“An Orphaned Clothesline” by Debasish Mishra 

Debasish Mishra is a Senior Research Fellow at National Institute of Science Education and Research, HBNI, India, who has earlier worked with United Bank of India and Central University of Odisha. He is the recipient of the 2019 Bharat Award for Literature and the 2017 Reuel International Best Upcoming Poet Prize. His recent poems have appeared in Arkana, Apricity, Hawaii Pacific Review, York Literary Review, Dash Literary Journal, and elsewhere. His first book Lost in Obscurity and Other Stories was published by Book Street Publications, India, in 2022.



A Word from the Author:

This poem was written during the pandemic. It highlights the impact of COVID on the working class in India. The woman in the poem, who doesn't return to take back the clothes that were left to dry in the sun, is a metonym for a large number of the population. Having seen the deaths of a few friends and acquaintances, I wanted to reflect the inevitability of death and the lack of a choice for the working class. 



An Orphaned Clothesline

(for a mother who died of COVID)


When bodies cease to exist

their relics cling to clothes


the smell of skin and the music

of voices lost in a babble


The clothes know the secrets

of the bodies like mirrors


where there was a mole

where there was a sore


The clothesline admits the secrets

and resets to a tabula rasa


the dance of democracy

to the tunes of the breeze


where every cloth gets

an equal share of the sun


where everything is cleaned

every organ is cleansed


but the clothesline can’t forget

the brown hands that blistered


with washing powder and left

the clothes to dry between


the wall and the sun like

a variegated streak of streamers


Those hands won’t come again

to take these clothes home

Human Rights Art Festival

Tom Block is a playwright, author of five books, 20-year visual artist and producer of the International Human Rights Art Festival. His plays have been developed and produced at such venues as the Ensemble Studio Theater, HERE Arts Center, Dixon Place, Theater for the New City, IRT Theater, Theater at the 14th Street Y, Athena Theatre Company, Theater Row, A.R.T.-NY and many others.  He was the founding producer of the International Human Rights Art Festival (Dixon Place, NY, 2017), the Amnesty International Human Rights Art Festival (2010) and a Research Fellow at DePaul University (2010). He has spoken about his ideas throughout the United States, Canada, Europe, Turkey and the Middle East. For more information about his work, visit www.tomblock.com.

http://ihraf.org
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“White Card” by Mira Mookerjee