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Rev Joseph Elavanal SDB in cassock |
Cordialness is more natural to humans than war. That
is my experience in general. It may be because my associations with people were
severely limited by my shyness and social anxiety which is not exactly introversion.
An unexpected encounter with Reverend Joseph Elavanal SDB [Salesian of Don
Bosco] evoked a flood of thoughts and memories in me.
I had been invited by Orchid Spell Bee to be a judge of a
state-level spelling competition for school students. The competition went on
the whole day from 9 am to 6 pm. Hundreds of students from class one to eight
participated from various parts of Kerala. Though there were 5 judges taking
turns, the duty was quite hectic, and I had reasons to be relieved when the
event was drawing to a close with the appearance of a Catholic priest in immaculate
cassock at the far end of the auditorium.
I didn’t recognise Father Joseph
Elavanal who was introduced to me by the organisers as the Rector (without
mentioning his name) of the school where the competition was held. When I
mentioned that I was an ex-Salesian (member of the religious congregation
founded by Don Bosco), he recognised me sooner than I could locate him in my
memory. But it took only flash of a moment for me to realise that I was holding
the hand of a man who was in charge of our novitiate batch for the whole year.
As soon as the programme concluded,
he invited me to their ‘house’ (as Salesians call their seminary). I had made
an attempt during the lunch break to find that house in order to seek out anyone
whom I knew from the old days. I couldn’t locate it, however. The reason: it
was a very unassuming tiny building tucked into a corner of the school campus.
It looked like a minor appendage of the school itself.
Fr Elavanal led me through a narrow
corridor flanked by an office and reception on one side and a chapel on the
other. He took me directly to the refectory and made me a cup of coffee, asking
my preferences all the way: strong or light, sugar or sugarless? His geniality
struck a deep chord within me. We were meeting after a gap of over four
decades. Yet the warmth that his cordiality exuded made me speechless.
I listened to him recalling the
others of our batch that he took care of in the novitiate. He has a terrific
memory. He was remembering people whom he left in 1979, the end of our
novitiate. I was there in the congregation for a few more years and so my
friendship with him continued a little while more. But it ended totally in mid-80s
when I left the congregation.
The aroma of the coffee still lingers, two days after the meeting. That’s how human relationships are, I thought, unless some pervert creeps in with divisive histories and objectives. Human relationships, I’ve come to realise time and again, have an innate grace which chooses to forget unpleasant past, not out of denial, but out of a quiet yearning to experience the tenderness of love and friendship. Such tenderness returns, unbidden and sincere, reminding us that connection matters more than conflict.
The credit for all pics in this post goes to Spell Bee.
The Humanum is a Symbol of the Grace of the Cosmotheandric experience, where the Divine and the Cosmic and the Human meet, blendingly, with an enchanting Aroma, surrendering one another, in mutual self-gift. It evokes nostalgia and unconditional gratitude.
ReplyDeleteI learnt a new word. You're right, there's something transcendental about human relationships.
DeleteAlso Hope in the Graciousness of Reality, as MotherFatherSophiaWisdom.
ReplyDeleteAlso Hope, in the Graciousness of Reality, as it unfolds, in everydayness. Human touch evokes in us, the sense of the Giftedness of Reality, ss MotherFarherSophiaWisdomCare, without hyphenation.
ReplyDeleteHari Om
ReplyDeleteSuch a blissful post to read from you, dear blogpal! All so very true... YAM xx
Was a lovely serene read indeed!
ReplyDeleteIt is interesting what we remember and what we don't. It's amazing to reconnect after 40 years. It sounds like you had a good chat.
ReplyDeleteNothing is more sustaining and energizing than cordiality and good relationships. It must have been such a nostalgic experience for you to be at the place where you were duirng your formative years and also to connect with landmarks and people rekindling old memories.
ReplyDelete