The Impatient Nomad
Bear this in mind Gobinda, Sribatsa and Chhabila
Srihari isn바카라™t the last multiheaded hydraÂ
on whose head the earth rests Â
without whom the entire worldÂ
with the seas will be still.
Srihari is that monster who resembles god only
Srihari is that god who wants to devourÂ
all our priceless resources in the form of Â
waters, forests, and lands.
The impatient nomad who wanders bakingÂ
pancakes on the pan that belongs to someone else. Â
Cataracts
For some people, tribals are hillbillies and wild creaturesÂ
whereas for some others, a great epic of a revolution Â
tribals are the venom of reservation for some people, someÂ
think them the cornerstone of the growth in the courtyard of faith.
So many hearts scream in the skyscrapers of the city
scamper to them once every week to have ragi gruel andÂ
get ecstatic, sharing the closeup pics on Facebook.
Some poets ooze poetry from their hearts, drinking mahua beer,Â
singing the saga of resistance, some hold placards for them every day
some exhibit cultural greatness and others play cards daily,Â
some regurgitate the etymology and some think of themselves asÂ
the saviour for them; however, the tribals don바카라™t have any reaction to this.Â
Due to lack of consciousness, tribals are labelled as monkeysÂ
due to lack of consciousness, their thumb is chopped off
due to lack of consciousness, some term them demonsÂ
due to lack of consciousness, when they바카라™re preached,
they say yes to Ram, yes to Krishna, yes to Jesus, yes to Hinduism,
yes to Islam and forget their Marangburu, Mahadeo, Budharaja,
Jahera-era, Gopagasen, Maili, while saying so.Â
They dance if they바카라™re asked to do so, and they depart if they바카라™re asked so
they say yes to Mao, and yes to Lenin and Marx too
and the portraits they바카라™ve never seen, they compose songs with theÂ
quill in their name; when talked about Bheema Bhoi, AmbedkarÂ
and Birsha, they saccade their eyes in pride and wear
knowledge바카라”erudition바카라”ashes on the necks of the caste enemies.
Amidst all this, the forest that had mothered them and the forestÂ
that they had taken care of is loved by someoneÂ
as like as he loves chilled beer and roasted chicken.
The light doesn바카라™t enter the forest, none avails the rare weapon ofÂ
the  alphabet, the crown of understanding and wisdom is rare,Â
that makes all the scholars, poets and leaders do an unending comic. Â Â
Even a tribal can바카라™t recognise a tribal as a tree can바카라™t realise defoliation
like husk deer can바카라™t recognise herself, it바카라™s not feasible alsoÂ
since many doing a sacrificial ritual to cover up cataracts
the murky darkness will last forever in the smoke deluged. Â Â Â Â
Â
Notes: Marangburu, Mahadeo, Budharaja, Jahera-era, Gopagasen, and Maili are the deities of the tribals and Dalits in the western part of Odisha.Â
Â
The Formula of the Grammar Â
Cow and buffalo are four-legged, milking domestic animals.
Black or brown or stripped, country breed or jersey
the cow is our mother, whereas buffalo is always stray.
Which is why Madhubabu told Danai, to not go to it
buffalo-milk is not even accepted by god,Â
a cow is always a subject for essays and
the centre of songs, epics, and storytelling Â
who cares about buffalo, it lies in a puddle of mud,Â
but it바카라™s the carrier of the god of deathÂ
isn바카라™t it a matter of delight?Â
Cow urine and dung are holy and treatment for manyÂ
diseases, stupids don바카라™t understand바카라”
they dump them into their fields as compost; in contrast,Â
the quack and witch doctor sell them for ninety rupees a litre.
it바카라™s also said that the body of a wretched is sanctifiedÂ
with the holy sacrifice and in the usage of cow dung.
Forget what science says, this is the land of the Aryans
you바카라™ve to follow the foot of their eminence Â
in this land of the Aryans, when a cow or buffalo dies
none comes to throw the carcass, that time no sonsÂ
turn up who were adoring just as a mother
who were being purified with the sanctity of cow dungÂ
who comes to throw the carcass is infinitely an outcast.
Cow and buffalo are not only the domestic animalsÂ
the peculiar recital of the royal brawn tooÂ
the domestic adjective of a butcher바카라™s weaponÂ
neither the cow nor the buffalo construes it.
History witnesses, one who doesn바카라™t understand
the etymology and the formula of the grammarÂ
gets slaughtered just as Mahishasur
despite being a hero, the chopped headÂ
of Belalsen remains hanging in the Mahabharata. Â Â
The Dream of DevelopmentÂ
How can they realise literature and its pertinence Â
who think language is only a communicationÂ
and just the exchange of feelings?
How can they realise the glory of an idol, whoÂ
live embracing the land and mountain as a mother?
How can they decode the Darubrahma in the wood
who burn the planks in the hearth for a bit of riceÂ
being used in the roofing?Â
How can they analyse the indefatigable power of waterÂ
who guzzle and pour into the roots of ash guards,
spike guards, when they avail it?
How can they realise what sacrifice is, those who yell바카라” Â
we바카라™ll die, we바카라™ll die when they바카라™re asked to walkÂ
just a mile away from their hamlet?
How can they decipher the meaning of the nation
when they바카라™re obsessed with protecting theirÂ
own piece of land and forest insanely?
How can they understand the metallic nitty-gritty Â
who drink ragi gruel from a leaf bowl, water from a pot,
and cover ten-fifteen miles on foot for salt and chilly,Â
go hunting deer and stag with bow and arrow andÂ
arrange the net with an axe and a knife?
Development바카라”the mahatma! The dream of progress Â
here isn바카라™t just complex, it바카라™s intricate too to interpret. Â Â Â Â
Â


PaeanÂ
All languages are easy and elegant like a song andÂ
story and slick like the call of a mother.Â
But now the countenance, characteristicsÂ
and the grammar of the language have distorted  Â
the noun, adjective, pronoun, and verb areÂ
like a venomous arrow piercing throughÂ
the lives of many in a second, waging warÂ
impulsively and erupting lavas in a wink.
People baking their own bread become loquacious
hatching a war of wordsÂ
the quotidian life of thatch and clay turns intolerable
the barbaric wheels of language run over
the pregnant paddy and wheat.
The language that was consoling us until now Â
becomes excessively murderous,Â
when someone abuses a body, like a sharp weapon
the language overpowers the question of dissent. Â
Lives of fifty-six crore of living beings fall intoÂ
melancholy in just a few words of the languageÂ
friends, mates, brothers and all innocenceÂ
get bruised in the brutality of words, and mythically Â
there blossoms, Brahma Kamal and lakhs of lotuses. Â Â
Even in the scorching sun, the language sells Â
the full moon of development; this time is so vile Â
how many animals are dumb, deaf and numbÂ
in the new incarnation and etymologyÂ
of the language and reach the verge of death,Â
from every angle, nouns and adjectives are extolled.
Â
A dream of perennial hope clamours like a mic
it바카라™s said, a language also dies sometimes, but thenÂ
how would this language die, when you and I areÂ
singing a ceaseless paean in the same language? Â
(Translated from the Odia by Pitambar Naik)
Sanjaya Kumar Bag has a PhD in Folklore Studies from the University of Delhi. He teaches Odia Language and Literature at the Eastern Regional Language Centre, Bhubaneswar, Odisha. He has four volumes of research work and two books of short fiction바카라”Barnabodha O Madhubabunka Katha (2009) and Birnang Debi (2017). His stories have been translated and published widely in English and other Indian languages like Hindi and Assamese. He was born and raised in Koksara, Kalahandi and lives in Bhubaneswar, India.Â
Pitambar Naik is an advertising copywriter for a living. When he바카라™s not creating ideas for brands, he writes and translates poetry. His work appears or is forthcoming in ellipsis... literature & art, The Dodge, The McNeese Review, The Notre Dame Review, Packingtown Review, Ghost City Review, Rise Up Review, Glass: A Journal of Poetry, The Other Side of Hope and elsewhere. He바카라™s the author of the poetry collection, The Anatomy of Solitude (Hawakal). He grew up in Mandal, Kalahandi, Odisha and lives now in Bangalore, India.Â