Dr.Suryaraju Mattimalla

Dr.Suryaraju Mattimalla Poems

Fire starts to climb up, nearly touching the heavens.
The sound of crackling wood sounded like a death wail.
But what of the air that chokes and sighs?
When another body starts to turn to ashes and flies?
...

O valiant Derek, clad in blue's proud hue,
A steadfast guard where law and honor grew.
With resolute heart, you faced the urban fray,
A bulwark strong against the night's decay.
...

The Best Poem Of Dr.Suryaraju Mattimalla

Against The Madness Of Cremation

Fire starts to climb up, nearly touching the heavens.
The sound of crackling wood sounded like a death wail.
But what of the air that chokes and sighs?
When another body starts to turn to ashes and flies?

Smoke is present, and it is as black as only hopelessness is.
Possessing sorrow, yet polluting the weather.
Rivers that were once clear are now tainted.
There are memories of burnt ashes; there are memories of grief.

Would this be the way their memories can be honored?
Thus, feeding the flame, fueling dread?
By casting their ashes and polluting the streams,
Is it possible to actually transform sacred waters into the dreams of death?

It hears tradition and its lore, but does it ever look?
The forests cut down, the dying trees?
The breath of life, now heavy and gray
When have funeral pyres been burning day after day?

For sake of peace, we started burning the earth.
But what and to what? Other names, other people, and the future—what is worth it?
When the environment we live in, the air we breathe
Is turned into poison by the very rites that we contemplate and hold sacred?

Believe that people leave us to go to a better place,
But at the same time, let the living be happy?
Cornered both make a way for both to survive.
For in death that falls and in the coals that burn.
They are the constructs beneath which lies a truth we all must know.

Earth is not ours to burn and to betray.
To honor the dead, there must be a new way.
Let there be some cool-off period where passions cool down and flames die out.
And all the smoke clears.
Hear the dead and the living; let the earth be at rest.


Dr. Suryaraju Mattimalla
Author, Academic, Activist & Vegan

Refugee Poems: Life in Exile, Volume 1

Ode to the 'Boots on the Ground', In response to the global surge of Antisemitism. A poem.

Ode to the Naga National Council: 75th Naga Plebiscite Day,

The Seed of the Word, Opinions

O Naga Mother: A Cry Against Gaslighting

Agony of A Nagaland Girl: A Cry for Freedom

The Masks of Academia

Nagalim in the Court of John Rawls's "A Theory of Justice",

The Battle of Thuda: A Cry for Nagalim

I Am Nagalim

Untouchable Poems: Lived Experience with Hindu Religion, Ideology, and Society

Compatibility of the Death Penalty with the Purpose of Criminal Punishment in Ethiopia

Author's bio:

Dr. Suryaraju Mattimalla is an Indian asylum seeker from Germany. Dr. Mattimalla is a popular poet, human rights scholar, and vegan. He regularly publishes poems in American, Indian, and Israeli-based daily English newspapers and publication houses. He is the author of "Refugee Poems: Life in Exile, " Volume 1 (2025) , published by Wipf & Stock, USA, and "Untouchable Poems: Lived Experience with Hindu Religion, Ideology, and Society" (2024) , published by Wipf & Stock, USA, and the author of the globally acclaimed 'Compatibility of the Death Penalty with the Purpose of Criminal Punishment in Ethiopia' (2018) , published by The Age of Human Rights Journal. He studied short courses in history, heritage and memory & human rights and democratization at the Federal University of Bahia, Brazil, and the University of Sydney, Australia, in 2009 and 2010. He is living with his Ethiopian-Tigrayan wife, Selamawit Hailu Bezabih, and seven-year-old son, Saviour Suryaraju Mattimalla, in Regensburg, Germany, where his second son, Stanford Suryaraju Mattimalla, was killed at 37 weeks and 3 days of pregnancy by a neo-Nazi German gynecologist by forceful vaccination in 2023. His first baby was killed by a Hindu honor killing in India in 2010.

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