Wednesday, 24 February 2021

Photographer documenting the homeless discovers her own father among them

 Honolulu, Hawaii-based photographer and law student Diana Kim can trace her love of photography back to her father, who used to own a photography studio on O'ahu. Until just a few years ago, however, not much else connected father and daughter except for a strained relationship marked by disappointment, hurt, and absence. A chance encounter brought the two back together again, sparking an extraordinarily moving journey of love and forgiveness in the face of mental illness, homelessness, and hardship.

“Some of the earliest memories I have of my father is of him giving me Ring Pop candies whenever my mother and I would visit him,” Kim, 30, told NBC News. “I had an insatiable craving for sweets and he would go behind my mother's back and sneak me gummy bears and Ring Pops.”

That was over 25 years ago, when their family was still together. Eventually, however, Kim's parents separated, and her father left when she was 5. Afterward, she had a tough childhood, bouncing from place to place in search of a permanent home. She spent her younger years living at relatives' homes, staying with friends, or in parks and cars. Despite these early hardships, however, Kim has built a happy life for herself; she has a family of her own with her husband and two sons, and has pursued her passion for photography, advocacy, and law.




In 2003, as a student, Kim began photographing homeless people on the street for a personal project that would eventually lead to The Homeless Paradise, an initiative dedicated to humanizing the homeless by sharing their stories. The photographer told NextShark, “I first started photographing the homeless community in my first year of college. I gravitated towards the homeless because in some ways I identified with their struggle. I knew what it meant to be discarded, to be neglected, and to not have the stability and economic freedom I wanted. Overall, I understood their struggle because I struggled in the same way.”




Although Kim's project shaped much of her life and her decision to go to law school, the biggest impact came in 2012. While documenting homeless people on the streets of Honolulu, Kim came across her own father. The man who she remembered abandoning her as a child was now homeless, unwashed, dressed in rags, and extremely thin. Worst of all, he didn't even recognize her.




“I found him standing at the corner of a busy intersection staring into the asphalt. His hair was matted and his head rolled in small circles. . . I inched closer towards him, feeling a sense of uncertainty, and finally found the courage to call out to him. He didn't hear me. He couldn't hear me. I slowly stepped closer and mustered up the courage to tap him on the shoulder. Still nothing. He didn't look up. He didn't turn around. By now there were a couple of pedestrians who had noticed my efforts, and I could feel their eyes burning into my back and face. I could feel their curiosity pierce through the space between my father and I. The vast emptiness between us was broken by a woman who approached me and said, ‘Don't bother, he has been standing there for days.'


“A part of me wanted to scream at this woman, and the world, for being so callous. I wanted to yell that he was my father, that she was a heartless person to not care. But I realized that none of that would change the circumstances. So instead of screaming at her, I faced her and said, ‘I have to try.'”




For the next two years, Kim kept returning to the street that her father called home. Sometimes he would be there, sometimes he wouldn't. Afflicted by severe schizophrenia, he was often unresponsive, or would argue intensely with the empty space in front of him. He refused to get treatment, take medication, eat, bathe, or wear any of the new clothes Kim brought him. Sitting next to him on the street corner or watching him from her car during one of his angry spells, Kim wondered if he would ever get better.


Despite how hopeless the situation seemed, Kim refused to stop helping him. She recalled one of the last “real conversations” she had had with her father a few years ago, during which he had said, “Diana, I am so sorry for not being in your life. I am so happy that you have a family of your own now. Do better for them. Don't worry about me or what everyone says about me. If you want to make me proud and happy, be there for your family the way your mom and I never were. Stop trying to save everyone…just worry about yourself and your family. And don't forget why I named you Diana, you are the light within the darkness.” In that moment, Kim reminisced, his words touched her heart, and she forgave him for everything. She loved her father, and she would never give up on him.




In October 2014, Kim got a call from her cousin. Her father had suffered a heart attack. He was found face-down on the sidewalk, but someone called the police, and he was rushed to critical care at the hospital. Kim said, “I cannot even begin to describe the feelings of gratitude for the person who took the time to help him. My biggest fear has always been that he would die on the streets, and nobody would know who he was. My desperation and feelings of hopelessness are over for now.”




Stepping into the hospital room, Kim saw her father lying on the bed, looking cleaner and better than she had seen him in a long time. She and her husband stood by his side, and then, “Just as we were about to leave, my father's eyes opened and he called out my name,” she wrote on her blog. “We had a good conversation, and I walked away feeling lighter that day.”


The next few months were difficult, as Kim's father went through ups and downs during his stay at the hospital. Despite his health problems, there was a silver lining to his heart attack–it led him to finally agree to receive help through a treatment plan, and day by day, he began to take back control of his life.




In December, Kim received a phone call from an unknown number. It was her father, asking her if she was free for coffee that morning. She immediately agreed and ran straight out of the house to see him. They met on the street where he had once owned a photography studio decades earlier–the same street where he had slept behind a pile of cardboard boxes for the past two years.


“As I pulled up into the parking lot, I saw my father's figure and my heart nearly stopped. He looked better than I had expected, and so different from the last image I had of him in the hospital,” Kim said. “It felt so good to see him so healthy, and standing so tall again. We must have hugged for a couple of minutes.” They paid their respects at a Buddhist temple, looked at old photos that Kim's father had kept with him all these years, and finally opened up to each other in a long, heartfelt conversation.


“I feel like I just met my father for the first time today,” Kim wrote on her blog later that day. “Our meeting was truly a miracle.”




“Initially, the fact that I couldn't ‘fix' my dad tore me apart,” Kim shared in a photo essay published in Honolulu Magazine. “And because our time together on the streets was more than I had ever spent with him as a child, I struggled to reconcile my feelings toward my father's absence in my life, while continuing to care deeply for him and other homeless individuals. Over time, I learned to navigate through my feelings of desperation and became more vocal in my community about my father's condition and what it's like to watch a loved one battle mental illness.”


Now, Kim is happy to report that her father is doing well. “He is really proud of the fact that he has overcome such incredible adversity… He has goals, he has hope, and he has the will to succeed,” she told NBC News. He's spending time with friends, actively looking for a job, and planning to visit his family in South Korea soon.


“Every day is a gift. Some days are more challenging than others, but seeing my father in the flesh is a constant reminder of the strength of the human spirit and how precious life is,” said Kim, who's taking her relationship with her dad one step at a time. “I never had a relationship with my father growing up, and there was a lot he did and didn't do that hurt me, but I have chosen to forgive him so we can move forward.”




“Photography is not just about creating images–it is my window to experiencing the world and sharing relationships with people and things that I am drawn to. Looking through the lens and capturing that moment also captures my feelings in that moment. I think that, without the camera, I would have felt too naked and vulnerable to approach my father. I don't think I could have made the same journey without the purpose of documenting his journey as well. My goal, long before my father ever became homeless, was to humanize those who lived on the streets. They each have a story, and I hope that by sharing my own story, it helps to give new perspective.”


“So long as we are alive in this world, every day is an opportunity to take hold of that ‘second chance.' There is no failure unless you give up, and he never gave up. And I haven't given up on him.”


Diana Kim: Website


(Source: My Modern Met)

Tuesday, 23 February 2021

Eccentricity as feminism

 The first time I read Leonora Carrington’s The Hearing Trumpet, I knew nothing about its author, so I had the incredible experience of coming to this short novel in a state of innocence. I was wholly unaware, for instance, that Carrington had been a painter, that she spent most of her life as an expat in Mexico, and that in her youth she had been in a relationship with Max Ernst, one of the greatest surrealists. But the anarchic tone and perverse nature of this little book made a powerful impression, one that has never left me.

There are two qualities in fiction that I find particularly astonishing and moving: open-endedness and wild metaphysics.


The first quality is structural. Open-ended books intentionally leave themes and ideas unrestricted, rendering them a little blurred. They grant us wonderful space for making our own surmises, for seeking associations, for thinking and interpreting. 


This interpretive process is a source of great intellectual pleasure, and it also acts as a friendly nudge toward further prospecting. Books of this sort have no theses, but they arouse questions that would not have occurred to us otherwise.


To my mind, the second quality, wild metaphysics, touches on a very serious question: Why do we read novels in the first place? Inevitably among the many true responses will be: We read novels to gain a broader perspective on everything that happens to people on Earth. Our own experience is too small, our beings too helpless, to make sense of the complexity and enormity of the universe; we desire to see life up close, to get a glimpse of the existences of others. Do we have anything in common with them? 


LEONORA CARRINGTON. PHOTO: EMERICO “CHIKI” WEISZ. COURTESY OF NEW YORK REVIEW BOOKS.




Are they anything like us? We are seeking a shared communal order, each of us a stitch in a piece of knitted fabric. In short, we expect novels to put forward certain hypotheses that might tell us what’s what. And banal as it might sound, this is a metaphysical question: On what principles does the world operate?


I think that this, in fact, is exactly where the difference—so hotly debated in my own literary era—lies between so-called genre and non-genre fiction. The true genre novel presents us with recognizable perspectives, using a ready-made world that has familiar philosophical parameters. The non-genre novel aims to establish its own rules for the created universe, sketching its own epistemological maps. And this is the case whether the book is a love story, a murder mystery, or the tale of an expedition to another galaxy.


The Hearing Trumpet eludes all categorization. From its first sentence on, it presents an internally coherent cosmos governed by self-generated laws. In doing so it passes disturbing comment on things we never stop to question.


*


In the patriarchal order, on reaching old age a woman becomes an even greater bother than she was when young. Just as patriarchal societies think up and organize thousands of norms, rules, codes, and forms of oppression to keep young women in line, they treat old women (who have lost their alluring erotic power) with a similar degree of suspicion and aversion. While maintaining a semblance of sympathy, members of such societies endlessly dwell on the former beauty of older women with a certain covert satisfaction, pondering the effects of the passage of time. Further marginalization is achieved by pushing them into social nonexistence; they are often financially impoverished and stripped of any influence. They become, instead, inferior creatures of no concern whatsoever to others; society does little more than tolerate them and provide them (rather reluctantly) with some sort of care.


This is the status of Marian Leatherby, the ancient narrator of The Hearing Trumpet, as the novel opens. She is full of life but hard of hearing. And she is doubly excluded—first as a woman, then as an old woman. Essential to her character is a quality she shares with the novel as a whole: eccentricity (eccentricity being one of the modes allowed to an old woman when she’s not playing the role of a kindhearted granny). Indeed, casting a deaf old woman in the role of narrator, heroine, and governing spirit, and populating a book with a group of odd old ladies, indicates from the start that this novel will be a highly eccentric, radical affair.


Things that are eccentric are by definition “outside the center”—outside long-established norms and all things regarded as self-evident, on the beaten path. To be eccentric is to view the world from a completely different perspective, one that is both provincial and marginal—pushed aside, to the fringes—and at the same time revelatory and revolutionary.


The Institute, or care home, where Marian is sent by her family, is run by Dr. and Mrs. Gambit. It, too, is eccentric, comprising a series of bizarre dwellings—shaped like a toadstool, a Swiss chalet, an Egyptian mummy, a boot, a lighthouse—impossible and absurd, straight out of a Bosch painting or some oneiric funfair. 


But here eccentricity can be seen as emblematic of the oppressive, patronizing, and infantilizing attitude we take toward old people. The word gambit is derived from the Italian word gambetto, literally “little leg,” which also turns up in the phrase dare il gambetto—to trip up, or to plot against. The Gambits are the hypocritical, pretentious representatives of an equally hypocritical society, and their methods are summed up by the expression “for their own good.” The Gambits always know what is proper and healthy for their wards, submitting them to an ill-defined psycho-pedagogical doctrine not unlike the one embraced by followers of Rudolf Steiner. The most comical example of this ideology are the “Movements,” perhaps a nod to the Gurdjieff movements, that the old ladies are obliged to perform on a daily basis.


The Gambits’ mission involves constant observation and judgment of their residents, another feature of the vague, quasi-religious concept of self-perfection bordering on sadism with which they indoctrinate their charges. As Dr. Gambit tells Marian:


Reports in your particular case show the following list of interior impurities: Greed, Insincerity, Egoism, Laziness and Vanity. At the top of the list Greed, signifying a dominating passion. You cannot overcome so many psychic deformities in a short space of time. You are not alone as victim of your degenerate habits, everyone has faults, here we seek to observe these faults and finally to dissolve them under the light of Objective Observation, Consciousness.


The fact that You Have Been Chosen to join this community should give you enough stimulation to face your own vices bravely and seek to diminish their hold over you.


Behind the Gambits’ beneficence lies a quite specific economic motive. Yes, the Gambits make money from the old people they claim to perfect. In fact, they do not operate out of a sense of mission at all but in order to make a living. In invoking the sin of Greed, Carrington reminds us of the deeply hypocritical connections between religious institutions and economics.


Another of the novel’s eccentrics is Carmella, the heroine’s great friend, said to have been inspired by Carrington’s old friend and fellow painter Remedios Varo. Carmella has been allowed to retain some influence in the world because she is a rich old woman, and there’s nothing people respect as much as money and those who possess it. As a result, Carmella enjoys unquestioned power to make things happen. Her appearances at the dreary Institute are dramatic; her ideas are absolute, steered not by reason but by imagination and a different way of thinking. In her character eccentricity is elevated to the rank of Goddesshood.


*


In the early sixties and into the seventies, Leonora Carrington was active in the women’s liberation movement in Mexico. She was notorious for designing a poster depicting Adam and Eve offering an apple to each other. Similarly, in The Hearing Trumpet, Carrington reclaims and inverts traditional, foundational stories, in the process creating one of the most original feminist texts ever written. The book contains the quintessence of feminism in a narrative that is subversive and surrealist in its invocation of an unconventional metaphysical order. The Hearing Trumpet forthrightly introduces eccentricity into the feminist debate as a perspective that’s a legitimate alternative to the patriarchal one: whatever is eccentric is Goddess-like in spirit.


In our age, the Goddess was expelled from the center long ago by her “Sterile Brothers” (as Carrington calls them); her kingdom is now in the provinces of perception. Nevertheless, the Goddess will always be present wherever the binaries—either/or, native/foreigner, black/white—beloved by the Sterile Brothers are exposed as limited. Theirs is the simplest and crudest way of organizing a complicated world, of achieving power over it. By their logic, to fit a too-tall patient to a too-short bed, one should cut off his feet, not seek a longer bed.


I consider Goddesshood to be womanhood deepened and expanded by the manifold treasures of culture and nature. The Goddess is a powerful archetype, and her very existence is pure provocation to a patriarchal structure. No wonder that in many parts of the world women are made to cover their faces and bodies. Women’s physiology—which would seem to be the most natural thing in the world, like their corporeality—is always a problem, something not to be discussed. Civilizations might be described by the mechanisms they have invented and implemented to control Goddesshood.


When womanhood demands what it is owed—recognition of its strength and power, of its very Goddesshood—it is banished to the cellar, imprisoned in the dungeon. Deprived of contact with consciousness, it loses its ability to speak and can only “murmur”—as the Grail murmurs in The Hearing Trumpet. It becomes imprecise and blurred. It is unable (or unwilling) to use the awkward, refined patriarchal diction, essayistic flights, virtuoso sentences, and nonchalant musings on art so prized by the arbiters of culture, high above the dungeon of the despondent Goddess. Its language is coarse and irreverent, not at all adapted to people’s typical perceptions but wild, laughable, eccentric, untamed. It is often perceived as incomprehensible, and as a result it is sometimes judged as kitsch. Kitschy and lacking taste—a charge that is so often flung at women. Apparently Joseph Conrad said that the best criterion for the quality of a book is that women don’t like it—because women can only like bad literature. Well, I have to admit that I like what Conrad wrote very much. Sincerely.


All right. So be it. Kitsch is our ocean. All those cyclical processes, menstruations, and recurrent migraines. Mumbo jumbo, healing herbs, and infantile trust in the power of nature. An unhealthy love of animals, sentimentality, the feeding of stray cats. Being overprotective, poking one’s nose into everything. All those flowers in little pots, all those little gardens, the hollyhocks, the rags, the lace, the stitching, the knitting, the romance novels, the soap operas, “women’s literature,” “emotionality,” the accusation of mental weakness that has been pressed on us for centuries. 


The reservoir of misogynist scripts is immense and seemingly bottomless. In modern times, in a thoroughly patriarchal world, we can only talk about the Goddess ironically, winking like the Abbess in the painting that hangs in the Gambits’ dining room, and with a hidden smirk, half serious, half mocking. Having been actively displaced and ridiculed for thousands of years she can only express herself in this covert way. It’s worth pondering how many subjects related to women’s experience have been marginalized, derided, ridiculed, or altogether displaced. For hundreds of years women have been raised within misogynist, patriarchal religions that openly discriminate against them to some degree. They take part in cultures that are never fully theirs, or that are even in outright opposition to them. From youth, women are drip-fed doctrines that position them as inferior, weaker, less capable, or in some other way handicapped. They grow up in a mist of ubiquitous misogyny, often veiled and not fully self-aware, which is intrinsic to culture, language, images, interpersonal relations, history, and economics. It is only in the last few decades that the real story of women, marginalized into near nonexistence, has patiently tried to break free. And when it emerges into the appropriated world, it can find itself at a loss for words.


*


Leonora Carrington recognizes this subversive, eccentric position of womanhood. In both her painting and her writing she has a marvelous way of subscribing to André Breton’s belief in the need to align art with alchemy or occultism. She makes liberal use of our European esoteric imaginarium, while avoiding the pompous solemnity that often accompanies it.


The Hearing Trumpet is a hermetic text; it refers to things that are hidden, displaced, and forgotten. In order to be fully interpreted it requires from the reader a certain familiarity with its allusions, even as it mocks this sort of competence by pulling all sorts of striking and astonishing tales from its trunk of wonders.


The Abbess’s winking eye should be immortalized on every future cover of this book; it should become its hallmark, as should Marian’s deafness. Together they comprise a set of instructions for approaching the novel. At the very beginning of the book, Carmella gives Marian a hearing trumpet, which miraculously allows her to be selective about what she hears. The winking eye is telling us to place everything in inverted commas and to trust the “as if ” on which myth and literature rely. From here on we shall follow after Leonora like this—with one eye winking, mischievously, kitschily, taking everything that she serves up to us at face value.


And she serves up a lot—the book is a true carnival. At the moment the Winking Abbess is identified as Doña Rosalinda Alvarez Cruz della Cueva from El Convento de Santa Barbara de Tartarus—onto the stage of The Hearing Trumpet steps the Goddess. From this point on, the borders between reality and fantasy, the solemn and the absurd, the sublime and the ridiculous dissolve into the surrealist tissue of the novel. History opalesces with pastiche, and the book meanders down multiplying paths of references to esoteric pop-cultural texts, stories about the Holy Grail, the Knights Templar, and Mary Magdalene, and to a whole host of alternative histories of mankind that folk strains of religions have been playing with for a long time.


The story of the Winking Abbess is the story of the Holy Cup containing the elixir of life, which has been stolen from its rightful owner, the Goddess (who appears here under various guises), by “sterile” monks and hidden by the Templars in the cellar of their monastery. Only a woman is capable of extricating this genuine treasure, though the Templars do not seem to know this. Generally speaking, the chief adversary of both the Winking Abbess Doña Rosalinda and Marian Leatherby is Christianity—for the former it is represented by the Templar order and the ruthless bishops, and for the latter by an oppressive New Age Christian mentality of pointless self-denial and external control.


The tale of Doña Rosalinda’s mission to rescue the Grail is a series of fantastical and unexpected adventures. It is at the same time a story of repossession, of an anti-Crusade that restores the correct order in a fraudulently appropriated world. In this story within the story, Carrington produces a wonderfully comical parody mimicking those mysterious texts found in jars in the desert, such as the discovery at Nag Hammadi in 1945, which undoubtedly reinvigorated the religious imagination of secularized twentieth-century man. She makes copious reference to figures and names from the Gnostic treatises, including the Pistis Sophia.


The curious and patient reader will detect some surprisingly erudite references not only to Gnosticism but to esoteric religious syncretism of all sorts, both ancient and contemporary. Such a reader will take note of the name of our abbess: Doña Rosalinda della Cueva (from the cave), Abbess of the Convent of Saint Barbara of Tartarus, is associated (fittingly in the light of her further adventures) with the mysterious, powerful figure of Barbarus or Barbelo, who resides in—naturally!—“the depths of Pleroma” (to use the Gnostic term mentioned in the Apocryphon of John). Barbelo is the first creative force, hers is the womb of the world, she is the prototype for the Shekhinah and Sophia in one. 


She appears as a bearded female figure, the Mother-Father, and as Anthropos, the first hermaphrodite. As if in answer, Carrington seeds The Hearing Trumpet with characters of fluid gender—a bearded woman, a cross-dresser, a transsexual. Amid the several bizarre figures of earthly provenance in the book the reader will also find the character Taliessin, a figure taken straight from Welsh mythology. He is the Goddess’s messenger and the first man to be endowed with the gift of prophecy; here we meet him as an immortal postman.


What’s more, The Hearing Trumpet is a thoroughly surreal work, written oneirically—in other words, quite devoid of consistency or strong connections between cause and effect. There is certainly no gun hanging on the wall here, so there’s no reason to expect it to go off in the final scene. Things happen rather as they do in a dream, with sequences of events emerging subtly, arising from remote associations. When she is first mentioned, the sister of Marian’s friend Marlborough is a cripple; later it is suggested that she has two heads, and when she finally appears at the end of the book, she is neither a cripple nor two-headed, she simply has the head of a wolf! This kind of alternative causality doesn’t detract from our experience of the book one bit; instead it illustrates the process by which Carrington produced the novel, layering successive ideas, one on top of the other. As the narrative self corrects, it is a sheer pleasure to follow the mysterious flow of the unfolding story.


*


In old age a person becomes eccentric. This appears to be a natural law of development, once adapting to society is no longer essential, and the paths of the individual and the community start to diverge. Perhaps old age is actually the only time in life when we can finally be ourselves, without worrying about the demands of others or conforming to the social norms that we have been constantly instructed to follow. At last the adolescent obligation to belong to one group or another ceases to apply.


That is why the philosophy of eccentricity expressed in The Hearing Trumpet is connected with age. It can be treated as a special message from the old to the young, going against the current of time. We must do eccentric things. Where everyone is doing This, we must do That. While the whole center is noisily establishing its order, we shall remain on the periphery—we won’t let ourselves be drawn into the center, we shall ignore it and surpass it.


Thus eccentricity is posited as a spontaneous, joyful rebellion against everything that’s established and regarded as normal and self-evident. It is a challenge flung in the face of conformity and hypocrisy.


Ultimately, The Hearing Trumpet is a book that brings great delight. Let us enjoy the opportunity to share in this wild tale about an old lady who couldn’t go to Lapland, so Lapland had to come to her.


—Translated from the Polish by Antonia Lloyd-Jones

 

Olga Tokarczuk is the author of nine novels and three short story collections. Her novel Flights won the 2018 International Booker Prize, and she is the recipient of the 2018 Nobel Prize in Literature.


Antonia Lloyd-Jones is the 2018 winner of the Transatlantyk Award for the most outstanding promoter of Polish literature abroad. She has translated works by several of Poland’s leading contemporary novelists and writers of reportage, as well as crime fiction, poetry, and children’s books. She is a mentor for the Emerging Translator Mentorship Program and former cochair of the Translators Association of the United Kingdom.


From The Hearing Trumpet, by Leonora Carrington, published by New York Review Books this month. Copyright © 2021 by Olga Tokarczuk; translation by Antonia Lloyd-Jones.


(Source: The Paris Review)

Monday, 22 February 2021

‘The Mappila Verses’: Where do we go if our names are not in the list?

 ‘Where do coconut trees go when their roots are declared illegal?’

Following the Palestinian national poet Mahmoud Darwish’s Write me down, I am an Arab, Ajmal Khan wrote “Write me down, I am an Indian” in the wake of the CAA-NRC protests. It was translated into Hindi by lyricist Varun Grover, and into many other regional languages. The Mappila Verses is Khan’s new collection of poems.


Anonymous 16th-century Portuguese illustration from Códice Casanatense, depicting Kerala Muslims | Biblioteca Casanatense, Rome / Wikimedia Commons



Portrait of a Bastard

Your collar bone protrudes like a Somalian Child

and the arm muscles anaemic

but lungi, from the Malabar Coast.


Texture of your skin is the mixture of Pulaya and Cheruman

converted to Islam

sweat with a scent beyond Arabian sea from Dubai, Abu Dhabi or Saudi Arabia.


How do you speak English this well?
You guys rebelled against them
and boycotted even their language.


How did you get this resilient yet deep eyes

and rage? somewhat remotely similar to Palestinians and Kashmiris

You were never occupied.


Your chin remotely resembles

a clever north Indian Bania man

which disappear like a mirage.


They murmur, you are a bastard

in the confluence between the Arabian Coast

and the Malabar before Portuguese and Dutch mastered maritime.


Do bastards have documents?

Of the unholy nights

Or do they and their children and their children and their children remain bastards forever?


Where do we go?

Where should we go after the last frontiers?

Where should the birds fly after the last sky?

Where should the plants sleep after the last breath of air?

— Mahmoud Darwish


After the Isha Namaz

Chanting prayers sitting in her Musalla

Keeping her copy of Quran aside with the Thasbeeh, she asks

Where do we go if our names are not in the list?


Where do coconut trees go when their roots are declared illegal?

How does Hibiscus flower if you ask them go back where they come from?

Can you ask Tapioca to go back to Brazil?

Do you ask tea and coffee to go back where they come from?

Where do Great Pied Hornbills go when you tell monsoons are illegal to them?

Where do Mackerels and Sardines go when you inform them, they are illegal in the water?

Do Malabar elephant have identity card to enter Maasai Mara?

Where do Lion-tailed macaques go if they are asked to vacate the Silent Valley?

Can Mundakan and Puncha paddy be cultivated in Saudi Arabia?

Which water Giant Danio’s swim if rivers are made illegal to them?

Is there a list of snakes that are allowed only on the Western Ghats?

On which seas Hassinar fish if you ask him documents to enter the Arabian sea?


Where do we go?
The sword breaks my silence, she asks again

Where?
I reminded her

“For your father, Adam, was created with dirt from the surface of the earth.

You also will be returned to the earth”

We came from soil

We go to soil, until then

We live here.



Mappila Verse

The first step in liquidating a people is to erase its memory. Destroy its books, its culture, its history. Then have somebody write new books, manufacture a new culture, invent a new history. Before long that nation will begin to forget what it is and what it was... The struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting.

— Milan Kundera


Centuries ago

Even before Baba Sahib was born

My ancestors searched for caste annihilation – they became Mappila.


Malik Dinar came to my coast with light

Cheraman Perumal – lit Diya

Cheramaan Juma Mosque – first masjid on the subcontinent

Two lights merged between the Mecca and Ponnani.


Quadi Muhammed weaved songs when Portuguese arrived

Like Cannons on my disposal

Before anyone know anything about songs of resistance on my coast.


Kunjali Marakkar, Variyankunnath and Ali Musliyar

Might sound just Muslim names for you

– the light houses of self-respect and freedom for my land.


The brave children of Eranadu and Valluvanadu who poured their blood
The land that showed chest to the cannons in 1921
The brave children of Eranadu and Valluvanadu who poured their blood
The land that showed chest to the cannons in 1921


My lullaby

Anglo-Mappila war – My bedtime stories

When my ancestors fought against the sons of the empire

On which the sun never set

On another sunset Wagon massacre paintings were removed from Tirur railway station

How do you remove the wounds?


This land is built with the blood of my ancestors

The water we drink – their sweat

Their blood on my nerve

You – stand stable on their dead bodies.


Overnight

I have become an orphan in my own home

Or it wasn’t – home?

I now dig names graves and blood stains

Of my people to get all of us free – certificates of loyalty

I stand alone at the Ghat of this country

With all the documents and history

For my citizenship approval.


On the way back

Staring at stars, the cosmos and beyond

We went to colleges and universities like curious children following constellations.

Some of us – the only one of our kind

The rest had something similar – their surnames, parents’ jobs

Or the names of the cities they hailed

The kind of dress they wore, the way they spoke English

The brands of cigarettes they smoked and the scent of their sweat.

Some dropped out

Few missing

Others came home as dead bodies like – Shambuka

Those survived were picked up and

The remaining – untouchables in the job market.

On the way back to the village

The road is long with the heavy burden of degree certificates.




Excerpted with permission from The Mappila Verses, Ajmal Khan AT, Hawakal Publishers.


(Source: Scroll)

Sunday, 21 February 2021

Climate change, not Genghis Khan, likely responsible for decline of medieval Kazakh city

 The Kazakh city of Otrar, once one of world’s most fertile regions, was first lost to drought then to Mongols, unlike what was previously believed.

Drought induced by climate change, and not war, is likely to have led to the decline of Otrar, the central Asian ghost town in Kazakhstan, that flourished on the Silk Road till the 13th century, according a study.


The medieval city — an important seat of agricultural, trade, political and economic power in Central Asia — was thought to have declined after the Mongol invasions in the early 1200s led by Genghis Khan, and the gradual diminished importance of the Silk Road, the network of trade routes that connected Asia, Africa, Europe and the Arabian Peninsula.


However, the study, performed by an interdisciplinary team of researchers, shows the oasis of Otrar was already in decline a century before the Mongol invasions due to steadily decreasing access to water and increasing drought.


Ancient city of Otrar in Kazakhstan | kazakhstan.travel



The findings were made using a combination of a radiometric dating technique called optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating and radiocarbon dating, which identifies when particles of sand were last exposed to sunlight.


The researchers collected sediment samples from dried up canals that transported floodwaters for irrigation and used OSL and radiometric dating to determine when the canals were abandoned. The team found that the drought had already set in much before the Mongols arrived and the invasions made it even harder to recover.


The study was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal in December.


Transoxania as oasis

Also called Farab, Otrar was often referred to as the “land of the thousand cities”, and was situated at the trading and political intersection of Siberia, the Middle East, Asia, Europe, and China.


Its existence can be traced to the Persian Empire, to approximately 400 BCE. However, the city itself reached its peak between the 1st century BCE and 5th century CE. It flourished till the 13th century CE and was located between the rivers of Syr Darya and Arys in present day Kazakhstan.

The 2-square-kilometre city had access to about 50,000-sq-km of fertile land irrigated by these rivers. The entire region — now part of present-day Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan — was an oasis and came to be known as Transoxania.


Otrar continued to be occupied, but its incessantly feuding occupants steadily dwindled from the 14th to 17th centuries. By the 18th century, its occupants were a mere handful and the irrigated area had shrunk down to barely 5 sq km.


It was previously believed that the Mongols, who invaded Central Asia in the early 1200s, hit Transoxania’s Khwarazmian Empire through its famous canals to cripple the region. While Otrar city subsequently became an important seat of political and economic power for the Mongols, the region’s prosperity never recovered. And as the Silk Road lost its importance, Otrar was eventually abandoned.


The research team started its work assuming that the canals fell out of use after the invasions but found to their surprise that they had already been in a state of prolonged decline for a long time before that.


Luminescent sand grains

To perform OSL dating, the sediments had to be extracted in such a way that they do not get exposed to sun or light. For that, the researchers inserted metal tubes into the sediment, sealing both ends tightly and preventing exposure to light.


All sand, soil, and sediments contain minute trace amounts of radioactive elements like uranium or thorium. These decay over time and the ionising radiation they emit is absorbed by other minerals in the same sediment, such as quartz. By analysing how much radiation has been absorbed, optical dating can be performed where the age of previous exposure to light is calculated.


Exposure to light, even if it is just for mere seconds, releases trapped electrons in the form of light, effectively “resetting” the minerals. The technique has been perfected to a high degree of accuracy, and can be used to accurately date objects that are up to 2,00,000 years old.


The researchers also reconstructed climate records in Transoxania over the past 2,000 years, which supplemented and supported their findings that the irrigation-dependent culture had been in decline before the fatal Mongol invasions. Archaeological evidence, too, shows a decline in the region’s culture and trade before the invasions began.


The findings follow other similar studies investigating the decline of ancient civilisations, which conclude that the primary culprit for the decline of rich cultures like the Indus Valley Civilisation was likely to have been climate change and drought, more than any other cause previously believed.


(Source: The Print)

Saturday, 20 February 2021

Char Dham national highway has cost Uttarakhand its ecological balance

 To assess the extent of the ecological damage that construction activity is causing, Down To Earth travelled 250 km on the Char Dham Mahamarg from Rishikesh to Gangotri

The colourful landscape of the Lesser Himalayas at Muni Ki Reti, on the outskirts of Rishikesh, does not paint a pretty picture. Fluorescent yellow of construction workers’ jackets dots the pale brown debris of the mountain in Uttarakhand. The greenery is replaced by the yellow and red of excavators and trucks. The mountain lay wounded and bare with the deep, sharp cuts which excavators have made to construct a road. The eyes adjust to seeing rows of hillocks formed by debris dumped by road construction trucks. Half uprooted trees hanging mid-air is a usual sight.


It’s not just road construction that has ravaged the mountain. Landslides are a recurring feature along Char Dham highways that lead up to Yamunotri, Gangotri, Kedarnath and Badrinath. The Lesser Himalayas have a history of frequent landslides because of their recent origin and are, therefore, unstable. In 2003, a massive landslide damaged at least 100 buildings. As many as 3,000 people had to be evacuated. Heavy rains in 2016 killed scores of people in Pithoragarh and changed the landscape.


he wall built to prevent debris from falling usually does not serve its purpose as most of them are small and can barely hold themselves, let alone the mountain (Photographs: Vikas Choudhary)



In such an ecologically sensitive area, the Centre decided to launch a Rs 12,000-crore project to improve road connectivity to the four revered Hindu pilgrimage sites in Uttarakhand. Prime Minister Narendra Modi launched the construction of the Char Dham Mahamarg on December 27, 2016, as a tribute to those who died in the 2013 Kedarnath disaster. 


The project will refurbish 900 km of the damaged highways with two lanes, 12 bypass roads, 15 big flyovers, 101 small bridges, 3,596 culverts and two tunnels. The roads will be widened at least 10 metres, and will be strong enough to withstand the harsh climate of the region. The improved highway circuit aims to ease traffic during the Char Dham Yatra, the backbone of Uttarakhand’s tourism and economy.


“This is an extremely fragile region,” says Ravi Chopra, director of People’s Science Institute, Dehradun. “You have to understand that the area forms the Main Central Thrust of the Lesser Himalayan region. This is where the Indian tectonic plate goes under the Eurasian Tectonic Plate,” he says. The phenomenon makes the region susceptible to earthquakes and landslides.


The Geological Survey of India corroborates this in its report prepared after the Kedarnath disaster. It states that road construction in mountains reactivates landslides as it disturbs the “toe of the natural slope of the hill.”

To assess the extent of the ecological damage that construction activity is causing, Down To Earth travelled 250 km on the Char Dham Mahamarg from Rishikesh to Gangotri. The evidence is apparent from Muni Ki Reti itself, the traditional gateway to the Char Dham pilgrimage.


A landslide here has breached the concrete wall built to keep the hill in place. “The landslide came during monsoon in July this year. The mountain was cut but not given a slope essential to sustain itself. When rains came, they brought down huge rocks and boulders. Fortunately, it happened early morning, so no one was hurt,” says a construction worker.


From Muni Ki Reti to Agrakhal, a small town some 30 km from Rishikesh, the ride is precarious. Houses just above areas where the mountain has been carved out balance dangerously on loose soil. A part of the telephone exchange office here stands isolated as the rest of it crumbled down along with the mountain beneath it.


“The road was widened in 1991 to take machines for the construction of Tehri dam on river Bhagirathi. It destabilised the slope. The mountain took 10 years to stabilise. Ever since work began in March last year, we are seeing the mountain side collapsing,” says Surendra Kandari, a resident of Agrakhal.




Between Rishikesh and Agrakhal, the road is as wide as 17 metres, says Himanshu Arora of non-profit Citizens for Green Doon. According to the Hill Road Manual of the Indian Road Congress, roads in this area should not be wider than 8.8 metres. “The construction is destined to cause a disaster,” he says.


Isolated at Agar

Just about three kilometres uphill, residents of Agar village in Narendra Nagar district have a peculiar problem. Road construction has left the village of around 150 households with no access to the world. The only road connecting the village to the main road, some 20 metres down the mountain, has collapsed. This correspondent walked up a slim kuchcha road, just about enough for one person, to reach the village. “I have to sell my buffalo, but there is no way I can take the buffalo to the buyer downhill. It’s not just us stuck on this crumbling hill, our cattle are also trapped,” says resident Bhag Singh Rawat.


Huge cracks have appeared on his house. The hill, along with the house, is slowly sliding down. “I went to the district magistrate and the tehsildar asking for help. They came, inspected the situation and assured me that something will be done. Four months later, the situation is the same,” he says.


“The mountain here was cut to widen the road in March, 2018. In July, a large portion of the mountain fell. A road and our agricultural fields collapsed along with it,” says Raichand Singh Rawat. The state government gave him compensation for the land acquired for construction, but he received nothing for the farmland he lost due to the landslide.


“I had 150 sq m of land where I grew ginger. The government took 80 sq m of this for road construction. The rest of the field collapsed on July 14. My ginger crop, for which I had taken a loan of Rs 35,000 loan, is all gone,” he says.


No compensation, no EIA

Construction work has not started in full swing at Khadi village, which borders Tehri district. The process of acquisition is ongoing. “I was told by the tehsildar in January last year that title holders will get compensation for the land they give,” says resident Balbir Singh Tadiyaal. “Later, the official said only the structure built on it will be compensated for. When I went to meet him in October, he said title holders will not be compensated for anything. I have only one piece of land, and have built a hotel on it. What will I do if the land is taken away?”


Amitabh Singh Rawat does not own land, nor is he a title holder. But he has planted a good number of mango trees in Khadi’s valley. Bharat Construction, the company making the road on this stretch, has dumped debris from a landslide into the valley. All the mango trees and vegetation growing around it are now buried under debris. Rawat has not received any compensation.


As many as 25,300 trees have been cut and 373 hectares of forestland diverted for Char Dham Mahamarg. “We only know the number of trees that were cut for the project. No one knows how many trees were lost in landslides,” says Arora. “We had no idea that it was going to be such a massive construction work”. Arora’s non-profit is one of the petitioners in a case filed with the National Green Tribunal (NGT) against the construction work. The petitioners have asked why the Uttarakhand government started the mega construction project in an ecologically fragile zone without conducting an Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) study.


Five kilometers above Khadi, Bidon Khankar Marg, the only motorable road in Tipli village, has developed cracks after a kuchcha road near it collapsed in landslides. On some stretches, the road has sunk in. “I went to the district magistrate to complain about the road and get it repaired. He told me to talk to the additional district magistrate, who in turn, said we should get the road built using our village funds,” says Phuldas Dhandiyal, former pradhan of Tipli.

Uttarkashi, however, is a pleasing sight. Construction work has not started here because of the NGT petition. The Border Road Organisation has marked many deodar trees on this stretch for felling, but NGT has given a stay order after Birendra Singh Matura filed a petition against it (see ‘Petitions against project’).




The road from Uttarkashi to Gangotri comes under the Bhagirathi Eco-Sensitive Zone (ESZ). Development activity here can take place only if it complies with the zonal masterplan of ESZ. In fact, the Uttarakhand forest department has imposed fine of Rs 5 lakh on BRO, one of the government bodies constructing the road, for illegally dumping debris in the Bhagirathi. “I am not against the road. It will help us economically. But it should be done taking into account the environmental impact,” says Birendari Nautiyal, who has a teastall in Bhatwari, a small village some 70 km from Gangotri.


“The government is imposing a project disregarding the ecological concerns of the area. Making a road is fine, but it should be done keeping in mind its ecological implications. Else, it won’t be long before another disaster hits Uttarakhand,” says a resident of Uttarkashi Jaihari Srivastav. 


Petitions against project

Dehradun-based non-profit Citizens for Green Doon filed a petition against the Uttarakhand government in the National Green Tribunal (NGT) on February 22 this year seeking a stay on the Char Dham project, as it violated the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) notification 2006 and the ongoing construction work was "blatantly illegal". A three-member bench, headed by the then chairperson Jawad Rahim, heard the case. During the hearing, the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways told NGT that as per the EIA notification, construction on highways less than 100 km do not require environmental clearance. The government conveniently segregated the project into 57 parts, making each part less than 100 km. Clearly, the segregation was done to circumvent the EIA process. The bench criticised the government for its action and ordered a stay on tree felling. It also asked the ministry and the state government to file affidavits regarding dumping of debris. The bench reserved its judgement on May 31, 2018.


However, when the new chairperson Adarsh Kumar Goel took charge on June 9, he ordered rehearing of the case by a four-member bench. The petitioners challenged this in the Supreme Court, which ordered the original bench to hear the case. On September 26, NGT gave its clearance for the project and ordered the formation of a committee comprising members from the Wadia Institute of Geology in Dehradun, Govind Ballabh Pant National Institute of Himalayan Environment and Sustainable Development in Almora, National Institute of Disaster Management, Central Soil Conservation Board, Forest Research Institute in Dehradun and forest officials from Uttarakhand, to oversee the project. This clearance was struck down by the apex court on October 22. The government interpreted this as a go-ahead for the construction work.


In May 2017, another petitioner, Birendra Singh Matura filed a case against the Uttarakhand government in NGT for violating the Bhagirathi Eco-Sensitive Zone (ESZ). The Bhagirathi ESZ stretches from Uttarkashi to Gangotri. The case was disposed of by NGT, which ordered the authorities should comply with the rules.


(Source: Down To Earth)