Sunday, October 24, 2010

My little good Jamshedpur

My little good Jamshedpur

Jamshedpur is my city of origin. I left it 35 years ago. But as is the case with native place one could never cut off from it. Like a truant school boy I always try to find some excuse to run away from my business and visit Jamshedpur, my city of love. Last August I visited this little city at least after four or five years. It was still that little good Jamshedpur. The hills of Dalma range were still there with all its mysterious colours and flavor. During the month of August river Subarnarekha still flows with the grace of a young queen who belittles everything with the dignity of her resplendent beauty. And people of Jamshedpur were still very raucous at their very shell but if you have little patience to crack that hard shell you will find ,at your surprise ,a sweet and soft kernel inside the shell.

But the city had undergone a sea change during last three or four years. I found Jamshedpur now became a city of V.R.S. (voluntary retirement from service). Every third person I met was a V.R.S. Once a thriving city of Trade-Apprentice and Graduate Engineering Trainee now appeared to be an ardent follower of Russell’s ‘In praise of idleness’. Really, only fool dies in work-house! But change is the law of nature, one can’t help it.

Thirty five years ago during the period of our golden unemployment day we used a prosperous tea stall at Sidhgora Bazaar as our regular ‘thek’. But like its regular visitors it had also taken V.R.S. The shutter was pulled down, all benches and tables were gone, a few pieces of bricks and broken wooden plunks served as sitting arrangements. During day time there was a romantic darkness inside the shop that played hide and seek with defused light that infiltrated through broken slates of the roof, and in the evening an oil lamp of 1950 edition was lit and placed in the middle and its flickering light cast a ghostly shadow of inmates against bamboo wall. And my few fortunate friends who still managed to keep their job intact with TISCO or TELCO and those who had taken V.R.S. sit here regularly at their ‘aadda’. My friends had been highly spirited so they kept on consuming spirit to keep their spirits as high as it were thirty years ego. But cannabis was really our first choice. Our ‘thek’, the little shady haunt, was always laden with heavy thick smoke of cannabis. Whenever I visited our ‘aadda’ they set continuous fest of cannabis smoking to my honour. It seems like to be the pyres of Raja Harischandra Ghat of Banaras- the fire of cannabis never dies down.

But my present visit to Jamshedpur had taken a beating when I was introduced to some Barmanda. A short, slender and skinny Barmanda was a new entrant to our ‘aadda’ his cheeks were shrunken, eyes drawn back to eye-socket and his head was bald. But some unruly hair went down as long as his neck. His physic did not give the exact idea of his age; he might be of anything between 40 to 60. He had a striking resemblance with that of Professor Calculus of Tintin. And he was a happy recipient of V.R.S. He was a prolific smoker of cannabis and it is the rare quality that found him a permanent seat in our ‘thek

I found him perfect gentleman, an intimate smile always hovered round his face. He received me with sincere intimacy, and I immediately felt the warmth of close friendship in his association. He offered me a freshly prepared ‘kolkey’ (cannabis smoking pipe) and ordered Pepsi generously for all who were there, and thus flowed the plenty of V.R.S. money. During the smoking session one of my old friends pushed me

to a corner and told me in a hushed voce, ’Do you know how he could manage a job in TISCO?’

I stared at him expectantly.

My friend continued, ‘He was a champion body builder. He won national gold medal in his category. He got the job against sports quota.’

And for the next few seconds I found myself at my wit’s end.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Thursday, November 12, 2009

A rainy day


If one asks me of my dearest pastime I could say watching drip-drap of rain through my window. Rain has a magical charm over me. It might be that I am a Capricorn. It was a Monday morning, the beginning of horrible maths and physics and chemistry classes in school. The sweet note of ringing rain-balls wake me up and as I opened my eyes. I found a drowsy earth out there. But it sounded sweeter to my ear when mom declared that I would not have to go to school that day. The drum of joy started beating on my nerve. I did not care to leave my bed. Mom might have been cooking hotchpotch in her kitchen. For the sweet smell of my dish thrilled the atmosphere. I played Tagore’s songs on rainy season in my music system. The occasional clapping of clouds added spice to my mood. I wished the day might continue till the last day of the earth.


Tuesday, August 4, 2009

SPIRIT OF ASTHAMI EVENING

I fancy whether violet and yellow agree with each other. But neon and sodium vapour flooded the air with a prehistoric mystery. The atmosphere was trembling with drumbeat as if waiting for something very special to happen. The rustling of sarees, exquisite smell of French deodorant made the expectation yet more tempting and luring. The blue-bronze sky made above head a Persian canopy studded with diamonds and emeralds. The evening looked like the queen of Babylonia who had died long ago but her spirit still haunts in the purity of beauty and aestheticism.

It was Asthami night. The spirit of festivity was at its peak. I was standing in a dark corner of our neighbourhood pandel. My expectant eyes were looking for her. But I could not find her. I wondered where she might be at that moment. Would she be that cruel not to allow my eyes to have a glimpse of her. Drums were beating at the rhythm of my heart beat. Now I understood what was the expectation that rent the air, what was about to happen. It was she who was going to grace the occasion with her majestic presence.

Such is the spirit of the Asthami night—when every bit of life is radiant with elegance and splendor. As if cosmic Mother let loose the heavenly beauty on everything. Even my next door girl looked so cute that I sneaked a surreptitious glance at her. The imagination of Vedic poet captives the cosmic motherhood in the idol of Ma Bhagabati Durga. An incessant flow of bliss was streaming down from her. Suddenly drum beat went mad. A tremor made its way through the crowd. Yes, she arrived. Her reddish purple saree caught the entire pandle in blaze. I bequeathed Mother Durga not to allow her pain my soul any more. May there be a little room for me in her otherwise indifferent cruel heart.

Sunday Afternoon

Burtrend Russell rightly observed “Only fool dies in workhouse”. And God could not deny the fact. So, He establishes a rule of rest day ie. Sunday. This is the day when workhouse let loose its hand on us. On Sunday we are a lot of free and frolicking people. Sunday has a universal, if not eternal, appeal on people. The very approaching of Sunday brings about a queer pleasure in our mindset. Sunday yields a mysterious chemistry even in a die-heart stern man thus metamorphoses him into a funny and amusing man. Who does not welcome Sunday with a smiling heart. This is the day when man takes rest.

But each man has its own definition of rest. There may be one who undertakes a long bi-cycle ride on Sunday. He feels he has his rest. He feels his soul is recharged. He is ready to take is next week assignment afresh. But I enjoy Sunday in my own style. I enjoy sleep, reading literature, listening to music and participating in games. But sleeping is the top most agenda in my Sunday treat-list. I rise late on Sunday morning. However Sunday is not complete without some of my favourite dishes form Mom’s kitchen. My Sunday flows quietly and lazily and I enjoy every bit of it. I am fond of reading Agatha Christie. An adventure of Herclue Poirot just foots the bill of my Sunday afternoon.

I personally prefer and absolutely private holiday. The day I want to live only with my family. Seldom I do invite any guest on Sunday.

Monday, August 3, 2009

SWEET MEMORIES OF SCHOOL DAYS

It is very sweet to recall those happy days when I was learning my first lessons and playing and adventuring at my school. Who can ever forget school days? Walking down memory lane, I find the days are still fresh in my memory. It was an early summer morning, my Mom took me to my first school. The colossal school building and hundreds of parents and students thronging in the school gate made me tensed and scared. But it was as if with a touch of golden magic wand that my scare transformed into a deep likings as soon as the lady teacher stepped into the class room. Her delicate and charming personality cast a pleasant atmosphere in the class and that was all the beginning of my long schooling days. When I turn the old pages of my school days I find them still studded with unforgettable experiences of outing and excursion with loving and caring teachers and various programmes that I had taken part actively.

The last day of my school was a mixed experience. We were vibrant with enthusiasm of stepping into the new horizon of higher studies and at the same time the very thought of parting from our school mates and beloved teachers made us awfully sorry.