Human Kindness
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 March 2020
Summary
Stranded
On the corner of two indifferent streets
Chewing grey bhindi in a hardened roti
From a polysterene plate
Dreading another loo
Fighting off hustlers and flies
The infestation of rickshaw-wallahs
In the rising heat and the rising
Dust of early traffic
A young woman hesitated
Reading my distress.
Had she worn jeans
They would have been frayed
But she didn't
– hair matted
Face gaunt and parched
– the long tunic and folds
held a cell phone and a music box
She said “Come”
Her aunt had rooms to nighter
And a western loo
She only asked to use my tap to wash
Kibashni, she said and she said
AISA from JNU back on home-turf
To bring back news of a “struggle”.
There were meetings, bombs and martyrs
She said – under my rickety lamp Her eyes sparkled at the mention of poems She played me a track of Indian Ocean
I need a drink I said
She returned with a Kingfisher for me
And a glass of something dodge for her
She slept wrapped in a sheet on the floor outside the entrance
She got up quietly and left
I followed her to the curtain
The sun was up
I saw an official van
She was taken.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Around the World in Eighty DaysThe India Section, pp. 34 - 36Publisher: University of South AfricaPrint publication year: 2014