Dear Readers,
I hope you are all well and healthy.
This past fortnight, I've been a busy bee: participating in a poetry workshop, (more details in a later post) where one is expected to write a poem a day. Writing a poem is not an issue. It's the fact that as a poetry lover, I get stuck on the examples that are shared. I read and reread and then read the poem aloud and sometimes (as was the case on the day of e.e. Cummings, I got so sucked into the vortex of his words, that it took me two days to surface back up and realise I was lagging behind spectacularly! It didn't matter. The organisers are poets themselves. They understand our need to burrow deep every now and then.
As a means to dust off my stupor, I decided to watch a series on Netflix that came highly recommended by a friend. It's called: "How to become a Tyrant".
It is very well made. It's uncanny to watch history on screen while witnessing history repeat itself in real life. It's surreal.
Do watch it if you have the time or the inclination.
But, if you can't or won't. Then, I urge you to spend 6 minutes of your time to watch this gem from Iran. It says, with minimum production costs and time, everything that needs to be said. In my opinion, "2 =2 = 5" says it better than the Netflix series.
Personally and as a poet, this film also answers the question that often nags me (especially about political satires): "why write?" in the last 30 seconds.
In less than 10 seconds, the last shot says it-- LOUD and CLEAR:
The pen/pencil is mighty.
So, I reckon I will write for as long as I can.