Atomic children: on making transportables from grief


Clockwise: Onin, H. Todd Thomas, Sampada Joshi, Tarun Chakraborty, Niscal Parthasarathy, Ishaan Kaipur, Paraisha Dutta, Shruti Sharma, Henry Al Muthanna, Subhash S. , Photo Credit: Special Arrangement
Recently, a book shop in Indiranagar, Bangalore, was full of thoughts, grief, life and conflicts, not from silent prayers in Ata Galata, which was made out of suspicious options of a nation that triggers a million deaths and left many people.
The event, inheriting shadow: Children of the Atom, was organized by non-handicapped Poets Collectorate (NPC), a poet community in the city. The show was based on the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki of Japan during World War II in 1945.
The show presented nine stories from nine approaches, which were described through poems woven in emotions and words playing mixtures. From Albert Einstein and bombs, from the child victims, each perspective presented the audience with food for consideration.

Somya Tiwari as Openhaimer. , Photo Credit: Special Arrangement
Tarun Chakraborty, curator of the incident, said, “There are films and books that describe the tragedy, but they are almost always a perspective of a person, which is partial in a way.” “How is it appropriate that only the version of the hero is presented? There are many other people who are probably not clear or outgoing as a hero, whose attitude is never heard. So we have built this piece around those who we believe that we were in the shadow in the whole history.”
Tarun said that the show was to create an approach, where every person of stories gets equal time, place and importance.
The two-and-a-half-hour show was presented in a story-led format, with a presenter who described the events and introduced poets. The poems were designed with intelligence, satire and severity and were welcomed by the audience by deep ah, long silence and short cheers.
“I became an essential summer in the heart of the Cold War. On August, a bright Monday, I painted the sky over Hiroshima in the Shades of Death. Nobody had ever seen before. In the land of Rising Sun, I became the longest shade. I am not the answer to the question that you count the bodies in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but never presented their names because the history,” Bomb,
Niscal Parthasarathy Military complex As follows, “No matter what the conspiracy is, we have to agree that we are all in this magic show, where powerful and elite or organizers and media are the magician who distracts you from war and arms race in the right hand, while they steal their money from their pockets.”

Niscal Parthasarathy in the form of San-Industrial Complex. , Photo Credit: Special Arrangement
“I think I belong to this place because I belong to this place. You wear black clothes and keep your mouth shut here for two minutes, I am not going to help me here. I want to shout at anyone or anyone. I want this fire to go inside me,” Sampra Joshi, who performed the child’s perspective.
“Or we are just born in violence, are lucky to trade in pain?” Tarun said in his closing work of the show, “Still impossible things need poems to win an important battle.”
Each stories were creative and attractive; The poets intensified their pencils not to leave their words in the dialect to weave in perfection, so that there is no tear or sorrow.

H. As Todd Thomas Hygenberg. , Photo Credit: Special Arrangement
Although the show introduced listeners in a new perspective, there is still a question, “Is there another way to end war?”
The show’s presenter included Tarun Chakraborty as Albert Einstein; H. As Todd Thomas Hygenberg; Somya Tiwari as Openhaimer; President Harry S. Shruti Sharma as Truman; Henry Muthna as Colonel Paul Tibbets Junior; Sadhana Subramanian as Little Boy (Bomb); Subhash S as a Japanese citizen; Ishaan Kaipur as a doctor in a burn ward; Estate Joshi as a perverted child; Parsha Dutta as the Emperor of Japan, and Sainchal Parthasarathy as military complex. Was the narrator of the entire show.
Published – March 20, 2025 07:16 pm IST
(Tagstotransite) Theater (T) Poetry shows in Bangalore (T) Hiroshima and Nagasaki Bombing (T) Bangalore Events (T) Non -coalition poets Collective (T) Theater Events in Bangalore
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