For the Tourist at Lal Qila, Delhi
After Agha Shahid Ali *
The tourist smiles - forced, frozen in photographs. Like a trespasser invited to tea, the tourist holds babies like porcelain.
The tourist speaks - his speech jagged like speed bumps on Delhi roads. He stumbles on syllables that linger like the aftertaste of curry leaves.
In my city, we wreath white skin in marigold halos, welcome foreign feet into homes like a season-less monsoon.
Fortresses fold like doormats. Revolutions crumble to dust that add to Delhi’s pollution. Face masks appear on familiar faces.
The tourist bargains on fixed prices and stronger currency devalues artistry, amputates hands of weavers while tossing loose change.
The tourist says, “Na, Nahi chahiye” and just like that there is a lineage wiped away like Rangoli the day after Diwali.
The tourist leaves, marigold petals wither under his feet. He does not look back.
* Agha Shahid Ali - The Dacca Gauzes