Wild Pigeon - by Nurmuhemmet
Yasin.Part 2.
A
lyrical voice awakens me, dredges me up from the deep,
sweet sleep that belongs only to the very young and to
those exhausted beyond measure. A group of pigeons
flocks toward me—I hear their voices alongside their
beating wings, and I am shocked to see that they look
exactly like me. At first they resemble the pigeons in
my dream, but when I look closely I can see that they
are different.
image:RFA
First, though, I must find out where I can fill my
empty stomach. I ask these pigeons where there is a
safe place one can find food. They change the
direction suddenly, flying away from the
dwelling-places. I follow them.
An empty
belly
"Where are you going?" I ask a pigeon at the back
of the group.
"To the mill house."
"What will you do there?"
"Look for pigeon food"
"Are you looking for something to eat?"
His eyes are icy as he asks me, "So you are a wild
pigeon?"
"Originally are you a wild pigeon?"
"Yes, I am from the strawberry shoal."
The
pigeon-catchers
I follow them to the mill house where I see large
store of wheat covered with straw. The flavor is
really sweet, and I think this storehouse looks good—without
any trace of humans. The other pigeons look peaceful
and contented. I also start to trust this peaceful
environment, take courage, and fill my belly.
This is nothing like what my mother described of
the outside world. I reach out trustingly for the
wheat in front of me. Suddenly, a fierce power is
choking my neck. I try to move away, as fast as an
arrow shot from a bow, but find I am choking, and an
unknown power is pulling me back, just as fast. I try
to hide but I cannot—I am pulled down, flying,
circling, without direction.
All the other pigeons scatter upward, and I fear I
may crash to the ground as in my dream. I fear I am
falling into human hands, but no humans are near. Time
passes, but I have no idea how many hours elapse.
Suddenly, two humans appear, and I think I have been
caught—then the chokehold on my neck relaxes.
Suddenly, a fierce power is choking my neck. I
try to move away, as fast as an arrow shot from a
bow, but find I am choking, and an unknown power
is pulling me back, just as fast. I try to hide
but I cannot—I am pulled down, flying, circling,
without direction.
"This is a wild pigeon," a younger-looking human
says.
"Hold him firmly—tie up his wings so he won’t fly
away," says the other. Together they bind my wings,
grasp my neck, and stare into my eyes.
"Hey, this is a great species—it’s really good luck,"
the elder human says, turning me over and over in his
hands for a closer look.
'Set him
free'
"This wild pigeon is already useless—set him free,"
says the elder. "Set him free. He has already bitten
off his tongue. When you catch this kind of pigeon,
you have no choice but to set him free. Usually it’s
only the leader of the flock who will do this."
"At least let us keep him for eggs," the younger
human protests.
"This kind of pigeon—he won’t eat or drink if
we keep him. He will resist and refuse until death."
"This kind of pigeon—he won’t eat or drink if we
keep him. He will resist and refuse until death."
The younger human is adamant. "We can’t just let
him go!"
"All right then, it’s your choice. You’ll see that
I am telling the truth. I once caught such a pigeon
and insisted on keeping it—but he lived only a week,"
says the elder.
The ordeal
of the cage
"I will certainly tame it," the younger human
replies confidently."
You will never tame me, I think. I will find a way
home. I am ashamed of myself for failing to take my
mother’s words to heart and then falling into a trap
laid by humans. I draw all of my remaining strength
and feel for a moment that I might fly free. Instead,
I crash to the ground.
"Dirty bastard!" the younger human cries. "At least
I bound up one wing—I suppose that kept him from
flying free."
He packs me into a bag, apparently planning to take
me with him somewhere. Perhaps he aims to bind both
wings and put me in a cage. I see several pigeons
behind iron bars, all gathered at one corner.
I see several pigeons behind iron bars, all
gathered at one corner.
"You must have been very hungry indeed, or you
wouldn’t have fallen into my trap," says the younger
human, as he places food and water in one corner of
the iron cage. The instant he sets the food down,
pigeons flock at the corner of cage, frantically
rushing toward it. At this moment, anger burns through
me and I wonder if crashing into the bars would
deliver a fatal blow to my head and end this horror.
But my wing remains bound—and I am immobilized. I
raise my head slightly toward the sun, thinking that
in less than a day I have fallen into a trap set by
humans. If my mother could see me now, what would she
think? I lower myself to the floor.
Neither
eating, nor being eaten
In my dream, I see my mother against a deep blue
sky, calling to me. My father appears, tall and
stately, and I feel proud of him. They call out to me
again and I fly toward them—but they retreat. Again I
fly toward my parents and again they retreat. I stop
flying, and they stop as well. I am thirsty and call
out, "Mother, water!"
A human voice shakes me back to consciousness. ""This
pigeon is truly stubborn," the voice says. "He has
been here five days and eaten nothing." It is the
younger of the two humans who first caught me.
"Didn’t I tell you that feeding him would be
useless?" his elder replies crossly.
Just let him go. To watch a pigeon such as this
die slowly is too pitiful.
"But if he continues to fast, he will die. Wouldn’t
it be better if I just cooked him now for broth for my
child?"
The elder is derisive. "You’d get nothing much from
him now and you’d probably fall ill. Just let him go.
To watch a pigeon such as this die slowly is too
pitiful"
"Setting him free does us no good," the younger man
replies.
'Nothing
good will come of this'
"Nothing good will come of this in any event."
"We should have made a soup of him immediately,"
the younger man says. As he tries to unbind my wings
and place me on the cage floor, I summon all the
strength I have left, thinking I might fly up to the
sky. But the wire is too strong, and I cannot.
I want to hurtle toward the cage door and escape,
but I cannot. This cage is supremely clever in its
cruelty, I think, in allowing anyone caught inside
ample view of the freedoms denied to him—with no hope
of regaining them.
This cage is supremely clever in its cruelty, I
think, in allowing anyone caught inside ample view
of the freedoms denied to him—with no hope of
regaining them.
The air inside and outside this cage are identical,
I think, but the life possible on my side of these
iron bars might just as well belong to a different
universe. Whoever designed such a device was truly an
iron fist with the blackest of hearts—determined to
immobilize small creatures such as me even though I
can bring them no conceivable benefit. By caging my
body, they hope to enslave my soul, I think. I want to
end my life but I cannot, and this is worst of all. "Heartless
humans who killed my freedom," I want to cry out, "either
set me free or let me die!"
A familiar smell comes to me, and then I see my
mother—her eyes gleaming, anxious, noting in turn my
loosened feathers, my broken mouth, my pathetic,
twisted wings.
The soul's
release
"Forgive me, mother," I start to say. "I wasn’t
equal to the trust you placed in me. I am not fit to
be your son." I lower my head, like a condemned
criminal in the dock. Why couldn’t I have died before
she arrived here?
"You did everything in your power," she replies. "Now
you must end this."
"But mama, I cannot," I tell her. "I am a prisoner—without
energy, without strength. Much as I would like to die,
I cannot."
"That is clear," she tells me. "And so I have come
to bring you freedom."
"I no longer deserve freedom," I say. "I am no
longer worthy of being your child."
"Then I shall tell you again—I have brought you
freedom. You are still my brave child—you must not be
forced to live like a slave but must be allowed to die
bravely, with dignity," she says, pushing a bit of
food toward me.
A high price
for freedom
"This strawberry is the poisonous variety—eat it,
and it will set you free. Restore the honor of our
flock. And remember always that true freedom comes
only at a high price. Here, move your mouth closer to
me."
I gaze at my mother for the last time. She seems
peaceful, and brave. I stretch my damaged mouth out
toward her. My beak, my only remaining weapon—an enemy
to the humans, it protected and fed me, and then led
me into the humans’ trap. It is broken now, shattered
by my failed collision with the iron bars.
Finally, I can die freely. I feel as if my soul
is on fire—soaring and free.
The poisons from the strawberry flow through me
like the sound of freedom itself, along with gratitude
that now, now, finally, I can die freely. I feel as if
my soul is on fire—soaring and free.
I see everything clearly now—the sky is still such
a deep blue and the world remains so beautiful, and
everything is so quiet and still. A group of pigeons
gathers at the edge of cage around me, watching me,
puzzled and surprised.
Maralbeshi County
March 24, 2004
Translated by Dr. Dolkun Kamberi, RFA Uyghur
service director. Edited by Sarah Jackson-Han.
Produced for the Web in English by Luisetta Mudie.
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