Ras Siddiqui May 23, 1998
Tags: Nuclear , Feudalism , India , Gandhi
Three tears fell to wet the Indian desert on
This grim and horrifying day in May as
People danced in the streets soon after when
The sellers of sweets had a truly big day
And two more tears followed as if to
Lengthen the time of rejoicing
somewhat
Tributes to Gandhi the dear Bapu of India
Where reason and non-violence is now
Practiced with the help of splitting atoms.
I, the sinner from a country becoming known
Beyond the very few who have wandered into
The land of the mosques, guns and feudalism
My troubled soul in turbulence now
In the land of the free and the brave but
I fear this deadly power unleashed again
God taking photographs of the poor who
Inhabit the Indian and Pakistani landscape
But own or control the destiny of nothing
In my new fear there is also the absence of
The little joy that the masses of South Asia are
Allowed by the people who control their lives
The makers of these deadly and cruel jokes
On our hunger, our poverty and love of god
Or gods as in the case of the other side who
Today tell us that they have reached nirvana
While sitting under a mushroom cloud
Unable to feel the sadness of a crying Buddha.
This writing gets its title from a Peaceful nuclear test conducted by India in 1974 which attracted the nickname Smiling Buddha or the term The Buddha has Smiled. The recent series of five tests have been named Shakti but maybe Crying Buddha would be a more fitting label
This grim and horrifying day in May as
People danced in the streets soon after when
The sellers of sweets had a truly big day
And two more tears followed as if to
Lengthen the time of rejoicing
Tributes to Gandhi the dear Bapu of India
Where reason and non-violence is now
Practiced with the help of splitting atoms.
I, the sinner from a country becoming known
Beyond the very few who have wandered into
The land of the mosques, guns and feudalism
My troubled soul in turbulence now
In the land of the free and the brave but
I fear this deadly power unleashed again
God taking photographs of the poor who
Inhabit the Indian and Pakistani landscape
But own or control the destiny of nothing
In my new fear there is also the absence of
The little joy that the masses of South Asia are
Allowed by the people who control their lives
The makers of these deadly and cruel jokes
On our hunger, our poverty and love of god
Or gods as in the case of the other side who
Today tell us that they have reached nirvana
While sitting under a mushroom cloud
Unable to feel the sadness of a crying Buddha.
This writing gets its title from a Peaceful nuclear test conducted by India in 1974 which attracted the nickname Smiling Buddha or the term The Buddha has Smiled. The recent series of five tests have been named Shakti but maybe Crying Buddha would be a more fitting label
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