New Airport
A prayer flag flutters
over a pregnant woman
as she raises her folded hand
to her forehead in her evening prayers.
Nearby, a shaman gets ready to dance.
Leaning against the trunk
of an ancient pipal tree
near our village house,
my father was reading the newspaper
and occasionally watching the birds
flying back to their nests
in the woods with a smile.
Suddenly, his hands
began to shake bizarrely,
and he was marinated in sweat.
I rushed toward him and asked,
‘What’s wrong with you father?’
He said nothing,
but through his sunken eyes,
he gestured for me to read the paper.
Tears were rolling down
my cheeks
after I read about
the government’s plan
to chop the trees
and bulldoze the woods
to build another airport
right atop our soul.
We sat in silence
until the last bird left the sky.
Somewhere nearby,
a dog began to bark
and then stopped.
Bhuwan Thapaliya is
a poet writing in English from Kathmandu, Nepal. He works as an economist and
is the author of four poetry collections. His poems have been published in
Pendemics Literary Journal, Lothlorien Poetry Journal, Trouvaille Review, Life in Quarantine:
Witnessing Global Pandemic Initiative(Witnessing Global Pandemic is an
initiative sponsored by the Poetic Media Lab and the Center for Spatial and
Textual Analysis at Stanford University), International Human Rights Art
Festival, Poetry and Covid: A Project funded by the UK Arts and Humanities
Research Council, University of Plymouth, and Nottingham Trent University, Pandemic
Magazine, The Poet, Valient Scribe, Strong Verse, Jerry Jazz
Musician, VOICES( Education Project), Longfellow Literary Project, Poets
Against the War among many others.
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