I always wanted to write. My friends' encouragement led me to write and publish. I owe a lot to them. Writing gives me tremendous satisfaction, as I am able to express myself better in this form.
My pen-name is a curious amalgam of two names: Ali and Ashesh. In 1994, I attended a devotional quawwali concert, dressed in a long jacket and a fur cap. That prompted the revered host to remark that I resembled Nawab Ali Ahmed Khan. I took that as a compliment and a blessing. In the same year, later, I attended a programme during which my facilitator said that it was rebirth for me and he would give me the name Ashesh meaning without keeping anything back. The poems that I wrote in that period were published under the name Aliashesh. It is with this name that all my subsequent poetry is published.
Silo (1938 - 2010) was the Argentinian thinker and writer whose work gave shape to the New Humanism. (www.silo.net) Notably all his works are freely available on the internet. Centrality of the human being, non-violence, freedom, respect for all cultures and a ceaseless quest for learning are the cornerstones of New Humanism. Silo wrote with extreme economy of words and with extreme subtlety of meanings. One of my favourite quotes from him is : "There is no criminal in the world who is a stranger to me". My salute to Silo.
It's the month of Poetry again and my friend Sandeep A dutifully reminded me of it. Of course, it was on my mind. On 1st I travelled by train to Amritsar alongwith my wife and in-laws. The train started late and we reached the hotel just before midnight. The next day we visited Harmandir Sahib or Darbar Sahib or Golden Temple as it is popularly called. After lunch we settled down to see the World Cup Final and slept late basking in the midnight glory of our triumph. The return journey started pretty early yesterday morning and by the time we reached home I was fully exhausted. So it is the 4th April today for the first poetic offering.
He told us to collect a few leaves of the holy berry tree to keep all sorrows away; then he met us at the holy berry tree to remind the women to sprinkle the holy water on the old man in the wheel chair so that he may be hale and hearty again. "Many have come here to return able bodied", he said. Then the wheels of the chair got stuck and he came to lift it and keep it on track. The singer put his soul in the words "Thy name is grief-breaker, thy name is.." The water was full of devotion and the air was full of compassion and the earth was softness itself. Even the Sun shone benevolently as love enveloped us from all sides. Who would not go back ablebodied?