Mom went to
Bangladesh, as an Indian, once a refugee.
With animated street
view, she found the house,
and the stable garden
with her stories.
Huge backyard where
she’d play with her siblings, friends.
Divorced countries
now. Separated, yet the same without ends.
She was welcomed by
the relatively new inmates. Just like them.
At the end of the day
well spent, what memento would you like
from your house? She
pointed at a golden pumpkin lying on the ground.
She remembered her mother
caressing her bruised knee
When she fell off from
that banyan tree, standing there, still there
Unmistakably there
She carefully took the
vegetable.
Her head moist, bent.
Times flashed, times
changed.
She held the uprooted
pumpkin in her arms.
Held it gently in her
palms
Like a child, brought
it home; to Kolkata, a sliced Bengal
In her words, as she’d
recall.
We were thrilled to
see the cute-looking guest from Bangladesh.
Ah! Today’s lunch! We
thought.
But we didn’t say a
word
When we saw her
burying it in her favourite inseparable space,
She calls her kitchen garden.
My mom went to her hometown in Bangladesh, years after the partition and brought a pumpkin she couldn't eat. It was there with us for long until she buried it in the kitchen garden, from where grew many pumpkins, without inhibition.
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