The Free Press Journal

A silent feast

- MUNMUN GHOSH

Rapes. Lynchings. Brutal murders. Terrorist attacks. You seek to know what’s happening out there in the world and these are the images that are lobbed at you from every cranny of the media and the entertainm­ent world. Yes, reality is also harsh, but then what of the human craving for beauty, a hunger which is as real and basic as the hunger for food, so succinctly conveyed in Raj Kapoor’s cry in Awara,“Mujhko chahiye

bahar.” How do you deal with that need in today’s world of strife-and-bloody images? It is this craving that all good poetry and certainly Dinesh Raheja’s book of haikus (a minimalist form of poetry originatin­g in Japan) addresses and satisfies wholly. Pick out any of the 101 haikus at random, like say this one:

Clouds empty themselves/into seas pregnant with hope/one empties, one fills

Or

My moustache is white/mountains have a beard of snow/they will outlive me

In a trice, you are subsumed by a sense of peace, beauty, silence, and the joy of deep contemplat­ion.

Launching the book recently in Crossword, director (of Raazi,

Talwar fame) Meghna Gulzar commended the haikus “as being at once light, deep, soft and cruel. I have a big soft spot for brevity. As such, haiku as a form appeals and these haikus are truly beautiful.” Commenting on poetry or lack of it in today’s times, she said, “Unfortunat­ely today’s songs have very little poetry in them. We need poetry as it is inherently soothing and uplifting for the spirit, being open to different interpreta­tions.”

Raheja’s haikus (three-line poems of 17 syllables each) definitely elevate even as they create ripples of thought in our minds. Well-known as a journalist and author, Raheja confesses “how the haikus wrote themselves,” coming out of some deep recesses within him in a resplenden­t flow without any tugging. He acknowledg­es his debt to Japanese haiku masters who inspired him. “I love Basho’s classic haikus, most this one:

Old pond/ a frog jumps in/A splash – Haikus reveal the innate beauty of nature, we’ve so much to learn from nature.”

Indeed, poetry and definitely haiku as a form of poetry, reveals underlying interconne­ctedness of all entities in this universe, both animate and inanimate. Sample these by Raheja:

He stands on one foot/the wise and silent yogi/—the pink flamingo Or Facing each other —/the islands kept apart by/ a sea of ego

Or

A tree drops a leaf/ silently in a forest —/ Tress don’t grieve lost leaves

Humans, flamingos, islands, trees — the same essence residing in every being — the truth emerges powerfully from the book, dissolving boundaries.

This silent walk into the woods of contemplat­ion is greatly enhanced by beautiful theme-sketches made by the OM Publishers’ art team, not to forget the elegant cover by Arijit Ganguly. The sketches are as slight as the poems they juxtapose, and as communicat­ive. The foreword by Vidya Balan and the afterword by Varun Grover further the book’s charm. With her usual frankness and warmth, Vidya Balan lauds Raheja’s poetic creations for their “alluring simplicity – the crisp three-line poems are easily comprehens­ible, yet profound… Feelings are all that matter to me in poetry, and honestly even otherwise. The more easily and simply those feelings reach me, the more I enjoy poetry.”

Singling out the haiku,

“Goldfish in a bowl/opened a Facebook account/she loves the spotlight.”

For praise, Balan extols the form: “I am fascinated by haikus because I can’t imagine how someone can express so simply and effectivel­y in such few words…I am not very active on Twitter because a limit of 140 characters is too restrictiv­e…I have always struggled to keep my answers short (in school).”

Story-teller, lyricist Varun Grover has the last word – as he observes in the afterword to the book: “Poetry is silence. Dinesh Raheja’s haiku add many new silences to this universal pool, with a mastery of the craft that’s heartwarmi­ng and thrilling at the same time… The range of moods and epiphanies...here is huge.”

Grover ends with the hope Raheja will pen more haikus. After all, the human mind needs to be fed with such beautiful and pensive images, to translate in time into beautiful actions, contributi­ng to human well-being.

 ??  ?? ◾ Book: 101 Haiku◾ Author: Dinesh Raheja◾ Publisher: Om Pages: 94;◾ Price: Rs 150
◾ Book: 101 Haiku◾ Author: Dinesh Raheja◾ Publisher: Om Pages: 94;◾ Price: Rs 150

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