever

The hues of my sky have changed;

In a terribly transient Kyiv

My city,my country , my sky

has metamorphosed

Alas! the butterfly would soon die

Its wings caught in a flame,

stripped of freedom

My sky was golden,

Glittering like my wedding band

As bright as his eyes glistening with tears,

The tears like pearls, falling on his bloodsoaked shirt

My sky turned ash grey,

Cold, distant ,alien

With smokes,fumes and sirens

A quiet cacophony resounded in the streets,

The streets deserted like corpses in the hospital nearby

Now it's crimson ,

Mutilated by missiles

Amputated with words,

Smeared with hatred ,with anger

Every morning serves a new agenda for breakfast 

I eat it up, with a tinge of pride that's Ukrainian

The evenings bring promises, negotiations, a host of them

And yet, the skyline remains crimson 

Sometimes, my sky sings our anthem 

They can hear it too,

They are afraid too,

Just like my crying baby

But they are chained by diktats 

Will they ever break free?

My baby has stopped crying

There's tranquility, but no peace 

My sky is now apocalyptic 

This sky is mine.

Three Headed Snake | Ambica Gossain

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

The wedding wasn’t the worst of it.

A precursor of love, wind-swept,

weather-beaten and threadbare,

begging for alms before it stepped through

the temple door threshold.

My husband and I just barely bobbing

atop the waves of guests we rode that day.

A negotiation between airborne crests

high on a love that rivalled cheekbones,

eyes waltzing with each other ever so briefly,

and the deafening roar of the troughs

that would render us strangers

at our own ceremony.

(Shush) an unspoken reminder,

the history that everything is never

as dandy as it seems.

A mother's largesse accentuated

by a hot pink and lime green sari,

tacked with a six inch,

broad pearl cummerbund (suggesting a waist)

that paired with the multi-string necklace

spanning her under-bust.

My birth mother was the ornamental

overstuffed of stress, eating

her way through an imposed second wife.

Me, as equally plump.

Facedown, tongue out,

eating out of a step-mother’s

ruinous palms too.

As if our extra weight

deep planted our feet in a place

that didn’t make sense to stay.

A step mother trained in Paris,

her beauty parlour was the

ball of yarn animating my kitten paws.

Making them pounce and spring on

the fruity face packs, hot rollers and

French manicures strategically used

to reel me in.

My naïveté springing on anything it could catch.

Hers was an intentional spell,

to distance me from a birth mother swirling

in the emotional orgy of betrayal.

Punished for her only "misdeed,"

sticking around to avert a broken family

and secure her children's needs.

I was blind to the orchestrations,

a step mother hoarding ancestral silver,

heirloom property and my grandmother's

jewellery in her name.

The fudging of daily cash accounts for

cash bonuses.

Leaving our original family

my father’s first, unable to collect

a rightly share of wealth.

Truth, this isn’t really a poem about

my wedding day or my step-mother

and her conniving ways.

But more about grave mistakes

we cannot change and the regret that

lodges itself in their place.

About the look on my mother’s face

the day she was giving me away.

My face averted from hers courtesy

a step mother’s tactful brainwashing.

The heartbreak of gullibility or naiveté

Believing my mother could hurt me this way.

Keep a family inheritance from me,

when my step mother had looted it for me to “see”

how little my mother loved me.

A landslide victory, for a woman who

wanted more than just my father.

She wanted everything (for keepsake?)

or was it security?

I was ill-equipped to deal with the level

of deceit my blood mother had proved incapable

of intercepting.

More like her, myself,

than I cared to admit.

Every Hindu parent's journey

of a girl child's wedding,

culminates in a too- tearful, vidaai.

A farewell ritual I thought over-dramatized

and cloying, until I wept through my own.

Embodying the goddess Lakshmi,

a wedded daughter fills her hands with

raw grains of rice and throws them

over her head in gratitude of her birth family.

And a promise of their fortune

standing intact despite the departure

of her bountiful feet.

I sat behind the fragrant jasmine and

rose veneer purdah in my palanquin,

my wrists jangling with the golden sparkle

of kaleere ornaments,

when my mother parted the flower blossom

curtain and peaked in.

Contrary to custom, my mother surprisingly

gathered the rice I had flung in her

pallu (the loose trailing end of her sari)

and poured it back into my lap.

Her eyes softly locked with mine as

my father’s own grew wide, his jaw,

a dropping protest to her inauspicious actions.

I wanted to apologise to her,

but instead we observed a palpable minute

of silence, time having run out.

Or rather taken from us to feed my

step mother’s jealousy.

In those sixty seconds, we were the unspoken

love of mother and daughter,

collectively the richest we would ever be.

A switch flipped the first day

I overturned a pot of rice in my marital home.

A home where I live in conjunction with

a mother in law.

My concerned mother religiously

checking in on me

and my step mom once

and for all washing her hands of me.

A truth so painfully revealed.

My mother, an ally, one with a deeper

understanding of how complex it is for

two women to coexist (or compete?)

under the same roof.

At the mercy of three too many mothers,

I precariously navigate

how to cook my own eggs.

A hope in hell crockpot of unconditional love

to shakshouka a hold and heal.

The Ghosts of Time | Saee Athawale

One of the first losses we experience

Is that of the passing of time,

With every passing second, time is dying.

It's a shame no one taught us how to deal with that loss

As we mourn the past, we are haunted by its spirit,

And fear the birth of the future,

Though what we truly fear is the haunting that will ensue.

As we age, the spirits grow in number,

All the ghosts clinging on to every inch of our soul,

Until we die, and eventually the agony is released,

As the ghosts melt away

Out of loyalty to their creator.

My Poetry | Ankita Apurva

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

My poetry is not a privilege

of convent educated brown women

who gorged on nursery rhymes for breakfast,

my poetry is not a Humpty Dumpty falling from the London Bridge,

not a woke bigotry on social media every time humanity fails humanity,

my poetry is not a library lost to piracy,

not a satin coated diary—

my grandfather passed onto me on my twelfth birthday,

my poetry is not only remembrance poppy nor only cold war nor only carnation wreath at the national war memorial,

my poetry is a responsibility,

a legacy, a war cry, a thatched roof of bones,

my poetry is a voice I was born with

which women before me had died for,

I was born within the womb of the first woman in history,

the rhyme scheme in the funeral pyre of each Suffragette,

I am Ruby Bridge desecrating white privilege,

you see every poet is a change

and every poetess a revolution,

Last year India organised its first government funded transgender poetry meet,

at times history needs to be given a mic not a coffin,

you see my poetry is Savitribai Phule felicitated

with stones, mud, and rotten eggs

as she martyred herself to educate me two hundred years ago,

my poetry is Maya Angelou losing voice

because her rapist got killed

because women are culturally conditioned to believe

carrying the punishment of our violation

is our responsibility,

My poetry is my mother not understanding

half of it

but showing it to every guest who came to our house,

my poetry is every girl child

whose throat was found in a dump yard because of her anatomy

two days after she was born,

my poetry is the infanticide of misogyny,

Lee Makobe's mother telling her she "could grow up to be anything"

my poetry is 'twinkle twinkle little star'

my grandmother how I wonder where she is

tonight, refilling my pen

reminding me-

some times you may not

live long enough to be celebrated

some times—

you will live long enough to be remembered,

sometimes you learn history

sometimes history will

unlearn itself.

Sun to my Icarus | Chaitali Monpara

My tongue was tied, and my eyes could speak lies

But soul longed to cry, when you looked me in the eyes

I was a bleak night, you were summer sky

An elusive daydream, I knew wasn't my

you love the rain, but still look for the sun

Now I want nothing, but to eternally burn

I wish my cupid was painted as yours

with eyes wide open to stop the blind wars

You were the sun my Icarus yearned

When I tried to touch you,I burned and burned

You didn’t let me in, my heart was chocking

So, In the end, I stopped knocking

Awargi | Amit Kumar

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

A new day brings a new ending.

New ideas that need to be standing.

New vibes I need to be sending.

New money that needs spending.

New classes that I've been attending.

New girls who never give up pretending.

New money that needs lending.

New flights to crash before landing.

New emotions that need bending.

For the death that's still pending.

I no longer care for the work and it's pendency.

What is expected from me or the expectancy.

I'm playing guitar with tendons of my tendency.

To be old schooled with a hint of fancy.

The defining emptiness in vacancy.

I no longer need to accumulate currency.

I'm no longer part of schemes or agencies.

Or travel in the cars that look red n fancy.

Not to bathe at all or in the watery fragrances.

It never has distances or stances.

In the end it's only me and my vagrancy.

Life in the office | Manik Gupta

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

In the well furnished office, owned by my father ,

The walls of which constantly diffuse smells of materialism ,

I work like a machine .

I print bills , examine the colossal stock and record incessant transactions.

My mind does calculations better than any calculator.

I yell and curse my employees ,who I know despise me secretly.

Like a sacred ritual, I arrange the wet currency notes into the sturdy piles

And obediently hand them over to my father every evening.

Nothing pleases him more than money.

He grins and offers me my share

Which I always decline with an air of stoicism.

Money makes me nauseous.

It makes one servile and coward ,

Like a tamed bird always flying back haplessly to its cage.

In the first floor , I hastily eat my brunch .

It crunches of notes and coins .

In the second floor , I inhale the stale air ,

Being environed by the big coils of wires

And quickly rush back to the main office

Where the customers are heard pleading and yelling,

Transporters waiting impatiently for the receipts,

Cheque books which need to be signed and stamped.

At home , I often complain of insomnia and headache.

Monetary thoughts grip my neck constantly.

In dream , I encounter the big quagmires of wires .

I wake up tired like a criminal condemned to death.

Work keeps my temperament in check .

In the initial moments at my office every morning ,

When I’m allowed a few moments of privacy,

I reminisce about my old job

And my past academic life,

About the woman who no longer loves me.

I am told how blessed I’m and I reciprocate with a sigh.

In the middle of an exhausting day,

I escalate to the first floor abruptly.

There I stare at the heavily dusted fan

With complete absent mindedness,

And fancy myself to be hanged

By the most expensive piece of sturdy wire .

Down there , the noise accelerates

Regarding the goods which need to be despatched

To the places distant ,

And the fat ledgers which demand constant attentions

And then I quickly stride downstairs

To make all the necessary arrangements..

My Wardrobe Has Mitochondrial DNA | Dr Anamika Nath

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

I open my wardrobe every day to see,

A septate of saris, a dozen bangles, and some bindis,

And some traditions my mother has imparted,

Like how each morning her frail flame restarted.

Mom, you have grown old now

Yet you do the same every day and how!

The buttery skin of your hands has peeled off,

Scrubbing father's many white shirts, creating cracks and troughs.

Oh Mama! you bled profusely,

During your menses and while birthing me,

Yet even on those days, you cooked rice and five curries,

To feed all males in the house, who were always in a hurry.

The soot from the smoke had deposited in your lungs,

Your face had lost its glow and darkened your lips and tongue,

Dear Mamma, why did you blow the hollow pipe so hard?

The chulha had sucked your youth and made your dreams charred.

Mum, why do you forget things?

And what could possibly pull your heartstrings?

The keys are still inside the lock and so are many more.

You are still wearing the spectacles you are searching for.

The sun has set and yet you don't rest,

I know you want to be the best,

Daughter-in-law, Wife, Sister-in-law, and Mummy,

But your bones are now porous and your mood is not as sunny.

Mum, don't worry about me or my sister,

Take notice of your hair fall and all your blisters,

Don't worry about the Kheer getting burnt,

Remember the motivational stuff you have learned.

Maa, now stop it! You have done enough,

You don't have to be that tough,

Your mitochondrial DNA has slowly penetrated me and grew,

And somehow I am becoming you.

I don those saris, those bangles, and bindis,

To be a good daughter-in-law, wife, sister-in-law, and mummy,

I cook every day five curries,

And I keep my head refilled with worries.

My face has changed from twilight to the new moon,

I think I am shedding skin soon,

And I am slowly forgetting things, I think it's your DNA, Moma,

I had forgotten I was an individual in all this drama.

To the Thick Skinned One | Aditi Rajaura

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

To the thorns penetrating deeper into your skin

Anything but repellent to the oozing scars of your kith & kin;

Ohh heart throb! Have wounds ever healed without a tinge of delicate touch?

To the beating heart you say is numb

Have you ever witnessed,

Surviving at the mercy of blood, warm and ready to take the plunge?

O darling! All you ever did was lie

As your skin shone to the bright sunlit sky

The rainbow you owe the flicker of your smile to

The heart wrenching music you let your veins seep into

The seamlessly unbending values you tend to get inclined to

Aren't you the height of audacity so afraid to regard human vulnerability?

Might I not want to see the good in you

But, in the name of the love we shared as nyctophiles

Will you answer me one last time?

If it was forbidden to ache at the sound of my voice

To bleed involuntarily at the menacing high note

Carrying a glimpse of my sight

Would you have your soul coerced into doing away with my memories every day and night?

I may know what you're hesitant to say

In hopes of protecting the which is 'shattering'

Profoundly safer within 'matters of grey'

Lest a fraction of thy magnitude causes the holy breath to shake

All deception is forgiven, my love!

As foretells a promise I hereby make!

Form and Heart | Mitali Thakur

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

I told her, grow from me mother

Mine will birth you a new

Mount thyself on my back….

Grip and let bleed

And sip back that,

which flows and marks your face

Do not weep for the flowing scarlet on mine..

Hold…

How will I heal ? You ask…

When every time I wake

I see you lessen…

In both form and heart.

Hold it firm I will

Lend out every hand forced to places insecure..

It is me mother, hold!

Peep! One after the other

And see…though the resemblance is inevitable, but it’s me

I’m more you…

Than even you…

Tell me

Tell me…if the gust pierces more than it should

I will fill all that inside till veins, blue.

Hold mother, hold.

I am but the native…

To the shores of your womb.

Not of those shoulders unreliable…

Hold mother, hold.

It is me, hold.

Clutch hard…

Do not worry for the blemishes developing on mine

Let us erase those first,

Chiseled in your young heart.

Mother....

It is me...

Hold.

The Moon | Vutkuru Syama Sindhuri

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

As the blanket of the splendid sky spread itself wide

you appear round and blue;

so sound and still

with haunting handsomeness

and never exhausting awesomeness.

Although stowed millions of miles away

still can feel your amazing aura all around;

Calmness of a dark night,

Brightness of a sunny morning,

Coolness of a rainy evening,

Warmness of a winter noon,

yet mysteriousness of a mighty ocean

all enclosed within you.

Clouds may tease and hide you from me,

Stars might taunt for their closeness with you

but as love conquers all,it will find its way;

it lets to climb those invincible ladders,

fly through whirling winds

and survive the inhuman space.

Dear unannounced knight of the infinite sky

reigning the unchartered territories!

the distant you are,

the desperate am;

the dreamier the desire may seem,

the deeper it grew.

Love you to the moon and back;

May be will meet you in person one day!

A Lunatic Man | Bristi Parvin

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

I was in my car

I saw a man

With dirty clothes and an empty stomach

With bare feet and messy hair

With a long beard and an unclear face

He was sitting on the ground

and playing with sand

And asking pedestrians for food

People were looking at him

with disgusted eyes

And remarking, "Dirty lunatic man!"

"Maniac"

Then I noticed a blind person with a stick

He was begging for help

All of a sudden!

That lunatic man with dirty clothes, messy hair, and bare

feet

Came close to the blind person

Held his hand

Helped him to cross the road

That madman helped him!

Whom the civilized society called "crazy"

Whom the civilized society remarked " dirty"

Whom the civilized society thinks of as "untouchable"

Whom the civilized society "hates"

Whom the civilized society knows as "uncivilized".

Dowry | Keshav Bhanot

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

In the shadows of tradition's dark reign,

Lies a custom causing women pain,

Dowry, they call it, a cruel demand,

Where happiness fades like shifting sand.

A woman's worth tied to material things,

Her dreams crushed, her spirit in chains,

Innocence traded for worldly wealth,

As she's bartered away for her family's stealth.

Furniture, T.V., Fridge, Jewellery, Car, Utensils,

Are usually demanded and exchanged,

Leaving the marriage ceremony to become a trade,

Remember, a marriage ceremony is not a business deal.

In this cruel dance, she suffers the most,

Her dreams shattered like a forgotten ghost,

Her love, her care, her nurturing grace,

All diminished in this heartless chase.

But listen, dear world, and hear her plea,

A wife's love is boundless, pure, and free,

Her heart is a sanctuary, a sacred shrine,

Where love and compassion eternally entwine.

Why burden her with this painful yoke?

When she's more precious than any stroke,

Her laughter, her strength, a beacon of light,

Shining through the darkness, igniting the night.

Mental and physical torture, harassment, Domestic violence,

emotional abuse, Abetment to suicide, dowry death,

we read these terms in newspapers,

and we think that this is not our problem.

Let us break these chains, unshackle her soul,

Embrace the essence that makes her whole,

In unity, let's stand, hearts filled with love,

Respecting each other as equals above.

The dowry system's veil, let's cast it away,

Embrace equality, in love's embrace we'll stay,

For a woman's worth goes beyond all gold,

Her love is a treasure, a story yet untold.

Let’s not measure the love of a woman by the grams of gold,

Let’s not judge the beauty of a woman by her face,

Let’s break the chain of dowry and harassment,

Let’s spread love, spread happiness, and live life to the fullest.

When the night falls in our town | Gopal Dutta

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

When the night falls in our town

In winter, shrouded in her misty dark gown

Life stands still and it's so cold

And who'd brave to go out, who'd be so bold!

Snuggled in a blanket warm

And safe from winter's harm

My eyes would struggle hard to hold

With the tip of my nose so cold!

My hands would not dare to come out

'Homework' My mother would shout

From the kitchen- the only warm place in the universe

With the smell of delicious soup and the warmth of hers.

Altar of Love | Beena E.S.

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

Endless

as circadian rhythm

Days dawn to resume

The clattering and rattling

of the silverware

the buzzing and whistling of the airtight pots.

Entailed is a cluster of chores tied tight.

In dampened robe drenched in pungent whiff;

Sweeping ,wiping,

Slicing, dicing, chopping.

The pinkish glassy layers peeled

Bleary-eyed and rumpled;

burdened, wearied

in smothering heat.

Myriad dreams drift away.

Million desires dissipate.

Betwixt the pain and pressure,

Unrelenting cords of love

gracious happiness inspire.

Lucky Encounter | Mehreen Zaara

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

He stepped into the metro

While I temporarily forgot how to breathe

As our eyes locked,

A smile threatened to wreathe

Be it at work, or even before going to sleep

I, now know I may have looked like a dork

But all the younger me thought was about the insanely beautiful him

I was all too glad when the next day deja vu hit me again

But he sat beside me and suddenly I had a composure to regain

It took weeks for me to finally talk

And for him to not me a discombobulated me every morning

Albeit he smiled through it all

The idea of him liking me back died aborning

Alas no one can guess what the future holds,

‘Cause even a lost case like me found myself being confessed to by a guy

The same guy who was the reason I started believing in love at first sight

I couldn’t be more than happy when 20 years later

The spoons were left with a clatter

I found myself in front of the kids with the room filled with chatter

And I ended our fascinating tale as I said,

“That’s how I met your father.”

Fear the Fear | Anusha Tiwari

THE FOLLOWING POEM WAS SELECTED IN WINGWORD POETRY PRIZE 2023 LONGLIST.

Oh! to fear the fear,

how terrible-horrible is that!

And yet, I don't feel anything but courage when I tell you that.

And so I tell you this perhaps with an obtrusive heart and a scared soul,

So, listen mindfully

For it might be what's in your heart,

confined in a cabinet waiting to be set free.

'Through our infancy, we've been told everything.

From what to eat and what to do

To what to feel and what not to.

They fill our minds with THEIR thoughts.

Who to hate, who to love

Who to be nice to, who to avoid.

What to fear and what not to!'

Yes! They have told us what is to be feared and what is not.

It is this fear that I fear.

It is the fear which I am not allowed to be frightened off!

Why? O! tell me why?

It is okay to have a fear of height

But not good to have a fear of fright.

Why? O! tell me why?

It is okay to have a scare of a lion

But to have a terror of a dog?

Oh! My friend, that's a crime for them all!

Why? O! tell me why?

We aren't allowed to fear what we truly fear?

Why being petrified of a lion is a prudent thing,

But to be scared of a dog is considered a hideous feeling.

Why are we not obliged to feel what we want to feel?

Why this world fills its sentiments into us to feel?

Why? O! tell me why?

It is an age-old custom,

To teach the child what an adult knows,

But not for once, did you all think,

That somethings are better not known!

That, it is better and perhaps even amplest,

For a child to learn something for himself.

Maybe, just maybe. If we think about it,

Not teaching children who to love and who to hate,

Letting them decide who is worthy of love.

Perhaps this will give us a doctrine that we never had!

Why? O! tell me why?

Is it you fearful adults?

Or is it people like me?

Who doesn't like change?

Why? O! tell me why?

Are you afraid of letting us perceive our feelings?

Or do you not want to spread the love?

Why do people who have fears not quite prevalent to yours

Get hatred from you and your kind?

Is it not common for people to be different?

Isn't this a free world?

Or this is just a fantasy

Where every creature has a role?

To think of this world like a fantasy,

It can't even be that.

For it has been reduced, abused too much to be a happy place!

People, beautiful people, feel horrid.

Why? O! tell me why?

Do you have to judge others from their taste?

Can't you let them feel THEIR fear?

Oh! and to those,

Who feel scared to declaim.

Let me tell you something.

'This world has been far too altered,

You can sit by in your fear for now.

But realize this one thing,

If you fear something.

Be proud of it.'

Fear is fear.

We all are allowed to feel it,

and those who think that,

to have a fright for certain things is hideous

Are the ones with frightfulness, dear!

They fear of you,

They fear that if you get comfortable with your fears,

Then nothing can hinder you!

Why? O! tell me why?

Do You not feel this fear of the fear?

Or maybe your fear for fear doesn't let you express it.

But these are my assumptions,

Wholly like this poem.

I fear the fear because I am scared to speak of my despair

And perhaps I am just a skittish cat like many,

But I really can't think of any,

Who has indicated that they fear the fear!

So, yes! I fear the fear.

And oh! how blissful I feel,

To have finally let it off my chest and into my writing spree.

But one thing will make me more content,

With that said, I think you know what I mean.

And if you don't,

Then give a read,

You shall find some questions,

Whose answers you shall seek.