Vanka’s Christmas
Vanka is a nine-year-old orphan
apprenticed to a shoemaker in Moscow. On Christmas Eve, while his master and
mistress are away, Vanka writes a letter to his grandfather who is a watchman
in a village. It is a heartbreaking letter which describes the beatings,
hunger, sleepless nights, humiliation, and forced labour that the little boy
has to endure day after day. He recalls how his grandfather used to shower
affection on him and also how the old man once got him a Christmas tree. The
letter is posted. The address on the envelope reads: “To Grandfather in the
village.”
Vanka is a character in a short story
of Anton Chekhov (1860-1904). The great writer ended the story without any
moral preaching, but letting the child’s faith collide silently with a cruel
social reality. The country was celebrating Christmas with joy and festivity,
while Vanka was weeping over the cruelty and injustice he had to endure. What
did Christmas mean to those who celebrated it when Vankas suffered pathetic misery?
Let me generalise that question: what
does religion mean to those who fight for it today?
Vanka is a symbol of the
vulnerability of the weaker sections of any society. He is also a symbol of the
emptiness of ritual without compassion. Christmas is a celebration of divine
love; yet in Vanka’s world there is not even basic human mercy, let alone joy
and goodwill. Vanka’s trust or hope in the system is misplaced too. The postal
system won’t deliver his letter to his grandfather simply because the address
is incomplete and nobody in the department is going to take the trouble of finding
out the writer and doing something about his condition. Christmas is merely an
idea, Chekhov suggests to us, not a lived ethic.
Religion has become just that today:
an idea (worse, a political idea) that has nothing to do with morality or
spirituality. On the contrary, more evil is perpetrated today in the name of
religion than anything else.
In the past few days in India, Christmas celebrations have been disrupted by the Hindu right wing. Churches were vandalised, carols objected to, and the festival was portrayed as “foreign.” Even children were not spared.
My state of Kerala was relatively
free of the kind of sectarianism that dominates the politics elsewhere in the
country. But this Christmas brought that disgusting Northern politics here too.
A children’s
Christmas carol was attacked by an RSS man in Palakkad. I had always hoped
that Kerala would stay above the depravity that has become the hallmark of
North Indian politics. Now I know that depravity spreads much faster than the
spirit of Christmas. Vanka is the reality; religion is always a myth, an
illusion.
Vanka’s voice is soft. The religion
around him is vociferous.
Religion in today’s India is
violently vociferous. Confident and punitive.
Chekhov wrote Vanka’s story over a
century ago. If the story were rewritten today, Vanka’s letter would still not
reach its destination. Instead it will in all likelihood become a political
weapon with the right wing questioning the very right of Vanka to exist in the
country that belongs to a particular community which claims that the country is
theirs only.
The real question raised by Vanka is
not whether Christmas is our festival or theirs; rather it is: Do
we understand what festivals are for?


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