Monday, July 14, 2025
A poem inspired from the Bangla movie, 'Abosheshey' directed by Aditi Roy
who knows
who knows
what will happen
when yet the streets are running
and so are the
crowds the
sinking sun touches us
a smile now glistens in a shadow
time drops
down at the metro train’s next stop
lost horizons trapped in many streets and
bylanes people going home on nowhere streets
the howrah bridge stands aloof with
all its secrets
in a dimly lit coffee house
you said something with the rustle
of your saree
your touch and laughter in the crowd
who knows what will happen
when.
Inspired from the Bangla movie, ‘Abosheshey’
Tuesday, July 5, 2022
Chandan Mitra
Chandan Mitra ,former Member of Parliament Rajya Sabha passed away on 1 September 2021. A friend from Bhopal reminded me of his passing away today. A gentle person, he helped me in many ways. This article, I had written on 14 September 2009
https://www.boloji.com/articles/4351/chandan-mitra-the-real-
Charcoal on Paper
Saturday, June 18, 2022
Thursday, June 16, 2022
Tuesday, May 31, 2022
Remembering Fusion Dancer, Astad Deboo
Among the many fortunate happenings that shaped my life, my meeting in 1980 with Contemporary Fusion Dancer, Astad Deboo at Park Street, Calcutta, dancing holding to an electric pole, is one permanently etched in my mind. He had a great laugh and sense of humour when I revealed that I am from Gwalior, land of the Chambals . Sipping tea from khullar, he remarked, 'wish I could do my performance in the midst of Chambal ravines to the tune of chattering gun shots'.
He passed away on 10 December 2020
Remembering Vinod Dua
I met Vinod Dua ji once again in a January 2017 evening on the steps of India International Centre at New Delhi. ' Aarey Amitabh, Kab Aayey' He insisted that I should have Darjeeling Tea with him while he introduced me to Pakistani writers and scholars. They said that they are indebted to Shri Vinod Dua ji because his personal invitation allows them to visit and stay in India for long periods. Vinod ji went into a split of laughter, winking at me, explaining about his possible love and connection with Pakistani and Indian intelligence. There was laughter all around and the Darjeeling tea tasted better than before.
Before leaving, we all embraced and I invited Vinod ji including all the Pakistani intellectuals to my other home in East London, South Africa.
Vinod bhai succumbed to Covid 19 on 04th December 2021.
Monday, April 25, 2022
Sunday, April 24, 2022
National Persecution Authority, South Africa
Appreciation of my work by National Persecution Authority, United Nations Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women and the Hon. East London Mayor
Tuesday, February 8, 2022
Ahmed Timol
Ahmed Timol (3 November 1941 – 27 October 1971) He died at the age of 29 from injuries sustained when he fell from the top floor of John Vorster Square police station in Johannesburg.
Charcoal on Paper by Amitabh Mitra
Sunday, October 10, 2021
Somali refugees and Mdantsane, South Africa
The Somali refugee was shot dead through the steel mesh window at his spaza shop in Mdantsane. He sold even two bread pieces to starving locals. He survived Mogadishu and the Al Shabab, arriving in South Africa penniless and on an asylum status. They worked hard and started tiny grocery shops all over Mdantsane. The existing business being run by Bangladeshi shops had to close down because of fierce competition. The Somalis got involved in the spam of marrying on contract local South African girls to keep their residency status. But who killed the Somali man and who stabbed them. I had asked the Maulana accompanying them to my Emergency Medicine Department. I told him in humor, You are bringing stabbed and shot Somalis every week and I have healed them, what have you done for me. The Maulana smiled, I will offer my duas for you in the mosque. Later I found out it’s the Somalis killing other Somalis and has never been a case of Xenophobia. There is Al Shabab in South Africa and every Somali has to donate and become a member The radical islamization from where they fled has caught up with them here again. There is a turf war for the sale of Methamphetamine popularly known as the Tic. The Nigerian Mafia controls the drug trade, disguised as Pastors, they move around effortlessly. A certain elderly Nigerian whom I had treated in the Emergency Medicine Department and walks with a gold walking stick pondered and asked if I cared to join him in an impeccable English. Memories of the Nigerian Nobel Prize winner for Literature, Wole Soyinka wafts in, he had said, ‘The man dies in all who keep silent in the face of tyranny’. I remember at Nairobi airport filled with Somali refugees and the acerbic smell of Khat chewing, postponing hunger. I was on transit for an Air Afrique flight to Niamey where I was to serve as an UNV Volunteer Orthopaedic Surgeon there. Most of them eventually died in Complex Humanitarian Emergencies, running from their home to a foreign land which they wanted to call as “home”
I keep a 9 mm in my car, just to have the feel of fond memories of gun toting dacoits of Gwalior Violence is only the way to Peace and loving is the only poetry encompassing life
Friday, October 8, 2021
Dhaka and Old Delhi - Memories before I start forgetting
I remember Dhaka formerly known before liberation of East Pakistan as Dacca. The liberation war left it scarred and in 1982, the Bangladesh capital was renamed as Dhaka. The seventeenth century old city was the capital of Mughal Bengal and along came with it the unique art and culture, Dhaka culinary, architecture, weaving silk and tehzeeb handed down from generations. I remember Noor E Alam Siddiqui alias Tiger Siddiqui, Abdur Qudus Makhan, Shahjahan Siraj and Mohammad Abdur Raub, at the helm of Mukti Bahini and a certain Sardar Colonel from the Indian Army who crossed over every evening to the other side wearing a lungi and without his turban. These are all unknown heroes of India and Bangladesh. The other hero, I remember clearly was an American Orthopaedic Surgeon, he continued operating in makeshift tents during the uprising. He operated without any hardware on fractures of the neck of femur, removing them and then closing the wound. Known as the Girdlestone technique, he offered a shortened limb but a painless hip joint. His popularity was overcome by jealousy of non-orthopaedic surgeons of Dhaka and was finally forced to leave. In my years as an Orthopaedic Surgeon at Niamey in Niger during the civil war of the Sahel, I followed his Girdlestone technique and gave satisfied patients high heeled shoes. The sheer beauty of Dhaka can only be compared to the Mughal Old Delhi. Mughal memories are pigeons and the silk saree that can pass through a women’s ring. The heady aroma and drooping of eyes at a certain rendezvous are only distant memories.
Fordsburg, Johannesburg and Bangladesh, something in common
Back from Johannesburg. Clearly it seems that Bangladeshis have taken over all major trade including banking in Fordsburg. Had a great time conversing with a tailor from Sylhet. There are hoardings in Bangla and English. He wouldn't talk about the horrific murder of Neel, the blogger or even of Sheikh Mujib, says he is ashamed of his own skin. I saw tears in his eyes. Dada, 'please let me make a blazer for you'. I thought of the Liberation war, the genocide, in numbers and brutality only next to the holocaust in Germany, the Razakars still moving freely, some of them might be even living incognito in South Africa and radical islamisation of Fordsburg. Next time Dada, Next time, I told, embracing him.The Jannatul Firdaus, I bought from an Itr seller, brought me back to Old Delhi, its colors insisting, streets persisting on aadab, life and living.
Sunday, June 27, 2021
Sunday, November 3, 2019
Monday, July 8, 2019
Saturday, December 1, 2018
Thursday, August 23, 2018
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