Messiahs of the Broken Birds

“They called them messiahs of the broken birds—healers who could mend any wounded soul except their own.” A deeply touching poem about the unsung heroes who dedicate their lives to healing others—the counselors, caregivers, and compassionate souls who mend broken spirits only to face the inevitable loneliness when those they’ve helped move on.


Some said they came down from the grey hills,

with kind and smiling eyes and no other skills

Others called them children of the silent lake,

with a goodness so genuine and not at all fake


They nursed the ugly wounds and gaping holes,

their whispers, brought back to life, dead souls

Maybe there was old magic, lining their words,

they were truly the messiahs of the broken birds


They were no shamans, no charm but simple love,

broken themselves, more than a wounded dove

They shared with us only one common bond,

they cared for us with love and even beyond


No other mantra, hope was their one message,

optimism, the only ticket, to secure the passage

Life, as they saw, was unending ups and downs,

kindness, the only way to tread the grounds


They were prophets indeed, but prophets of loss,

their heart were all soft, covered in green moss

Their legacy was loneliness, night and day,

for in the end, their birds always flew away

The Wizard of Hope

There was a prospect once, glittering like a gem;

a hazy perception, even a possibility of ‘them’

Hope and light were easy to be found;

for they had to just wait to be crowned

The birthplace of sun and its golden orb;

a miracle making two hearts throb


Now there is just ‘him’ and there is just ‘her’;

existing in orphan moments, so many they were

Hope is a must, but all its predictions so grim;

maybe some hope for ‘her’ and some hope for ‘him’

For they need to live beyond each other;

following their dreams, one after another


That is his quest which kills his soul;

searching for a little hope for her, in a black hole

For her, he can create hope, out of thin air;

as love makes him a wizard, capable and rare

But for himself, there is no hope to be found;

for his wand is useless, its fate has been bound


This is him, a wizard conjuring hope;

an exhausted soul, slipping down a never-ending slope

That is her, climbing up the stairs;

towards the stars, without any cares

May she reach the stars and may she find the light;

and may he conjure hope and be her dark knight

شہر کا آخری خواب فروش

‘چاچا جی؟’ میں نے کھنکار کر پوچھا. ‘آپ چپ کیوں ہوگئے؟’

.کہتے ہیں……….’ انہوں نے بدستور گردن جھکائے کہا’

‘جب دور کسی گھنے جنگل کے بیچوں بیچ، کوئی بوڑھا درخت ٹوٹ کر گرتا ہے تو کوئی آواز نہیں گونجتی’

‘کوئی آواز نہیں گونجتی؟’ میں نے حیرانگی سے پوچھا. ‘یہ کیسے ہوسکتا ہے؟’

.جب کوئی آواز سننے والا یا پرواہ کرنے والا نا ہو تو آوازیں نہیں گونجتی.’ انہوں نے میری آنکھوں میں جھانک کر جواب دیا’

.میں ہوں نا چاچا جی!’ میں نے محبت سے ان کے جھریوں بھرے کمزور ہاتھ پر اپنا ہاتھ رکھتے ہوئے کہا’

‘میں ہوں نا سننے اور پرواہ کرنے والا’


Read more: شہر کا آخری خواب فروش

وہ سردیوں کی ایک دھندلکی سپہر تھی اور میں اپنا کیمرہ کندھے پر لٹکائے اندرون شہر کی گنجان آباد گلیوں میں چکر لگا رہا تھا. بہت سے خوبصورت چہرے بھی نظر آئے؛ بہت حسین نقش و نگار والے دروازوں پر بھی نظر پڑی؛ کچھ مسکراہٹوں نے دل موہ لینے کی کوشش بھی کی؛ اور کچھ آنسوؤں نے قدم بھی تھامے. لیکن پتہ نہیں کیا بات تھی کہ میں اپنے کیمرے کا بٹن نہیں دبا سکا. دل پر عجیب اداسی چھائی ہوئی تھی

پھر موچی گیٹ کی بغل میں ایک نسبتاً تاریک اور تنگ سی گلی سے گزرتے ہوئے میری نظر اس بوڑھے کھلونا فروش پر پڑی. وہ ایک بند دروازے سے ٹیک لگائے نجانے کس گہری سوچ میں گم تھا

جس چیز نے مجھے زیادہ متوجوہ کیا وہ تھا اس بوڑھے کھلونا فروش کے پاس ہی دیوار سے ٹکا بانس سے بنا اسٹینڈ. ایک مرکزی عمودی بانس سے جڑے لکڑی کی کئ چھوٹی بڑی پھٹیاں تھیں جن سے پلاسٹک کے چھوٹے چھوٹے کھلونے لٹک رہے تھے

ایسے کھلونا فروش میں نے اپنے بچپن میں ہی دیکھے تھے. چھٹی والے دن اور خاص طور پر عید والے دنوں میں چکر لگاتے تھے. ان میں سے چاچا خیرو مجھے خوب یاد ہے جو مجھے پیار سے بیجو بابرا کہا کرتا تھا

.یہ تم ہر وقت کیا گنگناتے رہتے ہو کاکے؟’ ایک دن چاچا خیرو نے مجھ سے پوچھ ہی لیا’

مجھے دراصل بچپن ہی سے اپنے ہم عصروں سے مختلف نظر آنے کا شوق تھا. لہٰذا ان دنوں میں چھ سات سال کا ہونے کے باوجود کلاسیکی موسیقی میں دلچسپی لے رہا تھا

.جی راگ درگا چاچا جی.’ میں نے بے ساختہ جواب دیا تو وہ ایک دم ہنس پڑا’

‘راگ درگا؟ تم بچے ہو کہ بیجو بابرا؟’

اس دن سے میرا نام ہی چاچا خیرو نے بیجو بابرا رکھ دیا اور میں اس کا مستقل گاہک بن گیا. رنگ برنگی چیزیں ہوتی تھیں اس کے پاس. پلاسٹک کے باجے اور بانس کی پیپنیاں؛ ہلکی سی باریک باریک پہیوں والی چھوٹی چھوٹی گاڑیاں؛ سستی گڑیاں؛ پلاسٹک کے خوفناک ماسک؛ اور سفید سوتی ٹوپیاں جن کے ساتھ مصنوعی سفید داڑھی مونچھیں جڑی ہوتی تھیں. اب چاچا خیرو جیسے لوگ ڈھونڈنے سے بھی نظر نہیں آتے


میں ان کے پاس جا کر بیٹھ گیا

.چاچا جی؟’ میں نے ہلکے سے ان کو مخاطب کیا’

‘ہاں……کون؟’ انہوں نے آنکھیں کھول کر حیرانگی سے میری طرف دیکھا اور پھر مسکرا دیئے. ‘کہو بیٹے کیا چاہئے؟’

‘چاہئے تو کچھ نہیں….’ میں نے سر کھجاتے جواب دیا. ‘بس آپ پر نظر پڑی تو آپ سے بات کرنے کا دل کیا’

‘ضرور کرو بات بیٹے’

‘آپ کون ہیں چاچا جی؟’

.میں؟’ انہوں نے اپنے سینے کی طرف مسکرا کر انگلی سے اشارہ کیا’

‘میں ہوں اس شہر کا آخری خواب فروش’

.خواب فروش؟ آخری خواب فروش؟’ میں نے چونک کر پوچھا’

ہاں کھلونے خواب ہی تو ہوتے ہیں…چھوٹے چھوٹے معصوم اور رنگین خواب. میں یہ خواب بڑی محنت سے بنتا تھا اور پھر انہیں چاہنے والوں کے حوالے کر دیتا تھا

ان کی آنکھوں میں ایک عجیب سی یاسیت اتر آئ

.اب نا خواب دیکھنے والے رہے اور نا ان کھلونوں کو چاہنے والے.’ انہوں نے بےبسی سے ہاتھ ملتے ہوئے کہا’

‘جب خواب دیکھنے والے خواب ہی نا دیکھنا چاہیں، خوابوں میں یقین ہی نا رکھنا چاہیں تو ان کے رنگ بے معںی ہو جاتے ہیں’

.لیکن خواب تو ہمیشہ اہم ہی رہتے ہیں.’ میں نے حیرت سے پوچھا’

.یقین خواب کی روح ہوتی ہے بیٹے.’ چاچا جی نے میرے کندھے پر ہاتھ رکھ کر کہا’

‘یقین چلا جائے تو خوابوں کی کوئی اہمیت باقی نہیں رہتی’


ہم دونوں کچھ دیر خاموش بیٹھے رہے. وہ گلی بڑی عجیب تھی. جب سے میں آ کر وہاں بیٹھا تھا ویران پڑی تھی. دھوپ کا گزر غالباً بالکل ہی نہیں ہوتا تھا وہاں. اسلئے عجیب سبزی مائل پیلا سا رنگ تھا ماحول کا جیسے میں کسی پرانی تصویر کے اندر زندہ تھا اور سانس لے رہا تھا. پھر گلی کے بیچوں بیچ ایک نالی ضرور بہ رہی تھی لیکن بدبو کا دور دور تک کوئی شائبہ تک نہیں تھا. بلکہ میرے نتھنوں میں تو لکڑی کے فرنیچر کی، پنسلوں کی اور مہنگے ربڑوں کی خوشبو مہک رہی تھی. یوں لگتا تھا کہ میں پھر سے اپنے بچھڑے بچپن کے کسی ایک ثانیے میں سانس لے رہا تھا. رنگ بھی وہ ہی تھے اور خوشبویئں بھی وہ ہی، بس ماحول مختلف تھا


.یہ جادو کی چھڑی یاد ہے تمھیں؟’ چاچا جی نے ایک پلاسٹک کی چھڑی میری طرف بڑھاتے ہوئے پوچھا’

.نہیں.’ میں نے چھڑی دیکھ کر نفی میں سر ہلایا’

وہ سرخ رنگ کے پلاسٹک سے بنی تقریباً ایک فٹ لمبی چھڑی تھی جس کے ایک کونے پر چاندی رنگ کے پترے سے بنا پانچ کونوں والا ستارہ لگا ہوا تھا

.یاد کرو بیجو بابرا!’ چاچا جی نے مسکراتے ہوئے کہا’

‘جب تم چھوٹے تھے تو تمھیں یقین تھا کہ چھڑی کو اپنے ہاتھ میں پکڑ کر ہلانے سے تم کچھ بھی کر سکتے ہو’

.بیجو بابرا….؟’ میں بری طرح سے چونک گیا’

.گھبراؤ نہیں…’ بوڑھے خواب فروش نے میرا ہاتھ شفقت سے تھپتھپایا’

ہم خواب فروشوں کا اپنا قبیلہ ہے اور اس قبیلے کی یادیں اور خواب مشترک ہوتے ہیں. خیردین اور میں، ہم دونوں اسی قبیلے سے تعلق رکھتے ہیں

‘ہاں شاید …..’ میں نے سر جھٹکتے ہوئے کہا. ‘اس وقت مجھے یقین تھا کہ یہ جادو کی چھڑی ہے’

لیکن اب اس خواب میں تمھیں یقین نہیں ہے نا. لہٰذا اب نا خواب بننے کی ضرورت رہی نا بیچنے کی. اب مجھے چلے ہی جانا چاہئے

چاچا جی نے رندھی ہوئی آواز میں کہا تو میں بےچین ہوگیا

.نہیں چاچا جی، میں اب بھی خواب دیکھتا ہوں.’ میں نے ان کا ہاتھ پکڑتے ہوئے کہا’

مجھے اب بھی اپنے خوابوں میں یقین ہے. اور میرے خوابوں کی ابتداء انہی کھلونوں سے تو ہوئی تھی. اگر آپ نے خواب فروشی چھوڑ دی تو میری تو خوابوں کی اساس ہی ختم ہوجائے گی

مگر چاچا جی کا ہاتھ میری مٹھی سے ریت کی طرح بہ گیا. میں نے آنسو پونچھتے ہوئے ان کی طرف دیکھا مگر وہاں کوئی نہیں تھا

میں گھبرا کر اٹھ کھڑا ہوا. سامنے دو برقعہ پوش عورتیں کھڑی میری ہی طرف سہم کر دیکھ رہی تھیں. میں شرمندہ ہوا اور اپنے تخیّل کو کوستا کیمرہ اٹھانے کیلئے جھکا اور پھر ٹھٹھک کر رک گیا. وہاں جہاں تھوڑی دیر پہلے شہر کا آخری خواب فروش بیٹھا تھا، وہیں اسی جگہ، سرخ پلاسٹک کی جادو کی چھڑی پڑی میرا منہ چڑا رہی تھی

#Urdu #story #fiction #dream #imagination #toys #oldcity #Lahore #street #nostalgia #memories #past #magic

Tales of the Ancient Turtle – Prophets of Sadness

‘If strangers confess their fears to you, if friends share their deepest sorrows, the ancient Turtle would say you’re not cursed with sadness - you’re chosen for it.’

A reflective narrative about a writer who specializes in sadness, reuniting with his childhood friend, the ancient Turtle, who reveals a profound truth: some souls are chosen to be “Prophets of Sadness” - those gifted with the ability to understand and carry others’ burdens. Through the Turtle’s wisdom, the protagonist learns that God kissed certain souls to give them the power to see beyond happiness’s seductive blindness and witness the pain that others overlook.

__________________________________________________________

‘Do you know the problem with your writing?’ My filmmaker friend asked me.

He and I are old friends. He knows me well. I write, and sometimes he is kind enough to give life to my words.

‘Please enlighten me.’ I said, while smiling at him.

‘The world needs to be a happier place.’ His voice resonated with exasperation, ‘The world needs to hear happy words. People need to forget the dark side. They need a light at the end of their personal tunnels. But you, my friend, write only of heartbreak and sadness.’

‘Yeah! I guess you are right.’ I nodded. ‘But this is what I am. I can write of happiness and joy and laughter. But most of the time, I don’t want to.’

__________________________________________________________

Yeah, you have guessed right. I am a writer. And yes, as my well-meaning friend mentioned, I mostly write about sadness and tragedies. In fact, I write when sadness resonates inside me and my eyes are filled with tears. Each tear gives birth to a sentence. Sometimes, the stories are about my own life. But mostly these are just figments of my imagination.

Writing enables me to wear the skin of my characters. I live the life they live, and I breathe the air they breathe. Their sorrows vibrate in my soul, and their tears cloud my eyes.

I see the smiling face of an old and poor woman. I am not fascinated by her smile. Instead, I walk along the deep lines creasing her skin. I peer into the cloudy pools of her eyes. I feel the roughness of her hands. I taste the bitterness of her broken heart, and I feel the tiredness of her exhausted soul.

I see a child playing in the park. I am not charmed by his excitement and joy. Instead, I see the burdensome life ahead of him. I feel the sting of thorns lining his path to adulthood, and I see the grey clouds of worry circling his head. I hear the thunder of disappointments, still distant and far away, and I fear for his sanity.

I see a couple romancing in the rain. I notice the magic of love, but I choose to ignore it. Instead, I see the fading colors of passion. I taste the sourness that comes with possessiveness. I sense the growing distance between the souls, and I hear the tinkling of breaking hearts.

__________________________________________________________

‘Well, I guess my friend is right. Maybe the world does need to be happy. Maybe it does want to live in the light and deny the existence of darkness.’ I thought and walked into the open arms of the tired evening. The dipping sun is painting everything a pale-yellow shade of gold.

I looked around. Autumn was gently receding, making way for the blissful winters. I heard the crunch of dry brown leaves under my feet. And I felt the rustling of a dry breeze amongst the leafless branches of the old Banyan tree.

‘Hello? Who goes there?’ An old, raspy, and deep voice called out of the rose bushes.

‘Who is there?’ I asked and was surprised as the bushes were too small to hide anyone.

‘My! My! If it isn’t my old friend?’ The voice was warm and affectionate this time. ‘How have you been, son?’

I peered closely and there he was, my childhood friend, the ancient Turtle. For those of you not familiar with him, I had been friends with an ancient Turtle since I was very young, probably four or five. He lived in our backyard and had always acted as my mentor and an intimate friend.

__________________________________________________________

‘Hey! You are still alive?’ I was amazed. I never knew turtles could live this long. He was at least a few hundred years old when I last met him. And I was just a four-year-old kid back then.

‘Yes, still alive and apparently in quite good shape.’ He winked at me with a warm smile and asked, ‘What about you, son? How have you been?’

‘I am fine. Just a little grownup, I guess.’ I answered.

‘Well, being grown-up doesn’t matter as long as you keep on believing in talking turtles. Eh?’ He cocked his gnarled head and inspected me in detail, ‘Fine, you say? You don’t look so good to me.’

‘I am just a bit sad, I guess.’ I smiled at him.

‘Oh! But, you will always be a bit sad.’ The Turtle chuckled softly and said, ‘You were sad when you were a child. You are sad now, and you will always be sad.’

‘Why do you say that?’ He always had a knack for saying the most shocking of things in the simplest of manners.

‘Please scratch my back a little. I have an itch that refuses to leave me in peace.’ Instead of answering my question, he requested me.

I just laughed, bent down, and started scratching his mottled grey-green back with a small twig.

‘Are you hungry? Can I bring you something? A carrot perhaps?’ I offered.

‘Nope. I have had my fill. The brown leaves tasted just fine this afternoon.’ He burped a little to confirm the fullness of his stomach.

__________________________________________________________

Several minutes passed without either him or me saying anything. I just kept on scratching his back, while he closed his eyes in contentment. I looked at him closely. There was no change. He looked the same and smelt the same - the pleasant smell of dried up moss and ancient magic.

‘Why did you say that I have always been, and will always be sad?’ I asked him when he reopened his eyes.

‘Hmm! You see, son, when God created the souls, He first created a big shimmering blob of conscience.’ He said while shifting a little to catch the last rays of the dying sun. ‘Then He took that blob into His old, wise hands, and molded souls out of it. He sat back and took pleasure in what He had created. But something was wrong somewhere. God could feel it.’

‘Did He make a mistake?’ I asked the Turtle, unbelievingly.

‘No, not a mistake.’ The Turtle shook his wise head, ‘Once you can guess something is missing from your work, it is not a mistake. It just means you want your work to be perfect. And God is the ultimate perfectionist.’

‘And why have you stopped scratching?’ He asked annoyingly.

‘I apologize. I got lost in your words.’ I started scratching his mottled back again with a sheepish smile.

__________________________________________________________

The sky had turned orange. There were a few stray clouds with purple edges. It was a beautiful evening - full of marvelous colors. The birds flew over my head - flying back to their hungry children and little warm nests. They looked down on us with amazement - a grown-up man and an ancient turtle - but had no time to stop and exchange gossip.

__________________________________________________________

‘So, what was I saying?’ I was brought back to reality by the Turtle’s question.

‘You were saying that God thought something was missing in the souls He had created.’ I reminded him.

‘Yes, something was indeed missing.’ The turtle agreed with me while relaxing his body in pleasure. Apparently, my scratching was doing wonders for his itch. ‘God knew what was missing. He picked up a handful of souls and kissed them softly. With that kiss, His creation was complete.’

‘Why? Why did that last kiss matter?’ I said while looking at the Turtle in confusion.

‘You see, son, God being the creator of all, knew very well that life would bring sadness to the souls.’ The Turtle explained, ‘In fact, as life brings more sadness than joy, God wanted at least a few souls to understand the essence of sadness. This handful of souls, God made them the Prophets of Sadness.’

‘So the last kiss was the kiss of understanding?’ I was beginning to grasp what the old Turtle really meant.

‘Yes! The last kiss brought understanding and also a special power - the power to lighten the burden of sorrow and the power that could heal.’ The Turtle confirmed with a proud smile. ‘Happiness is a drug, which keeps you human beings sedated and oblivious. Joys make you unmindful of the sufferings around you. But pain and suffering live on, feeding on your blissful oblivion. There must be a few souls capable of rejecting the drug of happiness. These few souls are the Prophets of Sadness.’

__________________________________________________________

‘So that is why some people come to me and confess their fears, and share their sadness?’ I asked the Turtle, while thinking of so many of my strange encounters.

I thought of the middle-aged friend of mine who held my hand and wept over a wasted life, and I thought of the old man who whispered of his fear of death in my ears.

I thought of a friend sharing his desperation for a love he was never going to find, and I thought of the woman who told me she was afraid nobody was ever going to love her.

I thought of the little girl who was sad because nobody liked to be her friend at school, and I thought of the little boy who was bitter about the bullies making fun of his short height.

I thought of all those familiar and vague faces, and I relived their pains, sorrows, and fears within a mere moment.

__________________________________________________________

‘I listened to them. I felt their pain. I shared the burden of their sorrows. And I felt threatened by their fears. But I never healed them.’ I said while looking at the Turtle through the misty curtain of my disappointed tears.

‘No, my son. This is where you are wrong.’ The Turtle patted my hand reassuringly. ‘A tree never talks to the people resting under its shade. But still, it provides them with something they need. The tree provides them a place to shed off their tiredness and a place to rest awhile.

‘I would like to think I am a shady tree. But I am really not.’ I knew myself and my shortcomings far better than the old Turtle.

‘No? Not yet?’ He asked with a naughty smile. ‘Okay, no issues.’

But then, seeing my long face, he took pity and said, ‘Remember, son, ego is a poison that stunts the growth of the mightiest of shady trees. Ego climbs up their massive trunks and wraps itself around the delicate branches. It sucks the life force and keeps on sucking it until the tree dies. You get rid of your ego, and you will reach your true destiny. You will become the Prophet of Sadness.’

__________________________________________________________

‘Baba! Baba! Where are you?’ We were interrupted by the voice of my young son.

I looked at my friend, and he was beginning to gradually fade away.

‘What are you doing here, sitting on your knees?’ My son asked, finding me kneeling beside the rose bushes.

‘Nothing, my love. Just chatting with an old friend.’ I stood up and held his tiny hand in mine.

‘Which old friend?’ He was surprised and looked here and there, but could not find anyone. The Turtle had long gone.

‘Don’t worry, he has already left.’ I smiled at him.

‘So tell me…had any troubles lately?’ I asked him as we started walking towards the house.

‘Why? What will you do with my troubles?’ He asked while looking at me strangely.

‘I will listen to your troubles and understand them. I will put them all in a small box and bury that box within my heart forever. Your troubles will trouble you no more.’ I said while drawing him close.

‘You know what, Baba?’ He smiled his peculiar smile, which was growing wider by the minute.

‘What?’ I asked while peering back into his mischievous, dark eyes.

‘You are becoming strange.’ He announced.

I stopped, looked back at the rose bushes, and took a deep breath. The Turtle had already left, but the air still smelled of moss and magic. ‘No, my love, I am not becoming strange. Rather, I am becoming a Prophet of Sadness.’

Songs of Innocence

307735_10150349639460834_934865487_n

When you are two, the world is a big fat rainbow circling your cot. Your pleasures are limited to a warm bottle of milk and your troubles hardly ever exceed a wet diaper or two. But when you are four that is when the magic truly starts.

Continue reading