"Death of a Village"
Here
intimations of death
hang
heavy in the air
Everywhere
there is the stench
of decay and despair
The river
strangled by
exigencies
of industrialisation
is dying….
and nobody cares
The fish
in the river
poisoned by
progress’s vomit
are dying….
and nobody cares
The birds
that feed on the fish
in the river
poisoned by
progress’s excrement
are dying….
and nobody cares
And so
a once-proud village
sustained
for centuries
by the richness
of this river
dies….
And nobody cares
To that mammon
DEVELOPMENT
our high priests
sacrifice
our customs
our culture
our traditions
and environment
and nobody cares
We blind mice
We blind mice
see what we’ve done
see what we’ve done
We all ran after
Progress’s wife
she cut off our heads
with Development’s knife
have you ever seen
such fools in your life
as we blind mice?
By Cecil Rajendra
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Before discussing the poem itself, let me first begin by introducing the poet, Cecil Rajendra – one of the few Malaysian poets writing in the English language today, hence the reason why he is also the first Malaysian featured on this blog so far. Personally I have not read much of his poetry and would also confess to not being a particular fan of his poetry, but I have a deep respect for how his poetry gives voice to the socially marginalised and act as a conscience for the environment. Not as widely read in Malaysia, Cecil Rajendra’s poetry has travelled far and wide, cited by WWF, UNICEF, UNESCO, National Geographic and Amnesty International.
Bluntly (or sharply) direct, this poem is probably one that discomforts us, sitting uneasily with some of our sensibilities. We would agree that the environment should be protected, but is development wrong? Can progress be bad? Well, whether we agree or not, I think this poem still has some important things to ‘say’.
The first stanza confronts and assails our senses with rotting smells of dead and decaying matter. The word “hang” plays not only with how the air reeks, but how it is a kind of death by ‘hanging’, choking out the clean air we need to breath. How has this come about? We need not look further than the following stanzas to know that it comes from the excesses and wastes produced from industrial development that have not been properly cleaned and disposed of.
In a repetitious cycle, the stanzas of the poem take us along the ecological trail of destruction, from the polluted river to the dead and rotting fish, to the dying birds that eat the poisoned fish, to the slow death of the village which depends on the river for water and livelihood. Yes, not everybody live in villages, but the point made by the poem is that we are still bound to the environment; and regardless whether we like it or not, whatever we do will ultimately have an effect on the balance of the whole ecological system with us in it as well.
As much as the poem seems to denounce urban and technological modernity in causing the death of the village, I would suggest we take the village less in its literal sense, and see it metaphorically instead as a reference to developing nations that are moving from a self-sufficient agrarian economy to an industrial one involved in the global production of goods. These developing nations have often gone on a headlong drive towards rapid development, losing sight on the need for environmental management and protection, hence resulting in environmental degradation that come back to haunt later.
One need not think far then to recall how a mercuric sludge discharged from a factory in China last year cause widespread panic for people living along that river. Closer to home, Malaysia has seen its own share of environmental problems recently such as how the poor management of a waste dump caused severe health problems for residents living in the area and the landslides caused by indiscriminate and ill conceived housing development on hilly slopes.
Such blind pursuit of ‘progress’ is indicted as a form of false worship, where everything is sacrificed in the name of mammon, the false god of greed and money. The ‘progress’ sought after leaves behind its metaphorical “vomit” and “excrement” that spills over into the supposedly better lives improved through development. The sharp satirical tone here powerfully undercuts and questions what we believe is ‘development’, forcing us to rethink and reassess the manner in which such development are being carried out.
At the end, the final stanza, in keeping with the tenor of the poem, parodies the well-known nursery rhyme “Three blind mice” into “We blind mice” - we who in our blindness have become fools. Instead of innocence, the ‘nursery rhyme’ becomes a bitter satire, recalling the angry and resigned refrain “and nobody cares”. How sad this is.
Indeed, we need to care, though sometimes it is not that nobody cares, but rather nobodies care, who are also not able to care.
On a short note: During his early days as a lawyer, Cecil Rajendra set up a free legal aid service for rural communities. In this light, the village mentioned in the poem could also be a reference to rural and/or indigenous communities whose lives are threatened when corrupt greed allows unfettered and unmonitored development.
This poem may well be timely with this, Loggers and Penan Blockade, and this Forest Resources Depleting
Labels: dreamer idiot's choices, poems about the environment
