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Showing posts from May, 2020

Lockdown scenes in India

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Painting by Jacob Lawrence The Covid 19 situation in India has not only exposed the faulty health system in the country, but also the condition of the labour force. The thousands of workers walking in the scorching heat are all invisible to the government. Not to mention, there are many social media posts, tweets blaming the workers for leaving their work place during lockdown, almost criminalizing them for being poor. It is easy to say these, especially when we have a roof over our head, and food on the table. And those sharing their "migrant stories" with the "metoomigrant" hashtag, mustn't forget to add the word 'privileged'. Or, they could just stop their free flow of ignorance in a time like this.  Remembering a few lines from  Auden’s  Refugee Blues  written in 1939.  Say this city has ten million souls, Some are living in mansions, some are living in holes: Yet there's no place for us, my dear, yet there's no place for us. Once we had ...

Breathtaking Budapest: Remembering the city...

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People often describe Budapest as “the Paris of the East”, but I beg to differ. It holds a special place in its own right, and needs no comparison. I visited the city in January 2020. My purpose for visiting the Hungarian capital was primarily academic. But when you get to be in one of the most beautiful cities in the world, how can you miss exploring its beauty! I haven’t read much of Hungarian literature, but ever since I read Magda Szabó’s The Door , and Abigail I have wanted to visit the country. Both the books, like any other good book evoke a sense of curiosity to know more about the place and its people. Which is why, upon receiving the invitation from ELTE University, I did not think twice before accepting it. I only had two days in the city, but I’m not complaining. I tried to make the most of it! My train journey to Budapest started from Passau in Germany, with a seven hour wait at Wien Meidling railway station in the middle of the night. All those hours in Vienna, and I was...