Thursday, December 3, 2015

''Aaaaste ladies...Kole bachcha achhe....'' - Yeh Hai Kolkata Meri Jaan!










In continuation with my personal account of the recent India visit, Kolkata has got me stumped. It was a week back when I woke up to the usual cacophony of crows and honking of motorcycles and buses from my Subodh Mallik Square residence in central Calcutta, I realized my world has changed overnight.



The jetlag was so bad, that I had been staggering sideways every time I struggled to leave the bed and tell myself that I didn't share a meal with the zombies last night. Fortunately, besides the terrible dust and pollution, the weather God was considerably generous to somewhat dethrone the humidity level if not entirely. All I really had to do was pry myself from my envious forever-21 scarf and jacket, and allow my pores to breathe in an already soggy t-shirt once out of the airport terminal on a November morning. Thank God there were four moderately healthy people from my family waiting to receive me with an illuminating smile and a hefty Bhojpuri bhayia to move my luggage into the boot and drive away with the AC blasting its chill at me on the front seat in full swing. The feeling of stepping in a palatial house of the pre-independence era, that you are lucky to call your in-law's is very different from living three sixty five days in your much endeared townhome overseas, that you might very well be missing for the next one and half months. Anything from a little cold water over my head, to a pair of old pajama encrusted with powdered camphor balls stacked up in the cupboard felt nothing short of heavenly. To wind up, a plateful of loochi and aloor dom for a Bengali breakfast on a vegetarian Tuesday wasn't too much to ask for. And finally, I let gravity help me crawl in to my comfortable bed and soon my spirits conked off for next fifteen hours.


As a matter of fact, for an English-speaking non-resident Indian in Calcutta, mustering people skill isn't duck soup. Another morning dawned in the heart of my city of joy, though there weren't too many reasons to feel joyful about that day. My dad was due with a minor surgery of his hernia that he had been procrastinating for couple of years now, and I was finally waiting outside the operation theatre to hear the pleasant news of the process smoothly getting over. Family, relatives, and friends assembled to convey their good wishes. Most of us were out since early morning, and were ravenous, so we conveniently decided to peek into the hospital cafeteria to grab a bite. My mom and aunt preferred to stay back at the visitor's lounge and we were guided erratically yet determinedly through the dismal corridors that at last led us to a raucous crowd. The cafe area was congested with monobloc chairs, so much so that it interfered in the space between the pantry and the cash counter. Everyone except those busy munching on 'cha aar bishkut' looked blank in their faces and the waiters (I choose to put the term 'steward' away here)  could hardly decipher what we were expecting from them. Arghhh!


We five somehow managed to squeeze ourselves in oafishly at a table that had the ceiling fan glaring at us in a manner that emanated a certain sullenness. No wonder, the fan was unsparingly expelled from its routine duties for next four months. As a matter of fact, the issues someone 'fresh from the land of milk and honey' faces in communicating with quintessential Kolkatans is nothing to do with either one's Yankee blood or the lavish ways of survival abroad. It purely roots from the reality that we tend to show adequate respect to whomsoever we come across and the respect is pronounced through certain very selectively polite words along with the useless hope to exchange few basic pleasantries :

''Good Morning! May I have the menu please?'' - I chirped in.
In response to that blue story from this khadi kurta clad (for a welcome change) alien, the waiter standing next to our table gave me a 'Ki je bolen didi' (What crap you chattering sister!) sort of a look and was sure to snigger. ''Boshun boshun'' (Come, take a seat) - He chortled passing on the menu card that displayed a long list of junks starting from Khasta Kochuri to Shingara, from double dim er omelet to Chicken 'Chowmin' (I insist, it is 'chowmin'). Nom nom!


All of a sudden a coarse voice chimed in the background - ''Eii Ghontuuuu!!! Kothaye more geli? Jaa jaa giye jol ta tebile e diye aye.'' (Ghontu, where the hell are you? Go and serve water at the table)
Living in Kolkata, one is bound to get accustomed to be thrust upon with servants over and over again. Plenty of them. It is a part of the upper middle class Bong living, that we, most of the probashis aren't privileged with. And it is probably my American middle class savoir-faire, that makes me uncomfortable to see a young boy of ten-twelve years being bombarded with those unrighteous commands, and the poor child has no option but to lay down his arms. Out here, I emphasize the usage of the word 'servants' because that is exactly how upper and middle class Indians refer to them, and this is how they are treated. Though the proverb goes - If you pay peanuts, you get monkeys, the scenario specifically in Kolkata functions reversely. It is ostensibly, the impact of the incontrovertible British rule, that has perhaps got India’s privileged classes prospering hand over fist vastly owing to the boom of IT, but sadly there is still a significant number of lumpen-precariats oppressed in a position of financial dependency and subjugation. In West, equality and respect for all is a way of life, and the one serving us at a fine dining restaurant is not always necessarily catering to the whims and fancies of certain guests because they are compelled to, for the sake of their own bread and butter, more so because they develop a sense of independence and freedom at a very early age. Sharing a shelter with the parents after eighteen is close to a disgrace to them, and they take pride in considering themselves self-sufficient and that is exactly what they instill within their children too. 


Likely to be the British extraction, who believe in helping themselves in all situations with requisite self-sufficiency, similar to most of the Yankees, even I and my husband prefer doing things for ourselves, hence being served always make us feel slightly guilty. Even after being brought up in India for last thirty to thirty five years, maids and waiters make us faintly uncomfortable and therefore we are inherently extra generous with them in our words and gestures, which to the temperament of the average Indian may usually appear downrightly comical.


Though it was the eleventh month of the year, I brooded that gone were the days when we were small and the Winter lasted for roughly two and half months with the seasonal lows dipping to 45-52 °F (9–11 °C). With every year passing by, the tropical delight actually tends to torture us now, especially those who have left their snow-laden wonderland behind in pursuit of meeting their families. I am referring to myself, who has been despairingly and despondently missing her New Jersey wind chill that could have followed with the Winter lover pulling out the hoodies and furry coats for herself and the consort. In my observation, it's the heavy moisture in the air of amar shonar bangla and the overcast sky, that is contributing to make the atmosphere muggy and the days agonizing for Kolkatans.

''Dada, ektu fan ta chaliye deben?'' (Dada, could you please turn on the fan?) - I requested.
''Pakha ta...................hmmm...maneeeeee....chaliye debo?????'' - Pat came the hesitant reply.
In no time I ended up resembling a buffoon and it fleetly struck me back, that for my dear dadas and didis, it is officially Winter, regardless of how sweaty and restless one feels without the luxury of a fan or the air-condition.  


However, I was successful in convincing this dada at the eatery that we did need the fan to stay alive in a claustrophobic রেস্টুরেন্ট (Restaurant), that was further constricted by a swarm of horribly perspiring chhele (guys) and meye (Girl). We placed a minimum order of black coffee and Shingara and my folks' hunger seemed like the best sauce then. For me, everybody was curiously and diligently leafing through the menu to settle with something not even with a dash of deep fried morsel and of course low in calorie. The only item my eyes could stop at was the option of a choco-bar. After my doting folks were through, I went ahead to eagerly ask him for the ice cream.
''Amar jonyo ekta choco-bar'' (A choco-bar for me please) - I declared. 


''Ice cream taaa.....Hobe na. Ekhon sheet er shomoye...'' - The waiter uniformed in a plain white formal shirt answered. Quite dishearteningly, there was no shivering Bengali behind his signature monkey cap this time. You know what? It is yet to come. January maash ta ashuk. (Let the month of Jan arrive) Bwah-hah-hah!


A new day, a new assignment. I have been transporting the burden of getting my birth certificate corrected, from one part of the mother earth to another. Sometimes, it is just a mare piece of paper that costs you enough hurdles, harassments, denials and a lot of running errand to ensure something as vital as the issuance of your citizenship of the Yankee Doodles goes right. So, however crude and disastrous it might feel, you are ought to bear the brunt of gracing the maximum number of government offices in Kolkata with your Yankee presence just to discover and rediscover, WHO can finally come to your rescue and show you the legal way for obtaining a modified birth certificate with your full name imprinted on it instead of you addressed as 'Baby Sinha', and divulged as a chunk of pink flesh weighing 9.5 pounds, 'born to Mrs. Uma Sinha'.  Finally, after a lot of uncertainty, the husband's bum chum buddy intervened to make my life easier with his lawful volition, and Kolkata's Bankshall Court was the ultimate destination. Voila!


I was given a fair warning of the terminal aspects of crime that I was going to witness at the venue, leave aside the ramshackle infrastructure of the court that could throttle someone in his fine fettle in a blink with its sooty walls and rusty grilles. The waiting room was bursting in its clamorous debates amongst our brothers and sisters whose corpus came in different shapes and sizes. They were sweating like whores in the church and subsequently effused a redolence that smothered us as though we were beaten to within an inch of our lives. The honorable judge was supposed to show up at 14:00 hrs, only to bless our affidavits with his precious autograph, but left us in sheer unpredictability as it was already 14:30 hrs. 


This is another factor that makes us, the Indians, be it resident or non-resident, stand out from the rest of the world that follows an altogether different clock but we, can't part with our pitiable punctuality and its plaintive consequences which, the overtly smart Aryans as well as Dravidians strive to manipulate with their daily shenanigans to no avail. Sigh!


Here came Her Highness, the judge, at 15:15 hrs, draped in a floral green and orange cotton saree, her shankha pola (The traditional Bengali Red and White bangles symbolic of one's marital status) and the much lionized didir hawai choti. (Hawai slippers)
Soon to my amusement, the crowd started moving forward and a shrill proclamation echoed into the ears registering straight on to the brain for next ten days - ''Samner dike egiye jaan!'' (Please proceed forward).


I was bewildered to see an unusually quiet and meek judge for the very first time in my life, who, with all due respect, seemed nothing more than literate to me. Her constant prompter, a gentleman garbed in a Black coat looked more like a judge than her, and guided her through the testimonials on each page and even pointed the space wherein she was supposed to sign. Nevertheless, time was limited, one could only glance through the documents, and I was no one to cast my doubt on our Her Highness's credentials. 


The thing with the Indian reservation system is invariably controversial and has resulted in many protracted legal disputes and plentitude of legal interpretations. Yet it continues to dominate us, notwithstanding the fact that the Supreme Court had earlier ruled that the total percentage of reservation should not exceed 50% of the seats. Whatever said and done, we can't turn a blind eye to the fact that the quota benefits ingested by certain communities has been only acting like a protozoan rogue, dispersing the venom of disharmony and hostility amongst the people. India’s caste system has always been so vast, so intricate, and ineffaceably engraved on our national psyche, that for foreigners to comprehend this discord and thus the extra benefits is always unfathomable. The seed of discrimination more often than not germinates from one group that is repeatedly considered the most abhorrent and repulsive, by the rest. And they are seldom included in the system, rather detested as untouchables, outcastes, or Scheduled Castes. Our Her Highness was in all probability one of those downtrodden souls who, substantially is appraised as the paramount cause behind reservation and corruption that has knocked the nation down from its growth and advancement. 


On our way back from the Bankshall court, I could also manage to sneak a look into the recent hullabaloo over the subject of intolerance that has provoked an uproar across the entire country. Whilst we couldn't find a safe parking for the vehicle, we had to walk down a couple of miles. As I crossed those spasmodic hovels on both sides of the street, an interesting episode or two caught my sight -

As we walked briskly, I spotted a rustic couple standing in front of a shanty, whose pitch went from high to higher in an argumentative spree. By the time we were to pass that scene, the male counterpart had already come down to the point of exercising his inexorable hegemony on the poor girl. Grabbed by her hair, she was thumped down ruthlessly near the blazing hot oven, and was consistently slapped, punched and kicked until she screamed in pain and the neighbors found a new grapevine to direct their attention to but desisted from speaking up. It wasn't a rude awakening for me as such. The spectators might have been preoccupied with burning down Amir Khan's posters since one political party even offered reward worth 1 lakh to anybody who can manage to slap him on the charges of expressing his inhibitions which got some agitated mobs all over the nation slamming his image as an intolerant traitor. I was even prepared to discern slogans that may have spouted - ''Dada, Pakistan chole jaan'' (Dada, Go to Pakistan) Yikes! 


The indubitable truth is, whether intolerance has crept in and is growing manifolds or not, we, as people have definitely become intolerant towards life and the fellow members of our society. We keep yelling our hearts out over jargons like Nationalism, Liberalism, Egalitarianism, Terrorism and Pietism on the national television every day, but all the fundamental human virtues such as compassion and civility are almost extinct from our constitution nowadays. From talking about civility, I can't resist myself from pulling another anecdote out of my hat. As our endless walk came to a halt and we at last reached the car, I hurriedly hopped in and the AC blasting on my skin felt like a long awaited rain in the desert. As the car took a turn, a bus jam-packed with only heads that I could see was as usual boarding few more desperate dadas and didis. The pandemonium got my head hanging out of the car window to relish a rare sight that I knew I was going to miss for at least next two years - 

'' “Aei conductor ticket koro.....” (Give me the ticket and take fare) - Whooped one of the passengers.
“Dichchi dichchi korben na” – (Don’t say giving giving) - Retorted another tossing the former's demand away. Silence is believed to be golden, the conductor was seemingly muted, and I genuinely did not blame him! 


 The area was likely one of those, where the carnivorous scavengers - the dogs, the cats, the rats, and the crows, habitually devoured all that they consider edible from the waste pile. It was later in the afternoon, so the insouciant gomata also joined the brigade, while lazily chewing up whatever vegetable scraps were strewn all over the road.

Our driver got himself involved into a series of heated retorts, but with whom???
''Apni ki kore janlen ami gadi te daag ta ketechhi??'' (How can you say that I have scratched on your car?) - A clumsy looking commoner riposted in self-defense.
''Chhere dao Tapas! Deri hoye jachhe je...'' (Leave it Tapas. We are getting late) - Insisted my father-in-law. 


Chances were, our sincere chauffeur Tapas got it right and his contemplation couldn't have been more accurate that it was a deliberate damage made to the bodywork.  But one can't really complain over something so trivial in a country that is still not free from the predicaments like starvation, poverty and unemployment. This, evidently relates to the disproportion within the fabric of different social strata, and we are a total failure in bridging this gap. Someone who lives hand to mouth, someone who has an ailing old mother battling life and death back home, someone who has a marriageable daughter who can't help but abandon studies due to financial woes, someone who has a wife that is rebuked day in and day out at peoples' houses while serving as their domestic help, a top model of Sedan is a distant dream for him, and perhaps it is this inability, vexation and disconsolateness, that gives birth to an unmitigated destructiveness, that being so, in a momentary frenzy of depravity, one doesn't hinder from defacing someone else's hard earned glory.  


As I submerged myself into these contemplations tuning on to radio FM 93.5, another bus gripped my attention. I tried looking through the tinted window of our AC car, and all I could see was a multitude of heads jostling to adjust themselves in the hurly burly of a Kolkatan's mundane life. Epic was not when the bus driver became the captain of the ship, and the conductor barely his co-pilot, but another pat response that made me cachinnate and my India visit memorable as ever.
''Aaaaste ladies, kole bachcha achhe....!!!'' (Watch out ladies, there are infants on board) Oops!




Wednesday, November 18, 2015

A shout out to those, who think feminism is just another grain of sand soring the eye






My first ever visit to India after evolving into 'Ushasi Sinha Vasu Mallik'! The day also isn't far behind when I can see my near and dear ones more satisfactorily, breaking the barrier of a virtual window. This is after a full circle of three hundred and ninety three days and the experience can't be more exquisite while I take on my first flight with Emirates airline. The world looks more beautiful but less enticing without the man of the house next to me, gazing at a sublime and overcast sky that guides our aero pathway to Milan, Italy! An hour's halt at Milan, a quick tete-a-tete with a Hispanic co passenger in a broken amalgamation of English and some derivative of Espanola, everything goes smooth leading to a comfortable five hour's travel to Dubai. Now that I'm finally onboard for my flight to the city of joy Kolkata, it gives a strange sense of ecstasy and content within my dignity and uncompromising femininity, to pen down few candid words from the innermost corner of my heart - with the iPad open on my lap, every sip of that freshly brewing green tea tastes richer, leaving me feel wiser and blessed as ever.


This shall definitely be my first as well as last transit via Dubai. And the factors contributing to this deliberate decision are so very quintessentially Ushasi - the maiden then, the child wife now. One thing remains stable, unchanged, resolute, perhaps slightly more palpable than before - an unflinching faith in myself, and the unwavering zeal to take charge, voice for what feels principally right to me, regardless of how much pain and effort it takes to establish the right and vanquish the wrong.


The security staff sends me back thrice to take off three different items at the security check gate - my boots, my scarf, and my wedding bangle respectively - all of which he could have asked me to remove at one go and assemble in the tray for scanning. The United States, a country that fundamentally believes in ripping even a celebrity off his belt and shoes for security and safety purposes, normally doesn't adhere by rules such as asking passengers to remove their wedding rings and other religious ornaments unless they are indicative of some illegal trading or might turn out to be suspiciously and potentially threatening. This gentleman (if I should be gentle enough to address him so) has an inadmissibly churlish and aggressive body language from the very beginning and I don't know what pleasure he is relishing by making me go through the unnecessary trouble of returning continually and managing to grab the tray interminably, while almost choking in a wild stampede of a heavily crowded queue that seems to have the guests in more hurry than anyone else across the globe! They were probably like a herd of impatient sheep, each of them bleating in a nugatory effort to head quicker than the other for a magical flight to another destination. In addition, the rush makes them forget the basic generosity and courtesy of bearing with what is going on with another passenger before their eyes - a single girl, traveling alone with two hand baggage - one of the two considerably hefty, consisting of two single malt whisky bottles, a laptop, a plush puppy and few more goodies for her loved ones which she can't afford to carry in the check-in luggage owing to their fragile nature. Interestingly, there are other women too, whose jingling bangles and many more adornments camouflaged under the floor-length veiled garment is cleared to pass at the same point of safety check without a hint of hassle, but I am asked point blank to be free of my 'loha' ( wedding bangle on my left wrist) possibly due to some precisely unspecified and assumable reason. The security personnel, a dusky and lanky guy in his late thirties - hatched-faced, dark eyed, bearded, who considers himself to be the 'police' and the sole keeper of all the safety rules and regulations of the entire Saudi Arabia, unhesitatingly rolls his eyes at me in quite a nasty fashion and yells - 'Go!! go back! Take this off! (The bangle)


In a frenzied disbelief, my astuteness revolts through the veins instantly. According to the limited knowledge of the safety procedures that I am gifted with, there isn't any least convincing element in what he is trying to drive me at. There's supposed to be a beeping noise at the entry of any metallic device or object that in case is attached to your body, you are immediately told to put the same down for scanning, which in my case, makes no noise or doesn't flash any clearly visible blink in the machine either. Sometimes these personal belongings might very well be your anklets or even belts. I remember a couple of times the same was stringently followed at the Delhi airport several years back. Those days I used to be wearing a silver studded waist chain which habitually and subtly peeped out of my low rise denims on and off and it was extra special as was gifted to me by my mom during my early teens. I never took it off as it looked irresistibly sexy and also helped me ensure my waist was within its 26" width limit. Voila!


Every time I crossed the security check point, it beeped and I was blatantly asked by a female staff to pull my top up so that she could check me way too thoroughly, all the way down my navel where she could actually reach the metal chain and rotate her X-Ray wand all over. All this is more than acceptable. In an era of undue atrocity and religious fanaticism, the remorseless masterminds more often than not resort to the most devious ways in pursuit of sating their thirst for innocent blood. The 9/11 terrorist attack is the ultimate instance of concealed weapons that had helped the nihilists strategically hijack the carrier at the height of 50,000 feet above the ground level and where, survival stands hardly a chance. The emergency escape route is far from the gateway to your sweetest nest, nevertheless, the heaven's door might be wide open to greet you royally. Yikes! 


This janabe-ali welcomes all international passengers who touch down upon his home ground with few minimal expectation that they'll be treated with adequate respect, if not exceptional warmth and striking gestures, and he most certainly nurtures several dyed-in-the-wool discriminative tendencies, and so doesn't mind allowing the ladies in black to proceed but this lady in her khaki tee and faded blue skinny jeans is held in custody for not yielding to his precariously male chauvinistic command and idiosyncratic demands which refuses any explanation! Since this unfortunate lone traveler takes pride in her marital signs and perceives that the withdrawal of any of these must come with some reasoning and justification, she is considered as arrogant, not remotely 'intolerant' and of course a rebel in all forms for protecting her customs and religious sentiment that are a part and parcel of her existence.


"I'm afraid, I wouldn't be able to take of my wedding bangle. It holds a religious significance for me." - I declare.

"You can't take off your wedding bangle? No problem. Just go back. You are not allowed to travel." - And he gives me that vulture's stare with total disapproval of the clarification I ask him for.
"You can't speak to a guest like that! Your X-Ray machine hasn't even beeped. Why are you troubling me for something which is no way going to make your task difficult of double checking on the safety measures? Is any lady officer there??" - I retort.

"Listen lady, if you do not do what I'm asking you to do, I'll take away your passport and you can not fly!" - He screams at his bestial  best and snatches the passport away from my hand.

"Now you know what I can do to you right?" - He chuckles in his merciless vengeance mocking at my helpless, volatile state which only makes me shudder at the thought of what else is in store. What if I miss my flight to Kolkata? What if I am not able to reach the husband and the family?

Losing hope is not the solution and standing up against every wrong that attempts to bog one down can be ruled out itself by the virtue of one's conviction, judgmental prowess, unruffled composure and unabashed actions. There might be other girls too, just like me, who take up such risks and fight such a battle everyday travelling from one corner of the world to another and there is nobody to the rescue of these over protected and cherished daughters, sisters, wives and mothers of the family. Unlike many other times in the past, I feel I am going weak in my knees, jostle inside and out to regroup myself, and I mutter within - ''I'll sail through. Silently, singlehandedly but srongly. I know, courage and confidence is all that I have to bank upon and it's not easy. However, I can not let perseverance abandon me in this crisis while the faces of my affectionate family members keep coming into my sight.


I turn back, walk a couple of steps behind, as loud as a prying fox he is, I contrarily maintain my calm and my pitch substantially low, though loud enough to pierce through the ears of my targeted listener - "The next time you speak to a lady, utter words of respect in a tone that is professional and acceptable. I need my passport back! Do not try to harass me. It's not about the security check, but your behavioral manners." - I insist.

I am made to sit for approximately forty five minutes after claiming the passport and in the meantime not a single service personnel belonging to the same team and ethnicity assists me with the password of the wifi which can help me connect to the worried consort. Furthermore, I am not permitted to step out to the cafe area to refresh myself. In my understanding, I am being tested, tried and watched over until I reach my breaking point, which, for the dauchebag is like waiting for godot and in succession, is thwarting his plans. I, being a strong devotee of Bajrangi bhai jaan, (not the one who swoons us over his screen presence, but the one that is omnipresent, sturdy and divinely) - smile within myself as I see another gentleman who happens to be our janabe-ali's supervisor, approaches me with the passport in his hands. He apologizes for the misbehavior, harassment as well as the delay, and in return receives few words of advice suggesting an in depth training in people skills and passenger handling for his subordinates and seniors. I thank him and walk down to gate number C18 and in a blink my international roaming is resumed connecting me to the love of my life.

The truth is, that we talk about political dogmatism, we argue over the news of award return, there is a tempest in the teapot almost every morning over beef eating, or the prosecution of a criminal who has damaged millions of lives almost a decade ago. But no one talks about how the temperament of the society at large has not yet changed over the years in view of the attitude towards women across the globe. At least thirty five to fifty percent female air travelers report of being groped and fondled during random body search at the airports every day. And if deprived of the least scope of sexual harassment, one may even have to undergo an unexpected lashing of verbal abuse. And Dubai airport is no exception. Not to forget, there was not even one female security officer to check me physically, but janabe-ali standing tall and upright. The darkest images of such malevolent realities prevail across the whole of middle east. There are countries that still has its 'Muttawah' (religious police) roaming around the streets to make a record of maximum arrests for witnessing an unmarried man and woman having a conversation - be it a casual and pleasant chit chat, or some hint of euphemism. It was not too long back when one such country made news of an employer chopping off the arm of an Indian domestic help for simply resisting sexual harassment. If one may put up a debate - How do we, as a civilization, as the citizens of a first world country, reconcile with a culture that continues to openly perceive women with contempt and brutally pound them with condescension? How do we, pervasively sit still for all those times when a female body and her emotions are mauled in an orgy of zealotry? How do we as a self-proclaimed educated specie, the moderately enlightened mankind make peace with our ill-fated brothers dying in suicide bombings who have spent more than half of their lives looking down upon their women for desiring to create their own identity beyond those black flowing nondescript robes? How do we help them outgrow such malignant dispositions that swears by the perseverance of their female counterpart's 'abru' (honor) at the cost of mutilating them, dispossessing them of their individual rights and fredom of expression? Change is quite possible to show up when we learn to redefine Feminism as a universal phenomena, and not just as a cliché blowing too many grains of sand in the eye.  








Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Audrey - The Teeny-Tiny Miracle







She is a teeny-tiny miracle, a wingless angel fluttering on earth and above,
She capers around in her frilly tutu and butterfly barrettes, searching for love.
Like an untainted dew on an opulent David Austin rose of an autumn morning,
She is fascinated with life, and her smile an infectiously luminous thing.

She can not make sense of the impairments that fate lobs at her,
Those tiny veins perforated, soon her vision begins to blur.
 Her twinkling eyes, terrified of the vastness of the sky,
Her pallor and elfin limbs, often brings her down to ashes from the high.

She hums the most mellifluous carol, and celebrates every season,
Momy says hope is on its way, then why is she distraught over some silly reason?
It rains and Audrey dances like a daisy, jaunty and ceaseless,
Sometimes like a piece of sun, she burns up, feeble and hapless.

Bo the Teddy Bear is in low spirits and looks through the window,
Audrey's Zumba this Sunday, hasn't reached its crescendo!
Once she bounces back, and hears her heart pounding no more,
Leaning on the balcony railing, she will hitch her wagon to a starlit shore.

I wish to see her standing there, remembering Alex, and feeling like the moon,
With a magical potion of her exquisite dimple, our princess shall conquer the world soon.
Audrey, you are a special child with gifted talents and a soul so pure,
The entire universe in its uttermost sanctity shall pray for your cure.




 My ode to all those little hearts like Alex who has recently lost his battle with Diamond Blackfan Anemia and also dedicated to my favorite - the irresistibly pretty, exuberant and incredibly brave fighter - Audrey. DBA is a rare blood disorder that causes low Erythrocyte (Red Blood Cell) without fundamentally affecting other blood components like the platelets and the Leukocyte or White Blood Cells. It may also be associated with birth defects or abnormal features. Usually during infancy; 90% have severe anemia for the first year of life. A significant number of cases go into instant remission and survival up till adulthood can be expected in a lot of cases. Although with proper care and treatment, people with DBA can live healthy lives and enjoy most of the normal day-to-day activities, if all medication fails, blood transfusion is the only option. Regular blood transfusions mostly lead to problems of iron overload. Bone marrow transplantation is the only definitive treatment but it is not always successful. Complications of treatment and incidence of Cancer may also reduce one's life expectancy. DBA education is the need of the hour as well as a handful of kindness that might help us spread its awareness, thus save another life, another bundle of joy. 




 











































Sunday, October 18, 2015

When Ekakanya ripens into Sati - What If Our Mother Goddess Could Speak






In next few hours from now, Kolkata : the city of joy will be all lit up, the beats of the drum will allure everyone with the chants of Durga Durgati Nashini Shlokas and whoa, that intoxicating aroma of incenses....


The essence of Durga Puja captures the very heart and soul of Bengal and its festivity - the emotional and cultural loyalty to plunge into one's love for life, the warmth and unbridled joy to get together, celebrate the brighter side of relationships, the pride in artistry and aesthetic penchant - none of this is just about religion and worshiping a mere clay idol. It is more than what meets the eye. It's about the cult of the goddess, that redefines empowerment and signifies 'nari shakti' in a universal sense. As the country gears up for the most opulent time of the year for our benevolent Mother Goddess, can we turn a blind eye to the trauma of a four-year old Delhi girl's blood-curdling sexual assault that has hit the headlines recently? Every time a brutal rape takes place in the heart of the national capital region or any surrounding site of crime, the nerve-wracking account of Nirbhaya's tragedy flashes back into the memory bank. 


Quite similar to the disturbing fate of Jyoti, who succumbed to her sufferings three years back owing to a barbaric sexual attack that occurred in a moving bus in the wee hours of the winter night in Delhi, this little girl too was brought up in a slum and her family is undergoing tremendous financial crisis to fund a series of medical treatments that are absolutely mandatory to help her recover from the current torments. She is just four year old, and was heinously raped and thereafter slashed with a blade and abandoned near the railway track last week. One wonders how her tiny body might have sustained those bruises from a gang of cold-blooded beasts. The child's intestines have possibly been damaged so much so that the Safdarjung hospital has been recorded to seek an emergency surgery for her. Researchers have revealed that India happens to be the hub for child trafficking, and nearly 40,000 children are abducted every year for child labor, beggary and sexual exploitation, out of which 11,000 go unreported, according to the findings of National Human Rights Commission of India.


  
What if Ma Durga could articulate her concern and respond to the prayers of her children? She perhaps wouldn't wish to indulge in spending lakhs on lavish mandap decor while someone else's home is dimmed to eternal gloom as their little baby shall never wake up to her cheerful smile once again. It's not only her body, but it's also her soul that has been abused and crippled forever. Those extravagant lights illuminating the grandest of pandals will fall short to drive away the darkness that has overcast her eyes those possibly used to sparkle with big dreams in them for a sound future. We may not be able to find the right spot to hide our faces in shame as we deck up in those ostentatious garments for the occasion, while the victim's diminutive body must have been ravished off her little dress. 


It is observed and believed in the ancient Indian scriptures of Devi Mahatmyam or Chandi, that the goddess occupies a small portion within every female living being on the planet. The sacredness of her chastity and virginal piousness is to be preserved and safeguarded as that also symbolizes the blessed womb that we all are born from. But the paradox lies in the hapless miseries of all the mothers of our nation, who are literally shaken to conceive a female child. That pound of flesh inside them is often destined to an early termination, or if brought on earth, is sooner or later bound to be subjugated to infanticide. In case the girl is fortunate enough to survive, she is raised to bear the burden of her share of price that she is forced to pay for being capable of menstruating, impregnating, and finally delivering another life. The unbreakable silence around this ugly truth scars every mother goddess inside each one of us, who, at some point in time of her life has been victimized of eve teasing, sexual harassment or molestation. She fails to immerse that lump of ignominy and despair into the hallowed water along with Durga Mata on Vijaya Dashami every year. As the deity departs for her voyage back to the Kailash in the secure folds of her benign husband, we still continue to be encumbered by a crude reality, that the majority of the female sex coming from various socio-religious backgrounds, at no juncture, are safe in the hands of their fellow men. They are not safe with their brothers, uncles, husbands, even fathers. They are neither safe within their own urban suites, nor those remote villages that claim to protect their as well as their family's honor at all times.



There are numerous incidents of children in India, noticeably young girls getting kidnapped mysteriously in the darkness of the night and sold in the market, for commercial sexual slavery. 
 Contrarily, there are still rituals of 'Kumari Puja' prevalent among some of the country's Hindus as well as Nepali Buddhists (for more than 2,300 years now), practiced to venerate the virtue of a young girl's chasteness, who hasn't yet reached her pubescence. The priests are meant to recite holy hymns and conjure up the deity in disguise of this rich silk embellished and bejeweled toddler. She pretty much stands for the embodiment of the 'Mahashakti' of Goddess Durga, and her other form of 'Bhaavini', (The beautiful woman), that is glorified as 'Devamata' (The Mother Goddess), garbed in the hue of vermillion as 'Paatalavati' (One who wears red-color attire). She is known for conquering the world with her 'Nitya' (Eternal) and 'Vaishnavi' (The invincible) aura. She also personifies the 'Mahishaasura Mardini' (Slayer of the bull-demon Mahishaasura), who ultimately diminishes the evil with her supremacy and shields the mortals from those vicious snarls and wrath of the demon. 'Mahodari' (One who has a huge belly which stores the universe) epitomizes that ministering angel in her, who holds her children closest to her existence as a raksha kawach from the satanic perils of the world, and is the most powerful avatar of Durga. Ironically, she is the same potential Divine energy, that manifests in the depiction of a 'Kumari' (The beautiful adolescent) who is later made to surrender as the weak and compliant 'Sati'. 


So, when a two and a half year old girl is raped in the Western Delhi suburbs, left unconscious and bleeding to death from her private parts, when a five year old is gang raped in a next door neighbor's house in East Delhi, and dumped to rot thereafter, we invariably lose some amount of blessing from an exorbitantly constructed effigy of our compassionate Maa Durga. Unless the vortex of salacious male deviance stops gripping us, until the day our honorable leaders of the society cease to believe that 'How is it a gang-rape if two people rape?' we hold no right to revere the Divinity that is incarnated of a mother figure. In our attempt to self-console by recompensing heftily for best idol competitions, night-long concerts and swanky celebrity appearances, we somewhat tend to also compromise with our morals, principles and basic humanity. Only if our Devi could talk, we would have known the degree of her dismay and resentment in a culture that can go broke in order to endow her with the most ornate and regal treatment during her annual visit, but simultaneously doesn't scruple to so mercilessly mutilate, castrate and at times disembowel the purity of its youngest natives.