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    AC Benus
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Poetry posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

The Walled Garden of Enchantment - Prologue. Author's Note

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Author’s Note

Siraj Aurangabadi was an early 18th century Sufi poet. As a lay clergyman in this branch of Islam, he explored the human-condition in relationship to an all-loving, all-forgiving God. In this, he followed the same writing traditions as Hafiz and Rumi before him. Siraj’s many ghazals praising the beauty and transformative power of same-sex love are still sung in India and Pakistan today. [i]

What follows is not a “translation” in the proper sense, as the Urdu original of Bustan-e-Khayal is inaccessible to me, and even when poets’ work in this language are obtainable, the broadness of the poetry – and references to Persian and Arabic predecessors – leaves non-speakers like me at a disadvantage. [ii]

That being said, I am still able to recapture the plot, the couplet formatting, the personal relationships, and the beauty of Siraj’s transcendental message about the meaning of earthy love. I have done this by using a detailed summary of the 1738 original. [iii]

Yet above all else, The Walled Garden of Enchantment is an exaltation of the love between men which can rise above adversity, such as contrived reasons concerning religious differences, with their ingrained senses of superiority, as well as other societal pressures, like those forcing young men to marry women as part of an expected sacrifice for the good of the family, no matter their orientation. In Aurangabadi’s work, this compromise is not allowed to happen; the male couples are accommodated – sans proselytization or conversion – and accepted in ways that let their unions stand independently and as equals to cross-sex marriages. In fact, they are celebrated as more important than ordinary, arranged male-female contractual obligations.

Any person who attempts to misrepresent Siraj, and his impressive oeuvre of ghazel lyrics and narrative poetry, as anything but Gay, is willfully trying to perpetrate a hoax. This poet belongs fully to LGBTI2S+ studies and its rich, historic and artistic culture.

And lastly, for those already familiar with the Bustan-e-Khayal, or its detailed summary, I must acknowledge adjusting the ending of the original in my version. But must I justify my “recapturing,” following an arc of development hinted at in The Walled Garden of Enchantment, but remaining unstated?

I feel I have carried the poem out to its logical conclusion, but freely accept that others – presumably those previously captured by the enchantment of Siraj’s narrative poetry – will have a bone to pick with me. So be it. [iv]

 

 

 


 

[1] For an introduction to the scope of Gay writers/poets working in various metaphysical schools of thought throughout time, but where each author praised the nobility of same-sex love as superior to cross-sex sexual relations, see The Essential Gay Mystics [Andrew Harvey, Editor] (Edison, New Jersey, 1997)

https://archive.org/details/essentialgaymyst0000unse

[2] The title of Siraj’s poem makes for an excellent case study. Although Bustan-e-Khayal is a mere three words in length, the term “garden” fails to properly encase the Persian concept of one, which in Farsi is بوستان [bustan], or a walled citadel enclosing a green oasis for reflection and contemplation – like the gardens of the Taj Mahal. And indeed, this brings with it shades of another Persian term for a walled garden: فردوس [firdous, which shares the same root as the English term “paradise”]. Additionally, beginning in the 19th century, bustan was also applied to open-air parks, without walls, in city centers. There had been no such things as "public parks” before this date in time.

Khayal is altogether a more difficult term to parse. As a noun, it carries strong metaphysical meanings of the orphic, revelatory, divination, the hidden, the esoteric, the mystical; plus, ecstasy, quietism, holiness, and the enchanting. In more mundane contexts, khayal can be used to speak of a parable, fairytales, or storytelling – i.e., a fiction, but one with the built-in intent to teach a moral lesson.

[3] “Siraj Aurangabadi: The Garden of Delusion [sic] (Urdu)” by Saleem Kidwai in Same-Sex Love in India: Readings from Literature and History [Ruth Vanita / Saleem Kidwai, Editors] (Kundli, India, 2020), ps. 169-172. Kidwai tells us the original poem consists of 1,162 couplets.

[4] The website Rekhta.org hosts several online editions of Siraj Aurangabadi’s work, all of which contain Bustan-e-Khayal

https://www.rekhta.org/authors/siraj-aurangabadi/ebooks/

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Copyright © 2024 AC Benus; All Rights Reserved.
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Poetry posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
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