Our Bangla
My Bangla
Sings out every morning
One language
Many songs
Emotions laced,
Tucked, shining
Hiding
In each letter,
In each word.
My Bangla
Was taught to me
By others.
Our Bangla.
We are vast
Our definitions–
Spacious and forgiving.
Our Bangla does not
Discriminate
And
We are almost
Proud of that.
In our Bangla
The word for
Discrimination
Is Bhedābhed
The Internet
Says:
Bhedābhed is a tradition which teaches that the individual self/truth is both different and not different from the impersonal Absolute Truth.
The separated "I"
Is different and
Yet the same
As that which
Encompasses all.
I am one,
But more
Importantly,
We are one.
Our Bangla
Did not teach us
To divide
It taught us
To multiply.
The Bangla word for
"Divide" is also the same
As telling someone
"To get lost."
The Bangla word for
"Multiplication" is the
Same as the Bangla word
For "Virtue."
Which equation
Will we choose then?
To divide
Or to multiply?
How far do we
Have to walk to
Not get lost?
And how far
To reach the virtue
Where the meaning
Of Discrimination
Translates to the
Absence of separation
Undivided,
It multiplies to
Include all?
Iffat Nawaz is a Bangladeshi-American writer based in Pondicherry, India. Her first novel, Shurjo's Clan, was published by Penguin India (Vintage) in 2022, and was shortlisted for the Best First Book Award by Tata Lit Live/Mumbai Literature Festival in 2023.
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