Thursday, May 27, 2021

The Nights Are Long

The Nights are long

Fear thick in the air

Was is not the same at the beginning of Time?

Wild beings and beasts, tempests aplenty.

Rome and Carthage. To Glory and Destruction

In Jerusalem stands memorium to a Cross. Life in Death.

Perpetuity.

The small window to the World that we live in

As the Sun glides from morn till night, changing the angles

Motes of light floating - iridescent, effervescent

Time. Grinding us down but what if it is only strives to show us in our strength and our timidity.

Fear and Glory

Not for God or Country

Not for Temples or Palaces

Not to be afraid of every changing atom for it is but a gift

To be lived and enjoyed. In Joy

Hold it and embrace it to your Heart for there will not be another moment like it.


Wednesday, July 6, 2016

When is Too Much,Too Much?The Dhaka Episode

The more one becomes Modern the more primitive one wants to be.Where once we ran after mobile telephony,emails,24*7 connectivity,we now want that small pause from being connected at all times,from being available to office at all hours,firefighting.

Time.The thing that has many definitions.But its one thing that cannot be put on 'pause'.It cannot be slowed down,at least not on Earth and not within the grounds of 'gravity'.

What we abhored is what we now desire.Privacy.The luxury of being away from 'breaking news' at all times.So how did this pursuit if happiness change over the last three decades?

Everyone seems to be having one foot outside the bounds of sanity.Travelling on the subway sometimes I watch the harried faces always trying to be 'cool',all knowing,skittish,scheming to have the last word.So what keeps one sane?

I think most of us in our regular lives almost daily cross the fine line between sanity and insanity.What pulls most back into the green is the deja`vu of the set routines,those infinitesimal positives that generate hope.

The demagogue inspires but also defeats the purpose of  communication.Because to them only what they say is right and all that matters.When you can obliviate the other's viewpoint,then and only then are you truly sunk.The small implosions define who we are and what matters.

If I only believed that I am the only one with the divine right to live or speak or in my faith then incidents like Dhaka will be repeated with more frequency in the coming years.This suspension of belief that other people with different outlooks too may be right is what defined Hitler and the what best describes the Islamists.

Mr Shekhar Kapoor,a very erudite film maker tweeted that this killing or the hundreds preceding it in California,Texas,Baghdad,Tel Aviv,Jerusalem,Hyderabad or Mumbai is not what the majority muslim view of Islam is.

On this the holy day of Eid I say,if the majority did not nod their silent heads silently or not weed out the killers of innocent amoungst them,then this radical islam would not have had the nourishment required to become the Hydra it has become!

Will the 'good'muslims kill the 'bad'muslims?Will the good ones become extinct?

What is certain however is the road to medievalism beckons.Until the humanity inside each one of us screams out there is no doubt that there will be many more Dhakas,pointless,anarchic but very much a symbol of modern man's quest for its primitive roots.

Thursday, April 28, 2016

Punjab - The Land of Five Rivers:Reminescences of a Neem Tree,Part I

It is strange how the first memories of people we meet,places we visit,food we eat,are always the strongest.Ever afterwards we subconsciously compare our subsequent experiences with 'that' first time.

1979.A nine year old born and raised in the congested surroundings of Calcutta had his first rendezvous with the birthplace of his fathers -  Punjab.A village in Hoshiarpur district.A dusty forty minute bus ride from the district centre.


Those memories are as crystal clear as if it was yesterday that I got off the bus in the late afternoon sun of a mellow summer.The adobe brick house was the tallest in the village,with an open courtyard and one of the rooms was mud brick.

The roof dazed me.I had never seen so much open space in my short life.Wheat and yellow flowered mustard fields stretched out and across my entire field of vision.The dome of an alabaster white Gurdwara stood out amidst the green.

Sleeping under the giant Neem tree in the courtyard on 'charpoys' with a stick under the bed to ward of snakes.The brightness of the stars and constellations and waking up at 4:30am to the sound of shabad floating on the wind from the unseen Gurdwara.

So close to nature.To where my ancestors must have toiled for generations.


And the first peacock,not those mangy specimens of Calcutta Zoo,but a real wild one,dazzling plumage,the deepest blue neck and about 5 feet away.Thankfully a few survive till date in the surrounding villages.
Guests coming to see the 'important' visitors from the distant big city.Drinking gallons of smoked milk flavoured with jaggery.The freshest 'Makki ki roti' and 'Sarson da Saag'.

The village plumber and oddjobs man using a lassoe to trip bullocks before shoeing them.The thud as they fell and how important to get them shoed.The gentle ride on a buffalo cart,undulating between wheat and sugarcan fields and a mango orchard that stretched for 3 kilometres at places the leaves so dense that the sunlight could not penetrate to the ground at high noon.

Gone today in the mindless urbanisation.The orchards and wheat fields.For exotic vegetables.And the scrouge of mosquitoes that came fifteen years after my first visit when rice was introduced.

Those friends of my age with whom we contructed a swing from the branches of that Neem tree now long immigrated to Canada and the USA or UK.London,Ealing,Southall.Vancouver,Toronto,Reno and New York.

Gone that innocence.The landscape survives.A mere reminder of the 'Green Revolution' and the prosperity.A tough but satisfying life.

Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Mountains In The Mist

The serpent eagle was shielded by the green boughs.But I knew it was there.I had seen it fly into the dense leafy branches of the cedar.


Welcome to the remote village of Kaluk in west Sikkim.Sitting in the lap of the mighty Kanchendzonga Peak,it lies close to Gyalshing,the anciet capital of west Sikkim.Across the hill lies the more famous town of Pelling.As the whitecapped clouds scuppered away in the morning breeze I caught my first glimpse of the third highest Peak in the world – Mt.Kanchedzonga.

My journey began 560 Kms from this Shangri La or lost paradise(in Tibetan),in conditions dramatically different.Hot,humid,sultry Kolkata.Although the summer heat was giving way to milder conditions in the month of October,it still was bloody hot!
  
My quiet night journey ended at NJP station in Siliguri with a much needed air conditioned car waiting.Karma Sherpa,a soft spoken native of Kaluk drove the Innova the 124 Kms from NJP to Kaluk via NH 31A with stops in Tadong and Jorethang.The higher we climbed the more we felt as if we were shedding our urban skin,the noise and pollution of Siliguri but a memory.Tall cedar and oak trees lined the road,unnamed bright red orchids peeping from the front yards of small mudbrick houses.
  

 

Finally our destination.5600 ft. Up from sea level the resort.Small yet comfortable cottages with a small balcony and the first thing I see is a reclining chair!The stress seems to drain out in the pristine air,sharp and one can almost feel the oxygen going into the lungs!The gardens are laid out in terraces,I hear a cow mooing somewhere,I see a pig pen,vegetable gardens,I see swifts flying high up between where i stand and the mountains.

I see butterflies.The size of small birds.Vivid blue,black,red,gold yellow.I have never seen such a variety before.The owner has brought kiwi vines from Arunachal further to the north-east and I see three or four kiwis growing on the trellised vines.The “viewpoint”is a meandering path topped out over a bamboo grove where the valley falls away precipitiously to meet the Rangit river many thousands of feet below.The pine needles have fallen on the ground over years and built into a layer which feels soft and strangely soothing when walking on naked feet.



The varshey rhododendron sanctuary – it of the magnificent mutli shaped orchids of the strangest hues of purple and pink,unimaginable in its diversity.

The singular Tchangey falls,twin slivers of water drifting away as mist even before hitting the ground.To the Pemayansgtse Monastery in Pelling,smelling of incense and a huge prayer wheel.Eating hot momos at a nearby tin shack restaurant.


Rested,refreshed after a three day break we headed back to our old life....and reality!!

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Bengali New Year,Circa 1422...Why I Still Have Faith

Why a post on Bengali New Year one may ask?

For one,I was born in Bengal.
Second,I grew up surrounded by all things Bengali
Most importantly,I have seen this amazing culture which in many ways is India,embracing others,influencing but never coercing.Enhancing everyone who touches it.


Across India,the Bengali has been stereotyped as a lazy person who talks more,does less,generally lives in the past and is totally ambitionless.This is so pervasive that some of my Bengali friends themselves believe this.

Yes they do hold onto Rabindranath Tagore,Netaji Subash Chandra Bose but let us not forget these people left a defining impression on the course of Indian history and not an overstatement to say that they not only defined it but changed the direction.Then there is the Bengali Renaissance,a socio culturural reform movement in the early nineteenth century led by Raja RamMohan Roy that questioned the prevailing orthodoxies like 'sati'or bride burning,polygamy and other practises that were corroding the very fabric of Hinduism.

Kadambini Ganguly was the first woman graduate from India.Henry Louis Vivian Derozio,an anglo Indian wrote about the glorious country that India was.

Swami Vivekananda,Sri Aurobindo,and Sri Ramakrishna were the leading philosophers whose vision is still relevant.

The war of Independence began from Barrackpore with Mangal Pandey then Binoy,Badal and Dinesh and Khudiram fanned the flames.

One blog is not enough to talk about character,some of them British,Scottish and Irish who were infuenced by the climes of Bengal to set up instititutions of learning that survive till today.The scientists,industrialists etc

India does not know how to cherish its history.Go to Plassey or Chandannagore and see the lack of care with which monuments are treated.


Yet like a phoenix that rises from the ashes,Bengalis abound.I will always remember a chance meeting with journalist Vir Sanghvi many years ago in Delhi who said,"the best work by bengalis is done outside of Bengal".

The sheer locational advantage of Kolkata and Bengal as a gateway to the natural resources of the East,a deep water port,fertile soil means that it will not take much for an agrarian-industrial economy to thrive.Like a wild creeper that just needs a foothold,a crevicefull of soil,a snatched handful of sunlight.

There were some noises made around 2007 of opening Nathula for Chinese goods to flow through Calcutta Port,of industries in the hinterland that subsided into political chaos.

Politics is and will remain the bete-noire of business unless the will to triumph.If Narendra Modi can make a wasteland like Gujarat prosperous then Bengal is far better equipped.

All those bengali classmates of mine today plying their trade in Delhi,Mumbai,Bangalore,Muscat or California have wistful ideas in some hidden corner of their heart to one day come back and do something.Of monsoon rains,freshwater fish.

Of Rabindranath Tagore's saying,"IF NO ONE WALKS WITH YOU.WALK ALONE".

A Bengal that will claim its rightful place in a modern,digital India.I have faith.







Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Nothing Ever Dies...

It is the faith in the heart
 That makes
 A dead dream
Worth resurrecting.

                               -haiku by unnamed writer.

This  is the picture of  the circuitry inside my brain.Latent images,memories  of incidents past,imprints of good or not so good experiences,people I have met.Just like the horseshoe impression left in the wet sand left by a horse minutes or hours before I was there,yet like a memory clinging to the last vestiges of recognance.
The brain like everything else is a machine.It needs to work at a certain pace not to rust and become a useless appendage.It also needs rest to repair and mend itself.
I see people around me,rushing.Rushing to prove that they are doing whatever the 'herd' thinks is in.Rushing to get in enough activity even on vacations so that they can stay ahead of the Joneses last vac!!Do they end up more tired post holiday?
How many of us have simply lain on a beach with a book we have wanted to read for ages?Or sat in that front yard of the Himalayan hotel looking at snowclad peaks?Or taken a scuba a few metres below the sea to look at the silent blue world down there?
Are we afraid that our friends or peers will call us lazy?Does our ego drive us ever onwards like lemmings towards an ocean of self destruction?
I read a beautiful quote somewhere that said,"Its good to sometimes pause in the pursuit of happiness and just be happy".
Guess as one ages the simple pleasures of childhood,the forgotten tastes come back stronger.At least it is so for me.
Yet it is more difficult to give the brain a rest than anyone may think.Just try to keep it blank and just in the trying sometimes the fears or phobias come back stronger.Even though I admire Deepak Chopra I do not agree that meditation done by a hungry beggar will make him forget his hunger or a person struggling with emotional or financial issues forget those.
The true Yogis spend years,sometimes lifetimes learning to disassociate self from soul.And most failed.We who struggle with the daily rigours of life are hardly capable.
So rather than put pressure on oneself to do what works for others just...pause.....and think what makes you happy.....and do that...!!

I was born by the river in a little tent
Oh and just like the river I've been running ever since
It's been a long, a long time coming
But I know a change gonna come, oh yes it will

It's been too hard living but I'm afraid to die
Cause I don't know what's up there beyond the sky
It's been a long, a long time coming
But I know a change gonna come, oh yes it will

Sam Cooke,1963

To be honest,Change always comes.It comes with the good,the bad and the ugly.Inevitably it comes.Like taxes and death,Change is a certainty.Some things go round but some things are gone forever.Let us accept and move on.

Yet having accepted everything,it galls me to see children and the aged begging on the streets.Not the countless Nobel laureates,the IIT and IIM grads and all those super-'thinktanks' have a solution.So I guess there aint a single-simple solution!

Nothing ever dies,it just changes shape.

Socialism is alive and well as many Americans found out during the 2008 bailout.Capitalism too took on a socialsitic face.Old fashions come back with new names.It is as if the atmosphere of this Earth holds in not only the entire 'matter' but also the soul of things as well.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Nomads

Muflisi aur yeh Mazahir hai nazar ke samne
 Saikaron Changez-O-Nadir hain nazar ke samne
Saikaron Sultan-O-Jabir hain nazar ke samne
 Ay Gham-e-Dil kya karun, Ay Wahshat-e-Dil kya karoon

Le ke ek Changez ke Hathon se khanjar tor doon
 Taj per us ke damakte hein jo pathar tor doon
 Koi tore ya na tore mein hi barh ke tor doon
 Ay Gham-e-dil kya karoon, Ay Wahshat-e-dil kya karoon...

extract from Majaz Lakhnawi's awesome poem 'Awara'

I am a nomad,son of an ancient land of nomads.Descended from a peculiar mix of people who lived at the confluence of a traditional thoroughfare for invading armies over the millenia.Alexander the Great and his Macedonians would have known my ancestors in the Punjab.Ghauri,khilji,Tughlak and Nadir Shah all came into India through those broad plains.

The result was a landless,literate,proud people,difficult to govern and always looking to the far horizons to find that fortune or just see the world.They covered the breadth of India,then Europe and the Americas until there is hardly a country in the world that has not known some of us.Where we settled we took on the indigenous customs,inter married with local people and are a generally law abiding people who brought raw intellect,strong bodies,a sense of independence and the realization that wherever i am is home.


All of us have a story to tell.Shaped by where we were born and where we grew up.For those who have ever done even basic diving - its a totally different perspective,widening your world with a view above,below and all around at once.Difficult to know where to focus on at any one moment!Its sometimes(for me its most of the time)tough to know which way to take,which story to follow and which crossroads to take.

In the potpourri that is India with a myriad cultures,traditions,mores;not one single strand can represent the complete picture.Each state tries to impose its language or its sense of asthetics.Can we as a Nation survive the regional parochialism?

I remember a decade back the Punjab government decided to have all road signs changed to Gurmukhi.Me as a Punjabi who can speak but not read or write gurmukhi had a terrible time driving around the countryside.The irony would not be lost on you-A Punjabi lost in Punjab!



My whole issue with Islam is that they try to 'impose' their beliefs through force rather than letting the finer aspects(and there are many)shine through to persuade.Its as if Islam was born for the Jihadis.The politilians have used it to foster insecurity and keep the mullahs as shepherds to control the flock.I was startled to discover that in Kashmir ,most riots happen on fridays which being the day of Jumah,fire and brimstone preaching by hardline mullahs in every mosque leads to a squabble bursting out onto the streets raining stones and what have you on whatever catches their fancy which is mostly the police and security forces.

This is the age of PR and none can do better than our political class.The question that most disturbs me is that the majority is too defeated to change the status quo and a small inority feels that there is no alternative to picking up the gun.

Who will stop then?Change their world view?

Its just not in India.Look at Syria,Libya,Pakistan,Africa,the Balkans...

A Zulu friend around a long ago campfire in the South Africa bushveld during a heated discussion on what ailed the mineral rich continent said,"Nkosi sikelele i Afrika".

God Save Africa.

I can say the same for India and about two fifths of the rest of the World!!

Dichotomies exist.Only in the promixity does one feel alive.Memories of being chased by an enraged Elephant in Betla National Park,being a few feet away from the unfurled trunk ready to pluck me out and ground me in the dust.Having survived,the rest of the normal,boring day seemed like a miracle!

Too many of us are living with petty politics,selfishness and obsession with our infinite jealousies.After thousands of years of living in societies we are as yet marooned from those next to us.

Be not like the butterfly(Monarch not included) that lives and dies in the same patch of garden where it was pupaed.

Be a Nomad.