Punjab Today brings you this lament by Swarajbir, renowned playwright and poet. As is understandable, the death of the father of a brave daughter of India in such circumstances has left many a good hearts shaken.
Prof Mahavir Narwal, father of Pinjra Tod activist and JNU research scholar Natasha Narwal, died of Covid-19 on May 9, 2021, in a Rohtak hospital.
Natasha Narwal is currently in Tihar Jail. She is known for her vociferous fight for civil rights and an equitable world. Natasha’s brother, Aakash, is also Covid-19 positive currently.
Prof Narwal could not meet his daughter till the very end despite repeatedly knocking at the doors of the Indian judicial system.
Natasha was granted interim bail on Monday, May 10 with the Delhi High Court saying it was doing so since there was nobody else in the family to perform the cremation and last rites and that her father’s body is waiting in the hospital to be accepted.
Activists the world over had been demanding Natasha’s release ever since she was arrested in May last year on allegations that she was part of a premeditated conspiracy in the northeast Delhi riots in February that year.
She has been booked under the stringent Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, a legislation often invoked against innocent but vociferous activists.
Prof Narwal remained a figure of fortitude till the very end. “There is nothing to fear about being in jail,” he had said about Natasha’s wrongful incarceration.
Dear Kind Judge Sahib
— Swarajbir
Kind Judge Sahib
Mahavir Narwal is dead
Yes Judge Sahib
Natasha’s father
is no more in this world
Kind Judge Sahib
Day ago, this daughter
had come to your Court
She had not said
“Don’t prosecute me”
She had not said
“Declare me innocent”
Her lawyer had prayed
“Give her two moments
She is to see her father
She wants to talk to him a bit
He is sick.”
She was 13 years of age
When her mother died
Her father was her mother
A shade giving tree he was
You know Judge Sahib
You know it too well
That this girl
did not incite violence in Delhi
She is innocent
She wanted to break the cage of the Society
You put her in the cage of the State
You are too powerful Judge Sahib
You are munsif
You could have given her two moments
to see her father
Judge Sahib, you can keep her in prison for more days
You can hand over her a sentence of life imprisonment
Your black robes have all the powers Judge Sahib
You can do justice
What is written above is wrong
You can do everything Judge Sahib
But you couldn’t have granted her
Two moments to talk to her father
You couldn’t give her
those two moments Judge Sahib
because you don’t have that heart which could grant her
those two moments
You have power
You have justice
You had said
You will hear prayer on Monday
Judge Sahib, that Monday won’t come
That Monday
has disappeared from the Calendar
Judge Sahib
your whole life
You will be searching for that Monday.
(Translated from Punjabi)
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