Today, I met the son of a rag picker.
working at a landfill talks about a Biogas tomb,
but does not know that he sits on a methane bomb.
Talks about the suffering of animals, while he suffers from toxins,
redeems every moment of his life for indefinite sins.
Shoves through the rotten corpses and befriends the scavengers,
he wears a stained Spencer and soiled wayfarers.
His eyes are jaundiced, given the stench,
climbs the dirt, while his body starves but his hands are hench.
He looks curiously at my white glowing skin,
laughs at my soft palms throbbing on a dustbin.
He burns the crap, and high goes the flame,
snuffs out his little life, with this every day precarious game.
He bathes in sewer and eats near the crap,
he talks of the other day when he fell off the fill and his leg got snapped.
He is sliced at places and stabbed for stealing ***,
he earns his bread while others of his age mug a shot.
Authorities for his welfare complain about the aroma,
he worships this place as his life’s dogma.
Someday I wish may he smell the green grass,
wear a uniform and attend the chemistry class.
Prejudice he may, for the upcoming generations,
who spend a summer day carrying out these gnarly operations.
May fair go his skin and clean run his blood,
he is the saving grace, my new stench bud.