Visas
Words By Purvi Shah, Art By Sydblees
The following piece is the poetry winner of F(r)iction’s Spring 2023 literary contest.
for Ba (Dec. 10, 1927 – Aug. 22, 2021)
Though it’s hard to take them
through a grocery store – or
on a plane – or even ride
them into a conference
panel – or across your cubicle, second
home which is sometimes your first
– horses
are an excellent emotional support animal.
Watch their ears as you prattle on – attunement as if your mouth were a prairie opening–
as if your tongue were the grass of their fondest memories. In the 90s, as we traveled hills
of Kashmir on horseback, an army lathi jangled. The horse, sensitive. My father’s horse:
sensed. Horse reared & swept forth, as if it could suddenly fly, nostrils
as wings. After flying, it clattered on
the mountainside, my father –
sensitive to the rock next
to his head, sensitive
to what memories he might
have missed in mountains
to come, sensitive to this new desire
for sensation. In 2007, my grandfather burbled, a lack
of oxygen to his brain. I stroked his face as if it were
wet rock, whispered into his sensitive ears, Shanti, Shanti, Shanti.
Perhaps these sounds reminded him of his own mouth, morning
mala japa. His burbling
receded. Some years later, I discovered in truly old
Vedic rituals, priests used to repeat Shanti before
sacrificing horses. Horses are sensitive, you
know, and must be calmed before slaughter. Rituals
today must not be too sensitive. My Dada
survived. Until four years later when
he died. Two weeks ago, I asked
my father how
my 93-year-old Ba
is. “Ghoda
jevi,” he says. Today,
we are all the horses
crossing rituals as if they were nations – or
loved ones – we could visit with visas – with
visas – we too could somehow visit.