Tuesday 13 September 2016

Memories of Madrid

I wish I could tell you that I finally went to your favourite city,
I finally went to Madrid.
So many years later, I had forgotten everything you had told me
Thankfully, the trees of Buen Retiro remembered
As I walked amongst them on a sleepless morning
They told me everything you had loved so much;
I finally saw Madrid - through your eyes.

I saw the masterpieces in Prado and the rare gems in Reina Sofia
I saw naïve tourists succumb to the promise of seemingly cheap bargains in El Rastro
I saw narrow, cobbled lanes that lead to grand plazas
Plazas that echo with the sound of music;
I saw the debauchery of dark nights in Gran Via make way for the warm gentleness of dawn
I smelt the sour stench of worn out brothels fade into the alluring aroma of freshly baked bread
I finally felt Madrid seep into my skin – as it had once done into yours.

As the sun went down to sound the drums in Buen Retiro
I knew the only truth there is to know
As long as the memories of Madrid remain with me
You remain with me.

Sunday 28 August 2016

The labyrinth of lost lines

Monsoon clouds loom at large
Serene surrounding stand in silent anticipation
All waiting - for a tear drop to trickle down your face.

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Saturday 20 August 2016

Forgetting

I have begun to forget you
Your voice no longer wakes me up at night
The hope to see you when I come home after a long day has now faded
I don’t look for your face in the crowds any more.

Winter left along with you.
Spring and summer have bestowed bountiful on what was once barren
Today, flowers bloom on bare branches of yesterday
The pigeons have built their nest again in the crevice of our walls like before
Once again, life has emerged victorious over death.

I, too, have removed the old to make way for the new
I have emptied your closet and given away the few belongings that you had
“The world has so little”, I told myself; “How can we keep to serve our memory what others need to live their lives”?
I removed your photograph too – if you are not able to see me, what good is it that I see you?
People who come home for the first time see no signs that you lived here.

Yet sometimes, when I see dawn break in its myriad hues, I remember the first time we saw sunrise together from a plane
When your favourite song floats to my ears through the din of rush hour traffic, I remember the joy on your face as you would hum along with it
When I make tea on lazy Sunday afternoons, I sometimes mistakenly pour another cup thinking you are here.
And then, I struggle to close the floodgates of my eyes. All over again.

I have begun to forget you
But to forget you completely will take some more time. Perhaps a few lifetimes.

Saturday 19 April 2014

The Pursuit of Happiness

“The Pursuit of Happyness” is one of my all-time favorite movies. It is a story of trial and triumph enacted poignantly by Will Smith that tugs at my heartstrings every time I watch it. That aside, one fascinating fact I learnt from the film is that the “United States’ Declaration of Independence” assures all its citizens the fundamental right to pursue happiness. What a profound promise that is! Often, in my moments of irrational exuberance about humanity at large, I tell myself that the United Nations Human Rights Council ought to undertake an academic exercise to write a perfect Constitution – one that borrows the best from constitutions of all nations and that line about the “Right to Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness” should be one of the opening statements of that document. (By the way, while we are at it, I also think it is time to change “all men are created equal” to “all life is created equal”).

But how does a nation deliver on its promise to allow its people to pursue happiness? How does one define an amorphous and intangible concept like happiness? I was pondering upon such problematic thoughts one Sunday morning a couple of months ago, while the week’s laundry lazily swirled in the washing machine, when a group of friends dropped by for lunch. After everyone had settled in and enough beer had been had for no question to seem out of context, I hurled that bizarre question at them that no guest expects to be asked over a leisurely lunch – what did happiness mean to them? As expected, the first response I got was a round of bewildered looks that face readers might interpret as “where the hell did that come from”? When I explained that I had been thinking about the words in the American constitution after watching the movie on TV, people got over their initial astonishment and started opening up.

The first answer was firmly grounded in the present moment when Suhas (all names changed) said that happiness to him was a lazy lunch on a Sunday afternoon talking rubbish with friends over chilled beer. All of us agreed with him, even as we delved deeper into the concept. What we all knew and was re-affirmed was that happiness meant different things to different people – to Priya, it was the recent moment when she learnt that she had got a much awaited promotion (she defined it more broadly as achieving goals she set for herself); to Shekhar it was the experience of fatherhood; Urmi found happiness in being by herself and playing the guitar (she is the mother of four-year old twins); her husband – Amit, who is a motor bike junkie, is happiest when he is riding his Harley Davidson on the national highway early in the morning with his fellow members of the Harley owners’ club; or when he is playing with his children. In the meanwhile, Suhas thought some more (beyond his opening comment of having beer with friends on Sunday afternoon) and added that the day he felt really happy was when he bought an apartment in his hometown couple of years ago and moved his parents there from the rented place they were in earlier…. It was a fun conversation and like all such conversations it ended without any of us really knowing when it did – we had moved on to other topics and some more beer.

But the thought stayed with me. After they left in the early evening and I sat with my customary cup of tea in the balcony (like I mostly do on Sunday evenings), I started re-playing the conversation in my head and processing what it all meant. The first insight I got was a real revelation – no one spoke of things money buys. No gadgets, clothes, shoes, cars. Even when things that can be bought with money were mentioned – like Amit’s Harley Davidson motor bike or Suhas’ apartment – they were means to achieve a larger end – the pursuit of a passion in the case of Amit and the well-being of his parents, in Suhas’ case. What about myself, I thought? So many “things” made me happy – the iPhone I recently bought, the car, the fancy music system, the list goes on. But then I realized that these things didn’t really make me happy – I was either trying to have something that no one else in my circle had or I was trying to have something that everyone else in my circle already had. That was my first insight on happiness – we spend too much time and resources trying to catch up or stay ahead of others and that can never be a source of happiness. Happiness comes from knowing and pursuing what we want for ourselves and enhancing our sense of self-worth.

Armed with that initial insight, I started thinking of the things I really wanted for myself, things that truly make me happy. The answers came easy – I enjoy life experiences – parasailing on the sea during sunset, walking on a quaint, cobbled street by a massive lake whose end can’t be seen, watching some mesmerizing live performances or, like I did yesterday, swimming in the rain. The memories of such moments stay etched in my mind and make me happy long after they are over. I also cherish relationships – I may not have a lot of friends but I have deep, strong bonds with the ones I have. Nothing makes me happier than spending time with people whose company I enjoy. I identified a few others – like pursuing some of my interests, being able to contribute to my work and people around me positively and so on.

The biggest realization that listing the things that made me happy brought was that almost none of it had to do with career success. Here I was, spending an inordinate amount of time defining and pursuing career goals when what I really should have been doing was to define and pursue life goals. Life is too short to start living after one’s career is over. In fact, for some unfortunate people (and who knows, I may be one of them), life runs out even before their career is over. A career is not entirely unimportant – after all, it is a source of self-worth but it is one of the sources, surely not the only source. On a similar note, the money that it fetches is important but as I now know only few of the things that make me happy require spending money. And, most of those things, I already have.

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Afterthought: I don’t write this blog very often but enjoy doing so greatly whenever I do. Though it’s quite a challenge to come up with topics and capture random thoughts when they do occur to me. I believe there are many good apps for amateur writers out there. Must buy an iPad one of these days!

Saturday 11 January 2014

Of beginnings and endings


Asha’s seventieth birthday came and went. She neither had the luxury of time nor the will to celebrate such occasions any longer. Not just her birthday, even more frequent, noticeable punctuations of time like days, weeks, months meant nothing to her any more. To her, they were all irrelevant demarcations of time that were spent doing the same thing – going about the prosaic routine of everyday errands and looking after Sunil – the former exhausted her body, the latter drained her soul.

She did notice the passing of seasons though. That was the good thing about moving to Dehradun from Delhi after Sunil’s retirement. In Delhi, where they had lived for little over five years after returning to India from many years of living abroad, there was summer and then there was winter. But in Dehradun, spring and autumn were distinctly noticeable too. So even though she forgot on the thirteenth that it was her birthday, she could feel the month of March in the air. After all, spring was here favorite season – the chilling winds that descended from the hills in the winter had transformed into a gentle breeze, the sun shone brightly but had none of the unbearable harshness that it would soon exhibit, leaves started to show up on the barren branches of the tall eucalyptus trees that dotted the street outside their house and best of all – flowers had started blooming in their neighbor’s garden. Asha could not see them from across the wall but she could smell their subtle fragrance in the air. By contrast, her own garden lay bare. The gardener, who worked at the nearby Forest Research Institute during the week, came every Sunday and mowed the lawn to ensure it did not turn into a bush infested with insects and rodents but that was all – she had little energy and lesser interest to plant saplings and grow them. The cane chairs and center table that Sunil had bought from Delhi’s Mehrauli-Gurgaon road, after enthusiastic searching and astute bargaining, were now dumped at the back of the garage instead of being laid out in the small portico that stood between the garden and rest of the house. For Asha, they had lost all purpose; they were just one more thing that she had to remind the domestic help to dust and clean once a month at least, a task that the lady whom it was assigned to was only too happy to forget. Life wasn’t always like this though.

Sometimes, at night, closing her eyes after flipping through a new book on crocheting (the only distraction she indulged in these days. Though she never got down to it, she read up on crocheting and wanted to get back to her hobby) that she would have borrowed from the library of the local club and while drifting through that space that separates wakefulness from sleep, she would think of the wonderful life they had – of her meeting Sunil at St. Stephen’s college in Delhi where she had enrolled for her Bachelor’s degree in English Literature (he was already on to his Master’s program in Political Science when she joined), their fairytale romance that made her friends jealous, Sunil’s getting his dream job in the India Foreign Service, their subsequent marriage, the many job assignments for which Sunil was posted in many countries and their eventual return to Delhi, where Sunil discharged his duties in the Ministry of External Affairs for the last five years of his career. It was not as if she thought of these things every day but every now and then the fifty odd years of life that they had spent together came back to her mind in bits and pieces. Well, not really; she seldom thought of the thirteen years they had now spent in Dehradun. It was as if her mind had played a mischief by inversing her reservoir of memories – the farther things were back in time, the more vividly she recollected them, the more recent the memory, the more obscure it seemed.

The last bit that she recalled was about their decision to move to Dehradun. Although they had lived in Delhi for five years after coming back to India, they could never really call it home. The city had changed a lot since the time they lived there as students and they found little of that change palatable. As a torchbearer of a new, upwardly mobile India, the city seemed so confident about its future that it almost seemed in a hurry to forget its past; so eager to create a new identity for itself that it had happily compromised its character along the way. Philosophical disconnect aside, it was way too big and chaotic for them. Sunil often joked with friends and colleagues that after many years in the quieter parts of the world (especially around Europe), it was back home in Delhi that he truly understood what the feeling of alienation can be like. So as soon as he retired they bought some land in Dehradun and meticulously went about building the house that would be their final address. They chose Dehradun because it seemed like an affable city – not too small, not too big; it mostly had good weather and it was close to Delhi. Apart from that, one big reason why they chose Dehradun was because of its proximity to the hills. The Garhwals were no Alps but there was something reassuring in the knowledge that they would spend the autumn of their lives looking at the quiet majesty of mountains. Thankfully, the highway between Delhi and Dehradun was now a well laid one with six lanes and they happily moved to Dehradun knowing that it was only a comfortable four hour drive to Delhi whenever they missed friends, family (the few, distant ones they had), the general cacophony of a big city and most important of all – reliable healthcare.

The house was everything they wanted it to be. They spent weeks, in some cases – months, looking for the right furniture, choosing different color schemes for the walls to suit the room, buying upholstery and linen to match the color schemes. And to top it all, they had their collection of curio from all across the world, aesthetically placed in nooks and corners. In size, it wasn’t as large as some of the other houses in the neighborhood but visitors could easily tell that its owners were people of refined taste.

They quickly built a network of friends too. It happened easily once they became a member of the local club. Sunil would go there to play tennis every morning. Most evenings they would go together for a couple of hours for a walk by the lawns, followed by a cup of tea with friends once the sun set, sometimes staying back a little longer to catch up on reading at the library or watching TV in the lounge if anything eventful was happening in the world. On Fridays and Saturdays they usually stayed late – chatting up with the other couples over drinks and dinner. If they weren’t at the club on weekends, they would be at one of their friend’s place or people would be coming over to theirs. It was the predictable post-retirement life that educated, upper middle class people wish for – predictably uneventful and predictably good.

So it was for the first five years until one day while sitting at their portico and having tea in the morning after Sunil returned from tennis, Asha noticed that Sunil’s hands were shaking and unusually unstable. She asked him what was wrong and he dismissed her by saying his hands tremble every now and then and it would be alright in a while. However, it never did. She saw them like that whenever she bothered to look till it reached a point couple of months later when it started disturbing her mind enough to press him to visit the local doctor. The doctor investigated, conducted tests and finally concluded that what Sunil was experiencing was the early stages of Parkinson's disease. He gave some medicines and exercises and asked Sunil to not exert himself too much while playing tennis. According to the doctor, so long as Sunil followed these instructions, he would be fine. So he seemed to be for a couple of years but in reality the disease was tightening its grip on him. One day, Sunil announced that he is hanging up his tennis racket for good. Asha only half believed him when he said that his friends were getting old and the games were no longer fast paced enough to be fun. But he continued to get worse. Things would fall from his hand, he would suddenly lose balance while getting up from the sofa, he started losing control over his facial expressions and his physical movements became visibly slow and clumsy.

Ultimately one day, three years after the doctor in Dehradun had detected Sunil to be suffering from Parkinson’s disease, Asha insisted they visit a good doctor in Delhi and this time, Sunil didn’t resist very strongly. After a battery of tests and diagnostics, Dr. Dinakaran, who was the Head of the department of Neurology at All India Institute of Medical Sciences, told them what they already knew – that Sunil was suffering from Parkinson’s disease. But he also said something that they weren’t expecting to hear – that he was somewhere between stage two and three of the disease and typically it was a quick road downhill from here. Though it worried them, neither confessed it to the other. In fact, on the way back to Dehradun, Sunil was more than his jovial self. He even took a dig at Dr. Dinakaran by saying that in their urge to be candid and pragmatic, these south Indian doctors often ended up as morbid and alarmist. A Punjabi doctor would never raise such false alarms, he laughingly told Asha.

But Dr. Dinakaran was right. Sunil kept getting worse. He found it difficult to climb stairs and shifted to the guest bedroom on the ground floor. He needed help to walk, found it difficult to hold the coffee mug, his head would slightly nod all the time and his thought and speech became more and more muddled. It was as if his entire body was becoming paralytic, but in agonizingly slow pace – one tiny muscle at a time. Eventually, two years later, he became completely bed-ridden. Asha found it impossible to look after him by herself. She arranged for nurses from the local hospital to come and stay with him – initially during the night then eventually through the day as well. Sunil lost control over his bladder, his memory, his speech and his ability to eat. The local doctor put him on saline drip but there was little else to do.

Asha could not bear to look at him. So much so that one day she felt a sudden anger towards Dr. Dinakaran for telling them that it was a quick road downhill. She wanted to meet him only to tell him that it had been four years since they had visited him, this journey was anything but quick. She wanted to ask him how far was the end, how deep the abyss, how much worse would it get? The truth is Asha was dying as much as Sunil was, only vicariously. Her entire day was spent only in ensuring he was being looked after and ensuring the house didn’t fall apart. She had no one to talk to except the maid, nurses and the gardener who came on Sundays. Initially, their friends would drop by often but their visits decreased as the days went by. Some of them would call once in a while though. The only thing that gave her some respite were the books on crocheting that she read and the thought that one day she must resurrect that hobby of her younger days.

Couple of months after Asha’s seventieth birthday and eight years after he was first detected with Parkinson’s disease, Sunil died. It was a gentle passing away and not a dramatic end. Sunil died as he had lived. He had been lying in coma for a few days and his life slipped away. When the doctor came to issue the death certificate, he put an approximate time on the document because the real time was not known to anyone.

The next few days were a whirlwind – some family came, most of whom Asha had not seen in years. Some of them even stayed back at their house for a couple of nights. Since they had come all the way from Delhi, they decided to make a short vacation out of it and went to visit Mussoorie as well. All the friends were around for her – they came every day and stayed back till late in the evening, leaving only after ensuring she had had her dinner and was ready to go to bed. The first thirteen days, which is the time till when rituals lasted, passed like this.

On the fourteenth day, no one came except the maid for a couple of hours to do the chores. For the first time in decades, in her life perhaps, Asha felt she understood what the phrase “the unbearable lightness of being” coined her favorite writer – Milan Kundera – really meant. It was as if she had suddenly put by the wayside a heavy weight she had been carrying on her head for an immeasurable length of time. She felt light but in a discomforting sort of way.

When she woke up the next day, she realized for the first time that Sunil was gone for ever, that her life would never be the same again, that things were returning to normal but it was not the normal she knew; it was a new kind of normal. For the first time, she wept. Strangely, when she was done crying she also felt a faint quiver of happiness in her heart. It shocked her, it embarrassed her but it was unmistakably there. She ignored it, made herself a big mug of black coffee and did something she had been intending to do for many years – she took out the bag from her cupboard that contained the crocheting tools she had been quietly collecting the last couple of years – needles, yarn, hooks, measuring tape and all. She sat on the study table next to the large window in her bedroom, looking out on a warm May morning and started crocheting after a gap of many decades. There she was – crocheting and sipping her black coffee. It was only when she was having her third or fourth sip that Asha noticed something she had never seen before – her hands were trembling; they were shaky and unstable just as Sunil’s had been after he had returned from a game of tennis one morning eight years ago.

Friday 8 November 2013

Let's talk about love

1 am. Vodka. Friends.
That moment when small talk ends
when secrets seep out of designer dresses.

It's everybody's turn
One by one.
Not for any purpose, just for fun.

Insider trading - it's rampant these days.
Equity or debt - what's your bet?
The fashion columnist - she has totally lost it.
An old friend - he is broken beyond mend...

"Let's talk about love" someone says.
Ah, love.
Everyone is talking about love these days:
On mobile messages and Facebook feeds,
In college classes and public buses,
Over de-caf coffee in chic cafes
Over tequila shots in hip night-spots,
Everyone is talking about love these days.

Suddenly. All eyes turn on me.
"Come on, tell us something about love" they say.
I want to but can't
The vodka is killing me
My insides are on fire
I must throw up.

Should have never had so much vodka, I tell myself
Should have stuck to a glass of wine, at best;
I rush to the bathroom and shut the door.

How do I tell them? How do I say?
Love is a wall - I have built between you and me. Lovingly.

Sunday 22 September 2013

The moment before heartbreak

Not a single sound would sweep the quiet calm
All waiting – like soldiers who have heard the alarm,
The rustling of leaves, whispering of wind
All sounds had ceased.

Not a bird would move its wing,
Even the river had ceased to sing,
Dry leaves tiptoed on the grass
Nothing would allow a sound to pass.

The moon hid behind a cotton cloud
And sunlight pulled its golden shroud,
For a moment creation closed its eyes

And then was heard the thundering sound of a breaking heart.

(9.46 am. 28th July 1996. New Delhi)

Thursday 15 August 2013

The Age of Ambition

History, as we are aware, is divided into eras and ages – pre-historic age, medieval age, anglo-saxon era, the industrial age and so many others. Within these larger definitions, there exists many other demarcations of time punctuated by more micro events or phenomenon. In the context of the Indian economy, for example, the years after 1991 are referred to as the “post liberalization” era – a period of rapid economic growth (compared to the first four decades after independence) since the opening up of the economy to foreign investment in several sectors in 1991.

Socially, I believe, we could well call this the “Age of Ambition” for India. On that fateful August night in 1947 when India became independent, Jawaharlal Nehru said “A moment comes, which comes but rarely in history, when we step out from the old to the new, when an age ends, and when the soul of a nation, long suppressed, finds utterance”. While we are still debating whether the soul of the nation truly shed its shackles that night, we are more unanimous in accepting that the “animal spirit of India’s economy” (as the current Prime Minister called it recently) was unleashed in 1991. Since then, there has been no looking back – roads have been paved, airports expanded, houses built, cars bought and lifestyles have been upgraded at a pace unprecedented in human history. If there is one characteristic that defines almost everyone I know today, it is “ambition”. It is as if a billion people have jumped on to a juggernaut of ambition and aspiration and there is no stopping them now. I am very much on the bandwagon too. Who wants to miss the bus, especially if it is a bus on the road to prosperity? After running the proverbial rat race for many years, couple of months ago I paused to ask myself what ambition really means.

In my quest to find the answer, I indulged in a social experiment. On a recent trip to Delhi, when I had the opportunity to speak to some 10-15 young professionals (all in the first 1 – 3 years of their career), I asked them that million dollar question (I told you, I am ambitious. In my world, if it is a tough question, answering it should come with a large monetary reward); I asked them what was their ambition? If I met them twenty years later and all their dreams had come true, what would they be?

The answers were mostly what I had anticipated. In twenty years’ time, people wanted to be heads of departments, CEOs and CXOs, entrepreneurs, venture capitalists and things of that sort. One person said his ambition was to be happy – that perplexed me a bit and triggered some thoughts (a blog on that some other day) but everything else that people said were the kind of ambitions I had for myself.

Aided by that initial input, I built upon the hypothesis and tossed a second question at the group – I asked them to think of a person they knew whom they greatly respected and write down the reasons why they respected the person. After everyone had a few minutes to do the exercise, I asked them to share what they had written with the rest of us. There was no pattern in the people they respected – some respected family members, some friends, sometimes it was a colleague, a teacher and so on. But there was a distinct pattern in the reasons why they thought someone was worthy of respect. Almost all the attributes were related to human qualities and values – knowledge, humility, open mindedness, dedication to a cause, honesty and integrity, ability to work hard, ability to inspire and motivate others, commitment to family and friends and things of that sort.

And then came the moment of enlightenment for all of us – how is it that there was such a large gap between what we wanted to be and what we respected in others? How is it that what we respect in people are values and human qualities but what we want for ourselves are all to do with a narrow definition of career success? No one seems to respect another person just because the other person lives in a villa or drives a fancy car; why then are all our plans about how we can own a villa and a fancy car? The evening was soon over. We left the room with a resolve (no, we didn’t decide to renounce all worldly pleasures!), we said we would think more deeply about the concept of ambition so that one day we are able to become the kind of people we respect.

It has been a few months since that discussion, yet the thoughts it provoked stayed with me and led to this blog. People who are in my age group are at a point in time in our lives when we are thinking about what our goals in life are and how do we go about achieving them. Some are even parents and sowing the early seeds of ambition and career planning in their children. While we are at it, I hope we don’t miss the wood for the trees. That is to say, I hope we don’t define our life’s ambition by an insufficient barometer of career success but instead we aspire to become people who are worthy of respect and whom our friends and family can be proud of.

Saturday 29 June 2013

The lesson I learnt from Mother Teresa

Watching TV news in the last couple of weeks has been a deeply disturbing experience to say the least. Not that it is ever pleasant these days but shallow politicians bickering over petty issues (or, for that matter – making light of issues of grave importance) is so much more tolerable than the sights of the horrific tragedy that has struck the Himalayan state of Uttarakhand. A mountain tsunami of sorts has washed away several homes, villages, towns, roads, bridges, everything that came in its way and has left behind hundreds dead, thousands injured and several hundred-thousands homeless. The cruel irony is not lost on us, shocked spectators, that many of the victims were pilgrims – those who went to assert their faith in the Almighty and have been bereft of their lives instead, those who hoped to seek catharsis by purging their sins and have been washed away by ferocious waves instead. And yet, this is not the first time.

My mind goes back 22 years when a devastating earthquake had rocked the same region. It was in fact the same night as my birthday but late enough for the date to have changed to 20th October in 1991 when an earthquake measuring 7.0 on the Richter scale struck the Garhwal range of the Himalayas. It tore apart Uttarkashi, Tehri, Chamoli (pretty much the same places that have been hit by the floods this time) and neighboring areas killing over 2,000 people, injuring over 5,000 and leaving over 300,000 homeless. (A decade later, at a cozy family dinner in Delhi, I would listen spell bound to the then Principal of a boarding school in Shimla who recounted to us the horrors of that night as he desperately tried to evacuate the children sleeping in the hostel from harm’s way). It wasn’t the age of 24x7 television and the radio had lost most of its old popularity, so there was a vacuum of sorts in the travel time of news and by the time it trickled to us in Calcutta through newspapers, it always already over 30 hours since the incident. However, that had not diluted the immediacy and brutality of the event. It was in the week following that terrible tragedy that I saw Mother Teresa for the first (and only) time in my life.

When I saw Mother Teresa she was already an internationally acknowledged messiah and one of the most famous citizens of Calcutta. She had spent over forty years in the city tirelessly working to provide succor to the sick and the destitute. It was over a decade since she had won the Nobel Peace Prize. Her visit to our school was no surprise. The school had sent a notice to all parents couple of days in advance announcing that Mother Teresa would be taking her Missionaries of Charity to Uttarkashi to work on the relief efforts and would be visiting our school (and many others) in a bid to collect money. The notice said that the logistics of how to give the money would be communicated after her visit and urged all of us to donate “generously” (or some word to that effect).

It is that last bit that made my mother apprehensive. To tell the truth, while I belonged to a perfectly middle class family, many of my classmates were from highly affluent families. And while my parents fully approved of the idea of being good Samaritans and donating money for a noble cause, they were conscious of the fact that our interpretation of “generous” may not match that of some of my more wealthy classmates. There was a balancing act to be done – on one hand, we wanted to give enough to strike a parity with what everyone else was giving; on the other, we did not want to give so much that we would end up far outdoing our own means. My mother did what she always did at such moments of moral dilemma – she telephoned the mothers of some of my other classmates who were her friends. I do not know what transpired on those phone calls but the instruction given to me after they got over was concise and clear – I was to ascertain exactly how much was the amount we were expected to donate. Armed with that clear agenda, I went to school the day Mother Teresa came calling.

That day was over two decades ago and yet I remember it the way I remember few others in my life. There was a palpable air of excitement in the morning assembly at school. I feel guilty to admit that the monumental tragedy that had triggered the need for her visit had somewhat receded in our adolescent minds. After all, we were going to get to see an icon, a real hero, a person whom legends were made up of.

When she finally did appear, I was a bit disappointed. She looked nothing quite like what I had imagined. With her reputation and her larger than life image, I was perhaps expecting to see someone more like her good friend Princess Diana! Instead, the person I saw looked older and frailer than my grandmother. She had a wrinkled face, was short and with her hunchback seemed even shorter, so much so that she was about the same height as me and I must have been less than five feet then. She was 81 then but if someone told me that she was a hundred years old or many hundreds for that matter, I would not have opposed. She wore her trademark white saree with the broad dark blue border though. There was no mistaking it was her. It was only when she came much closer that I saw something that startled me – there was around her frail body an aura of incomprehensible power. As she walked past, the radiance of that aura was so strong that I felt there was almost a glow around her, a halo. (Years later, while reading George Bernard Shaw’s play “Major Barbara”, I found in the description of Andrew Undershaft an imagery that comes closest to my memories of her demeanor; Shaw wrote “His gentleness is partly that of a strong man who has learnt by experience that his natural grip hurts ordinary people unless he handles them very carefully”). I don’t believe in saints today, I didn’t even then. Most people may dismiss my description as childishly (and perhaps needlessly) supernatural. But if you have seen someone who has dedicated one’s entire life to the cause of humanity, you will probably know what I am talking about. I saw that aura in another old man too, one who life is fading away today – Nelson Mandela – but I will keep that story for another day.

I don’t remember anything of what she said, except for one thing. Presumably, she would have told us about the tragedy, about the need to help people who were affected and about doing our bit by donating money. And then, to my utter disbelief she said she knew that the question in the minds of many of us was “How much is good enough” (exactly what my mother had asked me to find out!). And then she went on to say that the answer to the question was not a number but a principle. She said “give, until it hurts”. 22 years later, I still marvel at the simplicity and profoundness of that statement. What an easy thing to say, what a difficult thing to do. She said each of us should do charity based on our individual capacity and we must keep giving till we reach the point where our action starts hurting our own selves. And then, it would be alright to stop. That phrase I heard from Mother Teresa that day in school when she visited us after the earthquake in Uttarkashi got etched in my memory as a cardinal rule, a commandment that I should always aspire to live by. But I must confess today that I failed. Whenever I got a chance to do good, to show generosity, to give to others who do not have as much as I do, I always stopped short before it started hurting myself, sometimes well before. It disturbs me no end to think how little I give compared to what I have and every day I resolve to try a little harder the next.

Today, two decades after I learnt that lesson, Uttarkashi needs us again. Mother Teresa is long gone but her message remains and the need to live by it more than ever before.

The question that each one of us ought to ask ourselves today is what are we doing about it? Instead of being mute spectators to this gruesome tragedy, can we participate in improving the situation? Can we dedicate our time and physical effort to help those in need? If not, have we at least donated some money? The Prime Minister has set up a relief fund and appealed to citizens to contribute. But some of us are skeptical about giving money to the government coffers, given that the government does not have a track record of using it very effectively and efficiently. For such people, every TV channel and newspaper is publishing lists of NGOs who are working on the ground and are dire need of all the support they can get. Here is one such list http://www.dnaindia.com/india/1853462/report-make-a-difference-to-the-future-of-victims-in-uttarakhand-by-donating-today. I did not donate to any NGOs on this list though. Instead, I gave my contribution to http://www.savethechildren.in/. It doesn’t matter whom you are giving to, it matters whether you are giving. And, as I learnt from Mother Teresa, it doesn’t matter how much you are giving, it matters whether you are giving until it hurts. There are dead to be cremated, wounds to be healed, homes to be re-built. Now is not the time to sit and watch. Now is the time to do.

Wednesday 26 June 2013

Many moods of Goa










A sense of desolation - Perth (January 2008)

Walking out of the Perth airport, the first impression of the city was nothing like what I had expected, primarily because I had expected nothing. It was just another small city with an airport that made no impression. Outside, there was the usual crowd of excited faces waiting to meet their loved ones, hotel staff going about their daily routine of picking up guests – with professionalism and disinterestedness noticeable in equal measure, and the familiar queue of taxi cabs waiting to ferry inconsequential visitors like myself for whom no one ever waited at airports. There was one thing that was noticeable though – it was how brightly the January sun shone even at 6 o’clock in the evening “Welcome to the southern hemisphere” I told myself; it was my first time in that half of the world.

As I rode to the hotel, my senses slowly started drifting as if I were splitting into two separate people – my mind was fixated on the string of meetings that were lined up the next day. I was well aware of the fact that the outcome of those meetings would largely determine the fate of my organization and indeed my own self. My sight though was falling upon all that I was crossing and absorbing it all with juvenile curiosity. “How unique the sights of every city are” I thought to myself – the architecture, the well laid pavements, quaint houses with little gardens outside them – I had seen them all elsewhere before. Yet there is something in the way all of it comes together that makes every city one sees so unique. In Perth, there was one thing that was truly unique though – it was the sense of desolation and emptiness. Signs of life were so rare to come by that I was confused whether all this was real or whether I had been transposed inside a painting without my knowing it. Or maybe I fell asleep; the jet lag was beginning to catch on….

A rainy day on MG Road boulevard