Partition is central to modern identity in the Indian subcontinent, as the Holocaust
is to identity among Jews, branded painfully onto the regional consciousness
by memories of almost unimaginable violence. (William Dalrymple)
is to identity among Jews, branded painfully onto the regional consciousness
by memories of almost unimaginable violence. (William Dalrymple)
![]()  | 
| Usha Kishore | 
of broken bones flesh gut and blood spilling
across railway tracks 
across wine red seas across the politics of
deceit across a faraway island 
that ruled the seas only to be split up by
history and its own people 
tired of divisions tired of being slaves of bigger
nations who ruled 
land sea and sky an island nation showered
by the curses of its colonies 
who trembled under its foot curses showered
by centuries that quaked 
under the roar of its cruel canons its brute
desire to conquer the world
this subcontinent is a nation no more no more
its suicidal hands 
slicing off its sea its land its sky mapping
its own desires of self-rule 
its terrors in the wake of its own reforms
its fears of its own thirty million 
gods who metamorphosed into blood and gore
its two nation theories 
that created more nations of discord among
its heterogeneous races 
its multifarious languages its nefarious
rituals its bloodthirsty people 
descending into chaos in a motherland torn
apart by strife leaving 
a million songs unsung a million tales untold
a million dreams undreamt
this subcontinent is a nation no more no more
its everlasting mutinies 
its war mongering dynasties its power hungry
leaders spawned 
by bigotry and animal passion all falling
under the spell of an island 
kingdom queen of all nations ruling the waves
this subcontinent 
its geographies marking its histories its
languages chronicling its cultures 
its blaspheming men raping its women birthing
a generation of bastards 
hacking a nation’s breast splitting open its
womb this dark subcontinent 
is a broken down cannibalistic goddess
created by fair men with fairer 
dreams of a better world for themselves in
hill stations in summer capitals 
in a virgin land that prostitutes itself to
white masters a land of culture 
subjugating itself to anarchy a land of peace
opening itself to violence 
its hapless female soul trapped between many
libidinous male gods 
descendants of some other sky who write a
crazed and bloodied history 
of a myriad lives trampled in a myriad border
crossings on the breast of time 
this subcontinent is a nation no more no more this subcontinent
wallowing 
in bloodbaths has no beginning no end its
seething memories stretching 
across the centuries a standing testament of
imperial follies a distortion 
of historical trajectories that eclipse
nations making trysts with destinies 
at midnight when the world sleeps this
subcontinent will divide into two 
its cities ablaze its furies unleashed
smothering all sense and sensibility 
shrinking its languages groping for lost
words and time weeping in funereal 
silence on a maimed land a mutilated apology
of a nation sowing seeds of 
discord and the mother nation waging an
inglorious war on its glorious Raj
this subcontinent is a nation no more no more
it lies cowering 
under the mantle of never ending night when
wolves howl 
when vultures tear open its guts when myths
devour its children 
when daybreak is a legend that only happens
upon other skies 
this subcontinent will weep until the end of
time in blood and tears 
for tearing itself asunder like some monster
child tired of its own 
screams this subcontinent and its seismic
shifts of ideologies 
its vicious politics of partition defining
the contours of its land 
sea and sky 
defiling its people like a plague an eternal curse hangs 
upon its people in the poignant cry of an old
nation self-immolating 
at the altar of  freedom sometimes scarlet sometimes stygian 
sometimes silver like lightning piercing the
heart of a weeping sky. 
(Inspired by William Dalrymple’s article, “The Great
Divide” on the partition of India, 1947, in The New Yorker, June 2015)

Wow! A really strong voice. Molten images.
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