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Dear S,
I don’t know if you’d even remember me after all these
decades, but I find myself writing to you as if it were only yesterday that we
parted ways. You were one of the few friends I had at school. You may be amused
to know that a drawing of yours that you gifted me stayed with me until I left
Kerala after school. Half a century later, I still remember that beautiful
pencil drawing, the picture of a vallam (Kerala’s canoe) resting on a
shore beneath a coconut tree that slanted over a serene river on whose other
bank was an undulating hilly landscape. A few birds flew happily in the sky. Though
it was all done in pencil, absolutely black and white, my memories of it carry
countless colours.
I wonder where you are now. A few
years later, when I returned to Kerala on holiday, I did visit your village to
enquire about you. But the village had changed much and your hut on the hill
wasn’t seen anymore. Maybe, you moved on. Maybe, you took up your father’s
trade and became a blacksmith. If you had become a successful artist, I would
have known. But I know that Kerala never sustained anything that didn’t bring
in instant profits particularly in the 1970s. Your art must have gone the way
of all those potentially great souls that lay buried in Thomas Grey’s cemetery
in his Elegy.
Do you remember how we sneaked into
the government hospital in your village to see a foetus which was rumoured to
have two horns? And the thrill we experienced when we finally espied it in a
jar that was kept under a table as if it was a dreaded evil waiting for an exorcist?
A human foetus with horns. Just imagine it had grown to maturity in its
mother’s womb and was delivered to the earth. How would that affect history?
The truth is that I didn’t see any
horns on the head of that foetus. You said you did. I was always slow to see
details. Did your perceptive skills carry you far in life? I hope they did.
Whether it was my lack of those skills or some other reason, I know not, I
didn’t get far in life. Now, exactly half a century after we parted ways from
St Sebastian’s School, I’m back in my village with a lot of experiences and
memories, many of which I would have been happy to share with you. And I wish I
could listen to your story as well.
I’m sure the stories, yours and mine,
will be more shadows than sunshine. Our days were destined to be steeped in
sadness, with only fleeting touches of joy, merely because we were born in the
generation of the baby boomers.
That very name, ‘Baby Boomers’,
brings a smirk to my lips. The boomers filled the Sebastian’s campus with
children. Some 3000 or so, if I remember correctly. Fifty years later, when I
visited the same campus, it was nearly deserted. Hardly a few students. Today
Kerala has the lowest birth rate among Indian states. Moreover, no one who can
afford to pay fees in an English medium school will ever send his children to
schools like our alma mater which still has the huge campus but has refused to
evolve with the times.
The most ludicrous irony is that the
teachers in Sebastian’s and other such schools that are unwanted by the
majority of Keralites draw far higher salaries than their counterparts in the
private English medium schools which are overcrowded. Governments never learn
sense: that seems to be a universal truth.
But the teachers today in Sebastian’s
must be much kinder than those we had there, I am sure. Remember all those cane
beatings we got from almost every teacher for no reason other than the maxim: Spare
the rod and spoil the child? I remember you used to speak about some herbal
ointment that could reduce the pain of those beatings and your quest was to
find those herbs every morning. My mornings were filled with Hail Marys
intended to move Holy Mary’s heart that would save me from the beatings.
When people speak about their
childhood with nostalgia, I look back with a heaviness that comes from lingering
regrets and fading scars. How do you feel when you look back at those days?
Never mind, right? This is how life
is. We are here on this planet only for learning certain lessons and then go to
our graves with those lessons. Absurd? Exactly. That’s what life is.
I would love to hear from you on
this. I am sure you will have another story to tell. And that may be more
enlightening. Who knows!
Waiting to hear from you.
Yours…….
PS. This post is a part of ‘Scribbled
and Sealed Blog Hop’ hosted by Manali
Desai and Sukaina Majeed
under #EveryConversationMatters
Hari Om
ReplyDeleteWhat a moving and revealing letter... This is an interesting idea. I sat for a little while wondering who I might write to, or where it would lead. I found no impetus from childhood - but there is one friend from my 30s who was withdrawn from me and on whom I sometimes reflect and wonder if she is still in that situation, or if she managed to escape it and develop a more open life once more... YAM xx
I'm willing to wait as long as you wish for your letter to that friend of yours. It will be a blend of many things, I'm sure - not just nostalgia.
DeleteI do miss some of my old classmates. May be 'missing' is a wrong word. It's like curiosity to know how they would look back and see the same reality.
If your friend had the geniusm s of crafting nature in the contrast of shadow and light, you are an excellent wordsmith. If nurtured, he would have turned out to be a craftsman - blending his genes of blacksmithy and drawing. May be he is one already, out of your RADAR. The Pathos of the Baby Boomer Generation has its own potential. You and me are proof enough! And that I am crafting this comment, by a running bus, which actually is not running, but swept up and down by the waves, that too myself turning to the back of the bus, is better proof.
ReplyDeleteYou're right. I have no idea what he made of himself - outside my radar. In fact, none of my classmates of those years are in touch with a singular exception - one who stopped his car in front of my house a few years back when he saw me, and asked, "Are you Tomichan?" It was a rare moment of recognition.
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