Tag: khasipoetryintranslation

  • “Ka Jingim Ha Ki Kti Ka Por” da i Rangkitbok C. Dikrud

    "Ka Jingim Ha Ki Kti Jong Ka Por" is an original Khasi poem written by @rangkitbok_c 📝📖

    Kane ka dei sa kawei ka poim kaba la phah da i @rangkitbok_c 😄 Sngewkmen shikatdei ba phi ïai pyrshang ban thoh ha ka ktien lajong! 🙏

    Khublei Shibun @rangkitbok_c na ka bynta ka poim jong phi kaba pynsawa ïa ka jingangnud jong ka jinglong briew jong ngi ban pynsah ïa ka por, haba ka por pat kam kwah ban neh kumjuh. Dei shisha ba phi ong "…pleng wat ïalade ruh ngam lah ban bat sah…" 🍃🍃 🙌🙌

    "Ka Jingim Ha Ki Kti Jong Ka Por" or "Life in the Hands of Time" speaks of the ever-flowing stream of time pitted against the human need for permanence. 🍃🍃

    Rangkitbok C. Dikrud published his first volume of poetry entitled Ka Maïa Jong Ka Por: Ka Thup Poitri Khasi Ha Ka Laitlan, Haiku bad Tanka in 2021.

    #khasipoetry #khasiliterature #khasipoetryintranslation #khasiwriters #khasilanguage #khasilanguageconservation #speakyourroots #speakyourrootschallenge #talklocal

  • Ki Mawsiang Kulong Kumah Ka Sohra da i Kynpham Sing Nongkynrih

    Ka poitri "Ki Mawsiang Kulong Kumah Ka Sohra" na ka thup "Ki Mawsiang Ka Sohra" (2007) ba la thoh da i Babu Kynpham Sing Nongkynrih ka kren shaphang ka jingkylla kaba la wan ha ka shnong Sohra ha ki sngi mynta. Ki dei sa tang ki mawsiang ka Sohra kiba ïeng kynjreng kum ki dak ka jingkynmaw ïa ka ïing bad ïa ki por ki ïa kiba la leit.

    Ngi dap da ka jingsngewkmen ba ngin ïoh lad ban kren bad phylliew jingmut bad i Babu ha ka 2 tarik u Nailar ha @eveningclubshillong, ryngkat bad i @samuel.sawian bad i @daia.risa ban tip ïa ka jingïaid lynti jong i kum u nongthoh Khasi uba la pawnam ha ri India bad shabar ka ri India ruh.

    Khublei Shibun @pyrta.collective ba phi la pynkhreh kum ïa kane ka jingïakynduh! 😄🙏

    The poem "The Ancient Rocks of Cherra" from "The Yearning of Seeds" (2011) written by Kynpham Sing Nongkynrih speaks of the changes that Sohra/ Cherra has undergone in these present times. It is only the rocks and boulders of Sohra who stand constant as symbols of the memory of home and the days that have gone by.

    We are happy to be getting the opportunity to talk to Bah Kynpham Sing Nongkynrih on the 2nd of August in @eveningclubshillong together with @samuel.sawian and @daia.risa to know more about his journey as a Khasi writer who is well known in India and abroad too.

    Thank you @pyrta.collective for organising such an occasion! 😄🙏

  • Introduction to “Tales of Darkness and Light” by Janet Hujon

    Tales of Darkness and Light: Soso Tham’s Ki Sngi Barim U Hynñiewtrep: The Old Days of the Khasis (Translation and Commentary by Janet Hujon, 2018)

    INTRODUCTION¹

    Then will the rivers of our homeland tear the hills apart²

    The year is 1935. The event, at least for literature in Khasi, is momentous. A man diminutive in stature but with a voice that cradled the vast soul of his people had decided to do what he knew best. He completed a classic in Khasi literature and the Shillong Printing Works published The Old Days of the Khasis (Ki Sngi Barim U Hynñiew Trep).³ Soso Tham came in from the wilderness to carve in words the identity of his people—he made us see, he made us hear, he made us feel and he made us fear.

    In a land still under British rule this legendary schoolteacher expressed a weary frustration with the English texts he had taught his students year after year. He declared that from now on “he would do it himself”. And so he did. An oral culture for whom, in 1841, Thomas Jones of the Welsh Presbyterian Mission had devised a script, now had a scribe whose work expresses a profound love for his homeland and an unwavering pride in the history of his tribe—a history kept alive in rituals and social customs and in fables and legends handed down by generations of storytellers.

    Soso Tham refused to believe that a people with no evidence of a written history was without foundation or worth. He set out to compile in verse shared memories of the ancient past—ki sngi barim—presenting his people with their own mythology depicting a social and moral universe still relevant to the present day. For him the past is not a dark place but a source of Light, of Enlightenment. It may lie buried but it is not dead, and when discovered will provide the reason for its continued survival. Ki Sngi Barim U Hynñiew Trep is the lyrical result of dedicated devotion. It is an account of how Seven Clans—U Hynñiew Trep—came down to live on this earth. Tham tells us how

    Groups into a Nation grew

    Words ripening to a mother tongue

    Manifold adherents, one bonding Belief

    Ceremonial dances, offerings of joy, united by a common weave,

    Laws and customs slowly wrought

    Bound this Homeland into one⁴

    Not content to be the passive, unquestioning recipient of literary output and thought imposed by a foreign ruling power, Soso Tham decided to write in his native Khasi and about his own culture. Although he had embraced Christianity and imbibed Hellenic influences through his reading of English poetry, writing in Khasi expressed his resistance to the dominance of English—for surely, did not the Muse also dwell in his homeland? Creativity, he declared, is not the prerogative of any one culture. With the Himalayan foothills as a backdrop, winding rivers silvering the landscape, and hollows of clear pools and hillside springs, Tham points out that Khasis too have their own Bethel and Mount Parnassus and their own sources of inspiration from which to drink like Panora and Hippocrene in ancient Greece. His dalliance in the literature of distant lands had led him home.

    But in throwing off his colonial yoke to mark out an independent path, Tham did so with no trace of chauvinism. His affinity with the Romantics cannot be ignored. While he worked on his articulation of a Khasi vision, Tham remained alive to the gentle unifying truths of human experience and this can be seen in his translations of William Wordsworth’s poems into Khasi.

    For reasons of accessibility the nightingale (The Solitary Reaper) becomes the local “kaitor”,⁵ the violet (“Lucy”: She dwelt among the Untrodden Ways) becomes the “jami-iang”,⁶ and isn’t it just serendipitous that Wordsworth’s Cuckoo should so fit Soso Tham’s like a glove? This is because her call is heard in the Khasi Hills as it is in the Lake District. So when Tham addresses the bird as “queen of this land of peace” I feel he has not mistranslated the line “Or but a wandering voice?” but has chosen instead to give this spirit of the woods “a local habitation and a name”. The Khasification of the cuckoo is complete and a mutual recognition of the need to cherish what we have is established. Perhaps Wordsworth did us a favour, for without his poem Khasis may have never benefited from Tham’s translation thus opening our ears and hearts to this denizen haunting our woods.

    Poignant sadness in the face of beauty lost or just out of reach, so moving in Keats’ Ode to a Nightingale, is also felt in Ki Sngi Barim: inevitable perhaps in a piece recalling the past amidst a perilous present. Keats is therefore a gentle presence in Tham’s work, for listen:

    High on the pine the Kairiang sings⁷

    About the old the long lost past,

    Sweetness lies just out of reach

    And such the songs I too will sing⁸

    Stars of truth once shone upon

    The darkness of our midnight world

    Oh Da-ia-mon, Oh Pen of Gold

    Put down all that there is to know

    Awaken and illuminate

    Before the dying of the light⁹

    Furthermore, scenes from a Hellenic past in Keats’ Ode on a Grecian Urn dovetail neatly with the Khasi homeland where forces of nature each had their own deity. Ki Sngi Barim testifies to the ancient Khasi belief that the green hills, forests, valleys and tumbling waterfalls are guarded or haunted by their own patron deities and spirits. Reverence or fear has traditionally served to protect the natural world. Soso Tham himself might well have asked:

    What leaf-fringed legend haunts about thy shape

    Of deities of mortals or of both

    In Tempe or the dales of Arcady?…

    With their own world of sacred ritual and sacrifice Khasis would also have understood:

    Who are these coming to the sacrifice?

    To what green altar, O mysterious priest

    Lead’st thou that heifer lowing at the skies

    And all her silken flanks with garlands drest? ¹⁰

    Discovering the resonances between the English literary canon and Khasi poetry has undoubtedly been a source of pleasure because for me they underline the human stories we all tell. But this was not necessarily Soso Tham’s intention. What he wanted to do was to correct a gross misconception that still scars and skews the way Khasis look at themselves vis-à-vis western culture. His aim was to rebuild and restore cultural pride. Recounting the carefully laid down rules of social conduct, the heated durbars where systems of governance were debated and established, and the fierce fighting spirit of fabled warriors, Tham challenges the derogatory labelling of his people as mere “collectors of heads” or “uncouth jungle dwellers” incapable of sensitive thought and action.

    Once Great Minds did wrestle with thought

    To strengthen the will, to toughen the nerve

    Once too in parables they spoke they taught

    In public durbar or round the family hearth

    In search of a king, a being in whom

    The hopes of all souls could blossom and fruit

    and

    Boundaries defined, rights respected

    Trespass a taboo remaining unbroken

    Equal all trade, fairness maintained

    Comings and goings in sympathy in step

    Welfare and woe of common concern

    Concord’s dominion on the face of the earth¹¹

    What the poet constantly underlines is that a homeland and a way of life that has survived for centuries cannot be dismissed as insignificant—his ancestors were accurate readers of the writing on the land heeding the lessons and warnings inscribed on “wood and stone”.12 It is this wisdom that accounts for the continued existence of a unique people who, until relatively recently, lived life in tune with their natural surroundings and in sympathy with one another. This is why when Soso Tham renders in words the inspiring beauty of his homeland he does so with profound love and reverence, declaring with absolute conviction:

    Look East, look West, look South, look North

    A land beloved of the gods

    With a pride so touching in its childlike certainty he expects no dissent when he asks:

    Will the high Himalaya

    Ever turn away from her

    Pleasure garden, fruit and flower

    Where young braves wander, maidens roam

    Between the Rilang and Kupli¹³

    This is the land they call their home¹⁴

    To fully appreciate why Soso Tham is the voice of his people, one needs to know how Khasis respond to the world around them, and we must profoundly reflect upon this if we are to piece together again the shattered vessel of our cultural confidence. Here I recall what was for me a blinding flash in my understanding of the workings of my mother tongue. Years ago while we were travelling on the London Underground, my cousin made the following observation about an elevator carrying the city’s crowds. In Khasi she said: “Ni, sngap ba ka ud”. This would be the equivalent of saying: “Oh dear! Listen to her moan”. Simply because the old grimy elevator had been assigned the status of a human being and specifically that of a woman—“ka”—I immediately empathised with “her” suffering. In English the elevator would normally have been referred to as “it”, and I am convinced that my imaginative reaction to it would have been bland if not altogether non-existent.

    On that day I rediscovered the creative roots of my mother tongue. I was reminded that not only do Khasis see living beings, natural forces and inanimate objects as either male or female, but they also endow them with human qualities and feelings. It is this innate poetic tendency that makes the world come alive for every Khasi and no one exemplifies this better than Soso Tham. So when he writes about the great storms that batter Sohra, we are left in no doubt that here we are dealing with a living breathing entity, human in essence but with far greater power to awe:

    So the waterfalls threaten and the rivers they growl

    They sink to the plains and they smother the reed

    They banish wild boar who have ruled unopposed

    For that is the way our mighty rains roll

    Rivers turn to the left and advance on the right

    They collide with and devour whatever’s in sight

    Small islands appear as rice fields are sunk

    The might of the Surma gives the Brahma a fright¹⁵

    Tham’s words beat in time to the tempo of the natural world with which he so closely identifies, so that the storm lives through the poet and the poet lives through the storm. The poet is the storm. The vivid description provides an insight into what informs the hill person’s view of the natural world—this being the ability to respond with both awe and enthusiasm to the might and capriciousness of Nature. For a Khasi to underestimate the significance of perceiving, evaluating and identifying the effects of the natural world on them would be dangerous if not fatal. Yes we can delight in the Khasi flair for storytelling seen in Tham’s descriptions of gentle charm, sweeping majesty and lively engagement, but it is more important to heed the passages inspiring fearful dread. In a land burgeoning with promise and flowing with contentment the sonorous toll of doom is never ever totally muted. Then and even more so now that sense of foreboding cannot be ignored.

    In the process of translating I came across the word “tluh” which Tham used in connection with his first poetic breakthrough when he was translating the English poem Drive the Nail Aright Boys into Khasi. I had to look up the word because it does not form part of my everyday use of Khasi. When I found out that “tluh” is “a tree—the fibres of which are used to make ropes, or improvise head-straps, strings”—I felt both enlightened and apprehensive. I felt enlightened because I realised that a whole world of Khasi knowledge and expertise lay in just that one word. But elation was soon replaced by dread.

    In his book Wildwood: A Journey Through Trees Roger Deakin mourns the fact that “woods have been suppressed by motorways and the modern world, and have come to look like the subconscious of the landscape […] The enemies of woods”, he says, “are always the enemies of culture and humanity”¹⁶… and this is what made me apprehensive. Had I not come across the word “tluh”, I would never have discovered the world to which it refers. How much more do I not know? How much more have we lost? I therefore marvel not only at our poet’s appropriate choice of image but I also value the lesson he points us towards.

    Today the Khasi and Jaiñtia Hills form part of Meghalaya, a state in North-East India which came into being following local demand for the recognition of a strongly felt tribal identity. But it is clearly evident that long before this overt political step was taken Soso Tham had already addressed the question of identity, carrying with it that sense of rootlessness deeply embedded in the Khasi psyche, a raw wound sensitive to the reminder that “the Other” whom we have encountered in our recorded history has invariably been certain of his or her historical beginnings. This, I feel, accounts for the leitmotif of sadness running through Khasi literary and musical compositions, and the numerous nuanced terms for sadness and regret. Tham speaks for so many when he asks:

    Tell me children of the breaking dawn

    Mother-kite, mother-crow,

    You who circle round the world

    Where the soil from which we sprang?

    For if I could, like you I’d drift

    Down the ends of twelve-year roads!¹⁷

    Ki Sngi Barim is both a love letter to his homeland and a troubled and troubling exploration of what makes and sustains that fragile sense of self. He sees the battle for identity being waged on two fronts—against the enemy without and the enemy within. A reading of the work reveals in no uncertain terms that Tham fears the enemy within more than he does the foe without. Tragically this is still the case today. Mineral-rich Meghalaya with its dense forest cover is now a treasure trove being exploited by the rapacious few using tribal “rights” over the land as justification for their actions:

    Man’s greed is now a gluttonous sow

    (A pouch engorged about to rip)¹⁸

    Ki Sngi Barim is trenchant social critique told through a trajectory of spiritual questing. Through the converging prisms of Khasi myth and religion, Tham tells the universal story of temptation and man’s fall from grace. But despite the poet’s despair hope is never totally lost, for the narrative journeys towards the possibility of rejuvenation as we see in the final section Ka Aïom Ksiar (Season of Gold):

    The Peacock will dance when the Sun returns¹⁹

    And she will bathe in the Rupatylli²⁰

    O Rivers Rilang, Umiam and Kupli²¹

    Sweet songs in you will move inspire

    Land of Nine Roads, pathways of promise²²

    Where the Mole will strum, the Owl will dance²³

    Spellbound by the beauty of his homeland, the poet steadfastly holds on to his belief that the land that he fiercely cherishes and that inspires his art will once again be a spring of renewal and creativity. Whatever else this translation may achieve, my hope is that the powerful life of an old tradition will reawaken so that when we read we will hear:

    The crash of rivers, the thunder of waterfalls

    In the Khasi minstrel’s reed-piped-ears

    Where tumult is hushed and silence then ripples

    To the furthest brink of infinite time²⁴

    Perhaps the human voice will once again reassert its power to empower and change:

    Then once again will forests roar

    And stones long still shake to the core²⁵

    1 Some of the ideas in the Introduction have appeared in articles I submitted to the Shillong Times (Meghalaya) and in a paper entitled ‘Surviving Change’ which I presented at a conference organised by Lady Keane College, Shillong, in August 2014.

    2 Closing line in Soso Tham’s Preface to Ki Sngi Barim U Hynñiew Trep.

    3 Published in Shillong in 1936.

    4 Ka Persyntiew (The Flower Garden), in Ki Sngi Barim U Hynñiew Trep.

    5 Himalayan Treepie (Dendrocitta formosae), now endangered.

    6 Sapphire Berry (Symplocos Paniculata).

    7 Chestnut-backed Laughing Thrush (Garrulax nuchalis) also threatened by habitat loss.

    8 Ka Persyntiew (The Flower Garden), in Ki Sngi Barim.

    9 Ka Pyrthei Mariang (The Natural World), in Ki Sngi Barim.

    10 John Keats, Ode on a Grecian Urn, ll:5–7 and ll:31—34.

    11 Ka Meirilung (Gentle Motherland), in Ki Sngi Barim.

    12 Ki Symboh Ksiar (Grains of Gold).

    13 The names of rivers in the Khasi and Jaiñtia Hills respectively.

    14 Ka Persyntiew (The Flower Garden), in Ki Sngi Barim.

    15 Ki Kshaid ba Rymphum (Cascades of Joy), in Ka Duitara Ksiar. The Surma is a river in Bangladesh; Brahma is the mighty Brahmaputra (son of Brahma) which flows through Assam.

    16 Roger Deakin, Wildwood: A Journey Through Trees (London: Penguin, 2008), Introduction, p. xii.

    17 Ka Meirilung (Gentle Motherland), in Ki Sngi Barim.

    18 U Lyoh (The Cloud), in Ki Sngi Barim.

    19 A Khasi tale explaining the eyes on the tail of the Peacock who once upon a time lived in the sky with his wife the Sun. But one day as he looked down on the earth below he saw a golden-haired maiden with whom he instantly fell in love. He flew down only to discover that he had been captivated by a field of golden mustard. The foolish peacock was left heartbroken and realised he was doomed to live on earth forever. From that time onwards each morning he danced at sunrise to greet his wife whose tears would fall on his outspread tail and became those eyes on the tail of the Peacock.

    20 The Surma now in Bangladesh. Here it is compared to a necklace of solid silver.

    21 Rivers in the Khasi and Jaiñtia Hills.

    22 The Khasi word “lad” means both path or road as well as opportunity, so to translate the phrase “Khyndai lad” solely into Nine Roads would not necessarily imply opportunity. Hence my addition of “pathways of promise” in order to convey the local extended meaning of the word.

    23 Both the Mole and the Owl participate in a dance described in the legend about the Sacred Cave where the Sun hid her light to punish living creatures for casting doubt on her relationship with her brother the Moon. See Chapter 3, pp. 21–22.

    24 U Lum Shillong (Shillong Peak), in Ka Duitara Ksiar.

    25 From Ka Persyntiew (The Flower Garden), in Ki Sngi Barim.

    Kane ka dei ka lamkhmat jong ka kot Tales of Darkness and Light: The Old Days of the Khasis (2018) kaba la thoh da i Janet Hujon. Kane ka kot ka dei ka jingpynkylla sha ka ktien English ïa Ki Sngi Barim U Hynñiewtrep ba la thoh da u myllung Soso Tham.

    Kane ka lamkhmat ka long kaba shoh jingmut ban pule bad ka ai jingshai shaphang ka mynsiem bad jingsngewthuh jong u Soso Tham kum u myllung bad u rangbah Khasi. ✒️📖

    This is the introduction to the book Tales of Darkness and Light: The Old Days of the Khasis (2018) written by Janet Hujon. This book is an English translation of Ki Sngi Barim U Hynñiewtrep written by Khasi Poet Laureate Soso Tham.

    This introduction is a lovely read and it enlightens the reader on the values and heart of Soso Tham as a poet and a Khasi man. ✒️📖

    🟡 The cover art for this particular edition published by Martin Luther Christian University, Shillong @mlcuniv has been done by @careenjoplinlangstieh

    🟡 The book can be downloaded for free from here: https://www.openbookpublishers.com/books/10.11647/obp.0137

  • Ka Por Kristmas da i Occyliana M. Syiemiong

    Ki jingpynkhreh kyrpang baroh.

    Naduh najrong haduh hapoh;

    Habar ka ïing lynti syngkein

    Thaba ki rong i phuh i phieng.

    Bun jingbakla dei ban pynbeit,

    Jingmut Kristmas la kum u kbeit;

    Shu her sha suiñ khlem hiar sha tbian,

    Sngew tang rong phong katta la biang.

    Phewse! Kristmas dei ka jingieit,

    Mynsiem pynbeit ba kan suh thied,

    B'u Khrist hangta Un sa wan hiar,

    Ki Jingkyrkhu kin sa tawiar.

    Ka por Khristmas dei por jingkmen,

    Jinglehsynei samla tymmen;

    Hangne baroh ba ïa kmen lang,

    Ka ding jingieit to ai kan klang.

    Khristmas basuk Khristmas bakmen,

    Mynsiem to ai ba kan shong tngen;

    Ki jingkyrkhu kyrhai to shim,

    Khristmas to ai ha ngi kan im.

    -Occyliana Mary Syiemïong

    "Ka Por Khristmas" ("The Time of Christmas") is an original Khasi poem written by @occyliana_ 🌲❄️🎄 Khublei Shibun ba phi la phah ïa ka jingthoh jong phi kaba kren ïa ka jingshisha ba donkam. 🙏🙏

  • “Ka La’er Tlang” da i Manhaoo Paswet

    Ka la'er wa daitthah ka la'er tlang,

    I khyndaw da raw, da sdang u pdang,

    Ka la'er yei mynsien wa pyn ka-it,

    Ha pyrdi i kjam kawa pynchong chit.

    Soodong talawiar ha i tpai diñ,

    I ngiah i jrem heite da stiñ,

    Wa ya wyr-ngia ya klam khana,

    Ki parom wa pher ki khana danda.

    Chi iung chi sem chi lok chi jor,

    Harood i tpai diñ kaini i por,

    Wa'u kcchu tungtoh hajrong mookhuri,

    Da'u bang ja bha du nei rukom bih.

    Kynmoo u pyrkhat heiwon u pynlut yei por,

    Wa ki wa ha iung ha sem ki lok ki jor,

    Kamwa tyllung ki por wa ki samoi,

    Symboi ya mylliñ i yeiwa kordor wa myntoi.

    -Manhaoo Paswet

    "Ka La'er Tlang" toh ka poitri Pnar wa da thoh da u @wisu_02
    Khublei Chibōn wa phah phi ya kani ka poitri yong phi 🙏 iwa ya toh wa i por kjam, por bam tungtoh 😄😋

    Ym em de ha pyrthai kat i tlang ha yung wa ha chnong yong i ❤️❄️🏞️

  • Myllung Ka Ri da i Dameshwa Rymbai

    Myllung Ka Ri

    Na Ri ki lyoh bad ki kshaid.

    Ka shnong ba la bna nam.

    U Khun phrangsngi u mih,

    Jong I Hat Tongper, I Lyngkien Tham.

    Khun shynrang marwei bad ba lai,

    Kumba la thoh shun U Blei najrong,

    H'u khatphra spah hynniew phew lai.

    U kit ryngkat ka sap ka phong.

    U nonghikai ba kat u nonghikai

    Ia ktien khasi ban kyntiew nam.

    Synniang kham kordor ia ki sbai,

    Haduh mynta ki dang kren jam!

    U khulom ksiar bad ka sia jingstad.

    Uba dang iai pruid haduh mynta.

    Kyntien kum waitlam kaba prat,

    Ki sei shibun ki riewkhraw na jylla

    Ah! Lada long da u Mahon-mala,

    Ba pynkup burom ia phi myllung

    Burom jong phi la kat u patsha,

    Uba kit ka jingstad shi khung.

    Ah! Ei ban bteng ia lyngkor jong phi,

    Ki ktien jingstad ba tei imlang sahlang

    Ban pynneh, pynjanai ia ktien khasi,

    Shaei ki samla, ki thei bad ki rang?

    Hato ngin shu kut tang ka khana,

    Shaphang U myllung ba khraw ka Ri?

    Mano ban leit wad mawlynnai mawhira

    Jinghikai kiba Myllung u hikai ia ngi.

    Ban shu kut tang ha ka jingpule,

    la ki jingthoh ba kit symboh jingstad.

    Donkam ia ngi ba ngin da sule.

    Ha man la ki khep, haba plie ka lad.

    – Dameshwa Rymbai

    Sa kawei ka jingthoh poitri ban kynmaw ïa ka lyngkhuh sngi ïap jong u myllung Soso Tham mynta ka sngi ka dei "Myllung ka Ri" ba la thoh da i @damechwarymbai410 📖✍️

    Sa shisien phi la phah ïa ki jingthoh ba shoh jingmut, ba shoh mynsiem. Khublei Shibun! 🙏🙏

    #usosotham #sosothamdeathanniversary #khasipoetry #khasiliterature #khasipoetryintranslation #speakyourroots #speakyourrootschallenge #talklocal

  • Ka Por da Naomi C. Nonglait

    "La biang katto," ka ong ka por,

    Haba u briew la lut ka bor,

    Jingim la ïaid man la ka sngi,

    Mynta la poi te sha sepngi.

    Ani! To ap shuwa ko por,

    Balei pha sei ïa la ka bor?

    Jingim ban shim noh hi bran bran,

    Ngim pat sngewthuh kumno ban san.

    Bunsien ngi beh ïa la ka kam,

    Ngi klet ïa kiba ngi ieid tam,

    Ngi ai pynban ka por kordor,

    Sha kita kiba shet shukor.

    Ki thaba ha ki khmat jong ngi

    Ki pynthame man la ka sngi,

    Khmih ko samla ïa ka lynti

    Ïoh dier noh pat ka por jong phi!

    "Ka Por" (Time) is an original Khasi poem by @carey_lynz who is a teacher and scholar 🤗❤️ Khublei Shibun @carey_lynz ba phi la phah ïa ka poitri jong phi kaba long ka jingpynkynmaw ba kordor 🕯️🪞🕜

    @carey_lynz says about the poem: "Time is a gift and yet a curse to one who does not know how to use it. This poem expresses how time can run out when we are in the rat race of becoming, or achieving or doing things which may not matter. But, while we hanker after the things of this world, they may not be important in another time as we may have lost our focus. For instance, if it is family it is not that we have forgotten them, but it is acts of thoughtfulness like making a phone call or saying kind words that makes a difference. Sometimes we need to look at the bigger picture beyond misunderstandings which may ultimately cost regret and pain. The poem issues a warning of the choices made or the path taken."

    Dr. Naomi C. Nonglait is an Associate Professor in the Department of English,
    St. Mary's College, Shillong, Meghalaya.

  • “Ki kti wad jingsyaid…” da Daiarisa Rumnong (Haiku)

    Ki kti wad jingsyaid

    ïa ding saw kyrkhu arti,

    sla kyrthop ki hap.

    – Daiarisa

    Hands searching for warmth,

    bless a fire with joined hands,

    a ragged leaf falls.

    – Daiarisa

    Ka haiku ka dei ka rukom thoh poitri kaba na ka ri Japan. Katba ngi wad jingsyaid ha kane ka tlang, ngin pyni ïa ka jingieit jong ngi ïa ka mariang bad ka meiramew, katba ka dang khih dang syar ban thaw thymmai ïalade 🌄🏞️🍃🌨️

    A haiku is a Japanese verse form of three unrhymed lines, of five, seven and five syllables. A haiku often features an image, or a pair of images, meant to depict the essence of a specific moment in time.

    Haiku poems are primarily used to express feelings about Nature. Traditional poems dealt with themes like time, nature, emotions and so on. They are meant as words of enlightenment for the readers.

    Despite its many adaptions into multiple languages and styles, the haiku remains a powerful form due to its economic use of language to evoke a specific mood or instance. Most often occurring in the present tense, a haiku frequently depicts a moment by using pair of distinct images working in tandem.

    Haikus written by @daia.risa

  • “Mylliem” by Esther Syiem

    Village of my ancestors

    secure in your remoteness

    where your men stoke their forges

    under makeshift shelters;

    shacks of molten fire that

    spark with the energy of limbs that

    strike…hit…strike..

    in an echoing canvas of sound and silence

    that will always lead me back to my distant beginnings.

    Mylliem of my ancestors

    your smithies have endured

    the treacheries of wind and rain

    your flames lick

    the shimmering cold, as they

    condense in vapours of liquid heat.

    You are the mirage,

    locked in metal.

    Must I turn to you again?

    as in your men and in your women

    I find an answering call

    in the aroma of smoked earth in them

    and in the unbeaten slant of a life

    that writes itself back into my present.

    -Esther Syiem

    Mylliem is a hamlet in East Khasi Hills, famous for its iron smelting works.

    "Mylliem" is an original Khasi poem by Dr. Esther Syiem @meiithei which appears in the collection entitled Oral Scriptings (Writers Workshop, Kolkata, 2005).

    If you are from Mylliem or have lived there, you will find that the poem is an evocative mix of the sounds and images from the village of Mylliem which we now don't hear anymore. Gone are the days when the strikes of the blacksmiths were a reassuring pace of the passing of life. But we are never rid of our memories. These sounds and images return to fill our dreams and our stories. ✍️✍️🗣️🗣️

    Dr. Esther Syiem is a professor in the Department of English, North-Eastern Hill University.

  • Jingim Por Tlang da i Mebatei L. Khongsit

    Jingim por tlang

    Jingkjam te long ba lah palat,

    Sngew ngih hi thui wat bin sait kjat,

    Ynñioh jaket ba rben samup,

    Lynjur lah hi da nge jaiñkup.

    Khongdong kum thred taïar JCB,

    Lait ksai lut khait muja bapli,

    Khohwah kum sleit tyrkhong khaw khaw,

    Da thoh abkd ruh paw.

    Syang ding na khmat daitthah sha dien,

    Syang ding na dien daitthah sha khmat,

    Keiñnoh lah bha ba ai da u keiñ,

    Tang ha jingthih hi beit jingkheiñ.

    Tang kynjat shai b'la wan ka step,

    Ka thma ba jur bin khyllie nep,

    Jingkhi la kat khaw shibyrni,

    Nga jop haduh bin da dei sngi.

    "Jingim Por Tlang" is an original Khasi poem written by @mebatei_l_khongsti 🥶🥶
    Khublei Shibun ba phah phi ïa nge ne nge jingthoh biria jong phi 😂😂 Nang sngew bang shuh ba thoh phi da ka ktien Laitlyngkot. Shisha sa tang nge jaiñkup hi bin syaid ka met ka phad! 🔥💯

    @mebatei_l_khongsti i ong: "Nga thoh ha ka dur ba biria da ka jingshem lajong bad nga ngeit ba baroh baroh hi ngi ïa shem kumne ha ka por tlang, khamtam kito kiba im sha ki shnong ba jur u thah kum sha shnong jong nga."

    Translation: "I wrote this poem in a funny way based on my own experience and I know most of us also experience the same things during the winter, especially those of us who stay in places where there is heavy frost like in my village."