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    Home»Books»Beyond the Tusks
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    Beyond the Tusks

    Dr. B. HariharanBy Dr. B. HariharanDecember 2, 2024
    Elephant
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    This anthology explores our layered bond with elephants, revealing themes of reverence, exploitation, and coexistence in shifting cultural landscapes.

    The Elephant in Hiding

    My lord,

    The elephant hides in full view of the public
    In an endless, elephantine, epical catalogue.
    Some elephants march on highways,
    Gorge rice from fair price shops
    Or relish jackfruit and bananas.
    Still others are given stylish names after blockbusters
    While others discover chains on festival grounds.
    In the middle is the encroachment muddle:
    Taking giant strides, herds do not recognize title deeds;
    Settle they did in farm holdings and multiplied.
    Indeed, there was another herd mentality;
    Then the headlines out-trumpeted the tuskers.
    Some try to draw the elephant blind-folded
    Which is much more than a game.
    Others petition the courts
    But no elephant takes the witness stand
    For the question has to do with who should see!
    I forgot to tell your lordship that
    The elephant is in another room.

    To Look in the Eyes

    Have you ever wondered how I see you?
    How to see and what to see, that is the question:
    I have no guile in my thoughts, words, or how I see.

    Come, learn to look from my perspective.
    You deck me, climb on my back with the deity
    While another stands behind with other paraphernalia.

    You behold me and say it is a majestic view;
    I can see it in your eyes. You recognize
    In it elevation, then your elation.

    But what have you seen of me?
    My tusk and trunk? My skin?
    And you say I am thick skinned. Pachyderm.

    I can see how you see me from what you have made of me.
    You make me into a presence. Present.
    And I search your eyes in vain.

    I am absent in your eyes.
    Tell me, are you looking at me?
    Do you know how to look into my eyes?

    Come, see how you look at yourself through my eyes.
    I would like to see myself through your eyes.
    I think we should fill each other in our seeing; with our eyes.

    Half-truth

    I am sorry, my lord, but I can only swear
    By the half-truth that has engendered me.
    There were three lakh
    ninety three thousand
    six hundred and sixty of us
    readied for an epic battle that lasted eighteen days.

    I remember it clearly –
    Half-truths cannot be forgotten –
    It was the fifteenth day
    As the casualties mounted
    With strikes and counter strikes
    And no end in sight.

    Much the same as what you read in newspapers today:
    The only difference is that there is no more counting.
    The software to tally the death toll does not work;
    I have no apology for being up-to-date.
    You must realize I have been around for some time
    Yet it is your will to wipe me off your vision.

    I have not forgotten after all these years:
    After telling, retelling, then telling again,
    I was named into an existence not my own.
    It stuck like nothing before, a blot as black as ever.

    Isn’t it strange to be whispered a name, an identity?
    I don’t remember my lot having such names.
    The bearer of my name, the epic tells,
    Wanders, condemned to immortality.

    We are called other names now.
    The stigma is still there
    For no fault of mine.
    I plead not guilty.

    Did something of that curse touch us?
    Condemned to corridors, reserves, zoos,
    The depleting forest cover,
    The estates and plantations come in our way:
    We wander in search of food and water.
    How would you look at us now?

    The Colour of Truth

    The court is called into session.

    Is it fair to ask the learned judge the colour of truth?
    I have this doubt when I look at myself.
    Even my tusk, I am told is ivory!
    Yes, you very well know
    I always carry a price on my head!
    To tell the truth, I am always at risk
    As there are many head-hunters around.
    Is there a provision, I ask
    To get Z category protection with black cats?

    Allow me to ask you this as well:
    Whose idea is the white elephant?
    They roam freely in the country,
    A part of the state machinery:
    What remains is
    The nirvana of stink sanitised incense sticks
    Even when the coffers are emptied!

    Objection, my Lord!
    Objection overruled. Please continue.

    As for the damage done to the system,
    I reserve my comments
    Caught as we are in the yarn,
    Now blacker than our skin.
    The galleys block us in big letters:
    You stare at headlines, black in white.
    I must trumpet this loud:
    I still don’t know the colour of truth!

    Know this then:
    Truth is an unseen smudge in the edge.
    Court adjourned sine die

    Paper Elephant

    The elephant endures in the mind
    Taking many forms:
    King, devotee, loner, rogue, and much more
    Occupying spaces of the mind
    And even the State emblem.

    “Exhibits present in the case admitted”

    The King Elephant in an old story attained moksha.
    The caparisoned elephants roam all around
    Still chained to custom:
    What else is it but
    The nourishment of the superego of a people?

    Contradictions speak truths

    The verdict has been pronounced.
    Would paper elephant be another idiom?

    Touch of Fear

    People come and go talking about me
    While the mahout lights his beedi.
    A puff, then he snuffs it.
    Crumples and tucks a wad in his dhoti.

    A slight movement, tentative, sly,
    What do those curious little fingers feel?
    A hesitation, then a tender touch.
    I feel the puzzle those fingers take in.

    The toddler now beats me with its palm.
    There is touch, fear as well.
    Be it of mind or metal,
    There are chains everywhere.

    First held safe in arms
    Then made to walk right under me
    To emerge into waiting arms
    The toddler now offers me bananas.

    No hitches in the rite du passage:
    A ritual to ward off fear.
    But who is to overcome fear?
    Me or the toddler?

    animal rights animal welfare answer authority being belief compassion consciousness culture death despair disbelief doubt elephant conservation elephant in literature elephant mythology elephant poetry elephant rights elephant symbolism empathy environment eternity existence faith folklore Freedom historical reference hope human-animal conflict identity illusion indigenous knowledge injustice joy justice life loss Love meaning mythology nature non-existence objective observation oppression perception personal narrative perspective point of view political commentary politics power purpose question reality religion self-awareness social justice Society spirituality subjective experience suffering time truth
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    Dr. B. Hariharan
    Dr. B. Hariharan

      Dr. B. Hariharan is professor at the Institute of English, University of Kerala. His poems have appeared in Journal of Literature & Aesthetics, in the volume Dusk to Dawn: Poetic Voices on the Current Times South Asia and beyond and most recently in What Else is Rain: A Frontline Anthology of Contemporary English Poetry from Kerala.

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      3 Comments

      1. Dr John Thomas on December 4, 2024 12:46 pm

        Dear Hariharan
        Read your article. Beautifully written on an issue that the mainstream media pays no attention. For them Elephants are intruders.
        I remember our journey from Athirappally to Prambikulam.
        I lost your number

        Reply
      2. Anitha SGVS on December 5, 2024 10:47 pm

        Commendable job Hari👏🏻👏🏻

        Reply
      3. Balagovindan on December 9, 2024 7:42 pm

        Beautiful, thought provoking, record, as I will put it

        Reply

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