Skip to main content

Open door in post-truth darkness: Poems of Kedarnath Singh and Ashok Vajpeyi

By Ravi Ranjan* 
In an age when truth is crushed beneath layers of information, algorithms, and ideological walls, Kedarnath Singh’s poem “Keep the Doors Open” functions as a quiet moral compass. It draws us back from digital echo chambers toward the intuitive awareness that alone can preserve the grammar of our shared humanity. When read alongside Ashok Vajpeyi’s “Darwaza” (Door), the two poems illuminate two complementary poles of contemporary sensibility: one rooted in folk trust and deliberate openness, the other in existential slippage and the inevitable incompleteness of human boundaries. Together they offer a profound cultural intervention against post-truth isolation, digital alienation, and the architectural hardening of modern life.
Kedarnath Singh’s poem opens with a simple, insistent command:
"Keep the doors open
They may return
Don’t hold any expectation
Just leave them open
The openness of doors
Is itself a hope
That holds the foundation intact"
This openness is no mere metaphor. It is an active ethic of hospitality—“atithi devo bhava” reimagined for a shrinking world. The poet contrasts it with the “closed times” of ideological bubbles and virtual walls. He has learned the “grammar of home” from bricks, not from textbooks; he admits lifelong failure in the “arithmetic” of worldly calculation. From Kisun Koiri he learned the meaning of the spade, from Mangni Kumhar the beauty of clay. Nature itself becomes his university: the first book bought from a tree, meter learned from clapping leaves, the first lesson against hatred taught by a fly’s “wild longing to live.”
Sociologically, the poem relocates culture and socialization from institutions back to folk life and labour. “Grammar” here signifies the inner moral fabric that binds society through emotional and physical relationships; “arithmetic” stands for the calculative modernity that weighs everything in profit and loss. The poet’s deliberate “failure” in mathematics grants him moral clarity. Tacit knowledge—embodied in the labourer’s tools and the potter’s hands—is celebrated as superior to elite degrees. Nature is a living text; birds, trees, and even an insignificant fly become teachers in an informal pedagogy that democratizes wisdom.
Aesthetically, Singh’s language carries the earthy fragrance of soil and sweat. Abstract concepts are rendered tactile: bricks join silently to form the poetry of home, leaves clap out natural rhythm, clay reveals its beauty through direct creation. This is an aesthetics of labour and eco-pedagogy that dissolves the barrier between form and content, man and nature. Beauty resides not in grandeur but in the continuity of small struggles and the humility of remaining a disciple.
Structurally, the poem works through binary oppositions—open/closed, grammar/arithmetic, folk/academic—while displacing traditional centres of knowledge. Saussurean semiotics is subverted: the signifier “book” shifts to “tree,” “meter” to rustling leaves, “teacher” to fly or bird. Meaning arises from difference and relationship rather than fixed authority. The intertextual call for “the world’s Panchatantra” at the end—ironically advertised in a newspaper—links ancient folk wisdom to modern emptiness. Panchatantra is not nostalgia but a practical ethics of coexistence that algorithms cannot supply.
Post-structurally, the poem deconstructs logocentrism and power/knowledge hierarchies (Derrida and Foucault). Home is decentred: its essence lies not in walls but in openness and absence. Knowledge flows horizontally—from margins (labourers, insects, trees) rather than top-down. The advertisement for a teacher of Panchatantra highlights an aporia: modernity’s information overload coexists with spiritual thirst. “Hair turned gray” while learning underscores that education is endless socialization, not a fixed credential. Silence itself becomes eloquent—the silent grammar of bricks, the quiet observation of a fly’s persistence.
In the post-truth era, these images acquire urgent political force. Data can be manipulated, hatred packaged as product, relationships reduced to pixels. Singh counters with concrete, irrefutable realities: the smell of clay, the labourer’s spade, the fly’s stubborn will to exist. “Keeping the doors open” rejects echo chambers; it restores trust and dialogue. For a generation drowning in performance pressure and burnout, the poem offers existential balm: failure can be dignified, lifelong discipleship is mastery, and openness is hope itself. Real security lies not in closed rooms but in the courage to remain receptive.
Ashok Vajpeyi’s “Darwaza” presents a contrasting vision:
"The door could have been opened
Only if someone had opened it
Even by itself
Because
It was not completely closed
No one ever did it
Everyone is in a hurry to leave
Not to close it properly
After leaving, the door is forgotten…"
Here openness is accidental, born of human carelessness rather than conscious hope. The door functions as both boundary and inevitable leakage: “a little outside-inside and a little inside-outside slips away anyway.” Without it, enclosed and unenclosed would collapse into jumble; yet the door is never fully shut. Vajpeyi’s poem is urban and existential—marked by hurry, forgetting, and the loneliness of memory. It speaks of privacy, limits, and the fragile line between self and other in a fast-paced civilization.
A comparative reading reveals complementary truths. For Singh, the open door is deliberate ethic, sociological trust, and folk foundation—“the openness of doors itself is a hope.” For Vajpeyi, it is existential lapse, urban slippage, and the poetry of incompleteness. Both poets reject the completely closed door as the end of humanity. Singh’s openness preserves collective roots and intuitive awareness; Vajpeyi’s acknowledges the cracks through which life and doubt inevitably flow. Together they affirm that human existence is always unfinished—whether through generous invitation or forgetful haste.
These poems resonate sharply with today’s realities. Modern urban architecture—high-rise apartments, soundproof doors, CCTV fortresses—has eliminated the old courtyard’s shared threshold. Courtyards once enacted Singh’s “grammar of home”; now doors are filters, not invitations. Smart locks and algorithms promise total access control, yet breed deeper insecurity and alienation. Vajpeyi’s “slippage” has been engineered out; nothing leaks, yet emotional enclosure intensifies loneliness. In an era of digital walls and surveillance, both poets remind us that true security is relational, not technological. Real progress lies in leaving space for the stranger’s return, the fly’s lesson, and the quiet wisdom of Panchatantra.
Ultimately, Singh and Vajpeyi transform poetry into moral intervention. In post-truth darkness, their open door becomes a philosophical necessity: a crack through which fresh air of dialogue, nature, and folk consciousness can enter. They teach that civilization’s foundation is not higher walls or clever calculations but the courage to remain a disciple—humble, receptive, and forever learning. As long as doors stay open to hope and slippage, the home of our sensibilities remains alive.
---
*Professor & former Head (Retd.), Department of Hindi, University of Hyderabad

Comments

TRENDING

Why Indo-Pak relations have been on 'knife’s edge' , hostilities may remain for long

By Utkarsh Bajpai*  The past few decades have seen strides being made in all aspects of life – from sticks and stones to weaponry. The extreme case of this phenomenon has been nuclear weapons. The menace caused by nuclear weapons in the past is unforgettable. Images of Hiroshima and Nagasaki from 1945 come to mind, after the United States dropped two atomic bombs on the cities.

Manufacturing, services: India's low-skill, middle-skill labour remains underemployed

By Francis Kuriakose* The Indian economy was in a state of deceleration well before Covid-19 made its impact in early 2020. This can be inferred from the declining trends of four important macroeconomic variables that indicate the health of the economy in the last quarter of 2019.

Modi’s Israel visit strengthened Pakistan’s hand in US–Iran truce: Ex-Indian diplomat

By Jag Jivan   M. K. Bhadrakumar , a career diplomat with three decades of service in postings across the former Soviet Union, Pakistan, Iran, Afghanistan, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Germany, and Turkey, has warned that the current truce in the US–Iran war is “fragile and ridden with contradictions.” Writing in his blog India Punchline , Bhadrakumar argues that while Pakistan has emerged as a surprising broker of dialogue, the durability of the ceasefire remains uncertain.

Food security? Gujarat govt puts more than 5 lakh ration cards in the 'silent' category

By Pankti Jog* A new statistical report uploaded by the Gujarat government on the national food security portal shows that ensuring food security for the marginalized community is still not a priority of the state. The statistical report, uploaded on December 24, highlights many weaknesses in implementing the National Food Security Act (NFSA) in state.

Civil society flags widespread violations of land acquisition Act before Parliamentary panel

By Jag Jivan   Civil society organisations and stakeholders from across India have presented stark evidence before the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Rural Development and Panchayati Raj , alleging systemic violations of the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement (RFCTLARR) Act, 2013 , particularly in Scheduled Areas and tribal regions.

Incarceration of Prof Saibaba 'revives' the question: What is crime, who is criminal?

By Kunal Pant* In 2016, a Supreme Court Judge asked the state of Maharashtra, “Do you want to extract a pound of flesh?” The statement was directed against the state for contesting the bail plea of Delhi University Professor GN Saibaba. Saibaba was arrested in 2014, a justification for which was to prevent him from committing what the police called “anti-national activities.”

The soundtrack of resistance: How 'Sada Sada Ya Nabi' is fueling the Iran war

​ By Syed Ali Mujtaba*  ​The Persian track “ Sada Sada Ya Nabi ye ” by Hossein Sotoodeh has taken the world by storm. This viral media has cut across linguistic barriers to achieve cult status, reaching over 10 million views. The electrifying music and passionate rendition by the Iranian singer have resonated across the globe, particularly as the high-intensity military conflict involving Iran entered its second month in March 2026.

Beneath the stone: Revisiting the New Jersey mandir controversy

By Rajiv Shah  A recent report published in the British media outlet The Guardian , titled “Workers carved the largest modern Hindu temple in the west. Now, some have incurable lung disease,” took me back to my visits to the New Jersey mandir —first in 2022, when it was still under construction, though parts of it were open to visitors, and again in 2024, after its completion.

Protesters in UK cities voice concerns over alleged developments in Bastar region

By A Representative   Demonstrations were held across several cities in the United Kingdom on March 28, as groups and activists gathered to protest what they described as state actions in India under the reported “Operation Kagar.”