कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
Your Legend, My JM
Outlook
|September 21, 2023
The love and compassion one encountered in poet Jayanta Mahapatra's company are legendary. The luminary who passed away last month has left behind the undying zeal for life
Hi, JM, good morning! Whassup?
Yo, morning, beautiful! Birds are singing in the bamboos. Had coffee?
Yes, and hot hot vadas too, JM.
Yippie, love hot vadas!
SOUNDS pretty much like two teenagers conversing, right? My morning WhatsApp routine–even as a quasi-Luddite–would often start this way for the past eight months. JM, or Jayanta Mahapatra to the world, demanded I give him a nickname, call him a friend, and come to him to talk of all “fun things, not boring books and poetry, please!”
Like many others though, my first meeting with Mahapatra was at a 2016 literary festival in Bombay where he was surrounded by gazillion poets and writers. There was hardly any time for proper conversation. We spoke about the usual suspects– Sky Without Sky and A Rain of Rites–then posed to be clicked by a friend. He must have been photographed many times over at that festival and so, quite naturally, I exited from his memory to surface only in December 2022. However, it was poetry again which was the connector.
A close friend, a documentary film-maker and avid poetry lover, had suggested that I send off some of my books to Mahapatra along with my phone number and address. Usually lazy about such proactive moves, I heeded him. I also included a handwritten letter, reminding Mahapatra that we had met earlier on.
In about 10 days of the missive departing for Tinkonia Bagicha, where his very old mansion of a house ‘Chandrabhaga’ was located, a sudden phone call on my mobile, while I sat dozing in the Hyderabad metro, startled me.
“Nabina, Nabina,” piped the bird-like voice. This is how a legend sounds, I thought. A free and fervourful intonation.
यह कहानी Outlook के September 21, 2023 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
Outlook से और कहानियाँ
Outlook
Joy Words Club
Lit fests are defined by their audience. Organisers, speakers, curators are all replaceable but not the readers, not the audience
4 mins
February 01, 2026
Outlook
The Sting of the Bar
India today has more than 4.3 lakh undertrial prisoners. A significant number of them are linked to political cases
8 mins
February 01, 2026
Outlook
The Dispossessed
The systematic creation of criminal and security legislations view Adivasis as an inherently suspect class of criminals and terrorists
8 mins
February 01, 2026
Outlook
The Hypocrisy of Liberals
Favour of the self-proclaimed 'liberals' is lost the minute religion intervenes
5 mins
February 01, 2026
Outlook
Inside the Phansi Yard
Death row intensifies the structured brutalities of the penal system and reminds us why the struggle against the death penalty must also include the fact of prison violence
9 mins
February 01, 2026
Outlook
The Detention Legacy
Since Independence, a number of laws have been enacted that allow preventive detention which have been widely used by all regimes against their political opponents
7 mins
February 01, 2026
Outlook
“This Could Happen to You
The Bhima Koregaon case is not only about those who were imprisoned. It is also about the fate of democracy itself
8 mins
February 01, 2026
Outlook
"I Remember Swinging Between Hope and Despair"
HOPE and despair are basic human emotions and I believe that all human beings, now and then, swing between these two ends of the spectrum in life.
2 mins
February 01, 2026
Outlook
Think Ink
In 2026-the 'year of analog'-how will our relationship with literary festivals evolve?
6 mins
February 01, 2026
Outlook
Who Stole My Youth?
A Delhi district court granted Mohammad Iqbal bail in the riots case within three months. On March 18, 2025, he was discharged in the Babbu murder case, even as the riots trial continues
6 mins
February 01, 2026
Translate
Change font size

