TaufiqRafat (1927-1998) was an English language Pakistani poet born in Sialkot, India in 1927. Educated in Dehra Dun, Aligarh and Lahore, Rafat and his family returned to Sialkot (now in Pakistan) following Partition in 1947. After graduating from the Hailey College of Commerce, Lahore, Rafat became a company executive and married his wife Rehana, who was a social worker and women's rights activist from the local Kashmiri community.

Hailed as one the finest poets writing in English in Pakistan Rafat wrote some of his finest poems in the 1970s including "The Boy with the Bashed in Skull" and "Gangrene" from Wordfall, both of which provide vivid images of poverty and social division. Rafat's major work Arrival of the Monsoon: Collected Poems 1947-1978, which contains 150 poems, was published in Lahore in 1985.

Rafat died on 2 August 1998.

Circumcision

Having hauled down my pyjamas

they dragged me, all legs and teeth,

that fateful afternoon, to a stool

before which the barber hunkered

with an open cut-throat. He stropped it

on his palm with obvious relish.

I did not like his musthachios, nor

his conciliatory smile. Somehow

they made me sit, and two cousins

held a leg apiece. The barber

looked at me; I stared right back,

defying him to start something.

He just turned aside to whisper

to my cousin who suddenly cried

'Oh look at that golden bird,'

and being only six I looked up;

which was all the time he needed

to separate me from my prepuce.

'Bastard, sonofapig,' I roared,

'sister-ravisher, you pimp

andcatalmite,' while he applied

salve and bandaged the organ.

Beside myself with indignation

and pain, I forgot the presence

of elders, and cursed and cursed

in the graphic vocabulary

of the lanes, acquired at leap-frog,

marbles, and blindman's buff.

Still frothing at the mouth they fetched

me to bed, where an anxious mother

kissed and consoled me. It was not

till I was alone that I dared

to look down at my naked middle.

When I saw it so foreshortened,

raw, and swathed in lint, I burst

into fresh tears. Dismally

I wondered if I would ever

be able to pee again.

This

was many many years ago.

I have since learnt it was more

than a ritual, for by the act

of a pull and downward slash,

they prepare us for the disappointments

at the absence of golden birds

life will ask us to look at

between our circumcision and death.

--TaufiqRafat