Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Cows, calves, cops – and COVID-19


Tucked into a noisy commercial hub between Lepakshi and the Southern Grand in Gandhi Nagar and solidly encased by huge trees and almost hidden from view is a set of ridiculously tiny buildings belonging to a past era. Housed in the ruins of those weather-worn buildings which don’t seem to have had a coat of paint on their walls or windows for a century are a government treasury, a district jail, a court, and yet another government office with broken beams hanging down from its tiled roof.

It was 2.30 in the afternoon. The Bezawada sun was at his blazing best. Between the risk of catching Covid-19, which, I imagined, was having a field day inside the dingy, overcrowded treasury, and being burnt by the searing heat, I chose the latter, leaving it to my friends to deal with the treasury staff. Money matters, I said to myself, had best be left to them.

The heat had climbed higher, and being out under the trees seemed a better option than being inside. I sat under a huge chettu in the midst of piles of cow-dung. Around me were sleepy-headed cows with drooping eyelids, with their bodies spread out and their weight differently distributed. But their calves were active; unmindful of the heat, they were briskly moving around the trees. The air was filled with a strong smell of a combination of gaumaya, gaumutra, sweat and tobacco smoke.

Now a tall young man in police uniform came out of the darkness of the jail followed by a bald middle-aged man with a constant grin on his face. The latter had a pronounced police paunch set over short, thick legs, and he wore khaki half-trousers and a tight banian which accentuated his round figure. There was something of the Falstaff about the man: If sack and sugar be a fault, God help the wicked. If to be old and merry be a sin, then many an old host that I know is damned. If to be fat be to be hated, then Pharaoh’s lean kine are to be loved.  And I took an instant liking to this merry-looking fellow.

The pudgy policeman sat on a bench under a neighbouring tree, lit a cigarette and drew deeply on the tobacco smoke. As he blew rings of smoke, his grin widened. ‘Now, tell me,’ he said addressing the young policeman standing in front of him, ‘Naakku aratti pandu kaavali’ (I want bananas). How would you say this in Tamil?’

‘Enakku vazahi pazham vendum.’

‘What is pandu in Tamil?

‘Pazham.’

‘Pa-’

‘Pa-zham.’

‘Pa-lam. Aravam is a difficult language,’ he said with a reflective look at the smoke rings.

The conversation continued. The senior policeman gave one sentence after another in Telugu, and the young man promptly supplied Tamil versions. The sentences sounded quite acceptable. It was a truly riveting performance, and I was absolutely fascinated.

There was a sudden splash of warm water against my face now, and I stood up shocked. The cow was on its feet now. It was urinating intermittently.

‘If you stay on there,’ shouted the fat cop, ‘you can have a gaumaya treatment also, and the coronavirus will never touch you.’ With a silly grin on his face, he got up and moved behind one of the trees in a corner where I now noticed another building whose sign board read that it was the office of some pensioners’ association.

Moving closer to the young man, I asked him, ‘Is Tamil your mother tongue?’ He shook his head.

‘Then how come you are able to speak the language with ease?’

‘I’ve picked up all that I know from movies. I watch quite a lot of Tamil movies.’

‘You've never learnt Tamil formally?

‘Never. I don’t even go to Tamil Nadu often.’

‘Your Tamil is very impressive, I can tell you. It’s amazing that you picked it up just from movies.'

‘I can see that you’re having a nice time,’ said a voice from behind. I looked back. My friends had come out. Mr Rama Raju was giving a big triumphant smile, and I congratulated him.

‘Get in. Let’s go,’ said Mr Rama Raju from behind the wheel. While getting in, I looked in the direction of the pensioner’s association office. The bald man with a police paunch was stepping into view from behind a massive tree. He waved a warm hand.


Monday, March 30, 2020

Social distancing? Hey, what does it mean?


Good books, bad reports – reflective reports written in execrable English by some 30 university teachers – and, of course, the coronavirus lockdown helped me stay indoors for four days. Without good food, this would have been impossible.

But food supplies – greengroceries, in particular – were running out, and there was a demand for replenishment yesterday. So I ventured out.

That was the first instance of my breaching the much-touted code of conduct for social distancing (SD). Not quite a breach, in fact. Hadn’t Jagan Anna sanctioned your compromising your safety a bit for the sake of creature comforts from 6 am to 1 pm? Come to think of it, I decided to go out primarily because I was consumed by curiosity: for the first time in my three-score-and-four I was going to witness a working model of social distancing.

I was excited, and this put a spring in my step. As I walked down the stairs, I slowed my steps because I was greeted by gales of laughter. A few spirited old men some of whom, for all I knew, might be harbouring milder versions of COVID-19, were having a ball. Why allow a weekend to pass without some fun? If the worst comes to the worst, heck, die the death of Dylan Thomas. But never “go gentle” into that good night! Whatever, it was not a good SD model. Far from being SD, it was SC – social converging!

There was no SD in my street or the next. Neither was it to be seen on the service road either. I was now at the greengrocer’s – a pushcart stocked with lots of fresh vegetables in front of the Novotel. It was a hub of commercial activity with the buyers literally rubbing shoulders with one another. Where the flyover descended and met Ring Road, a large group of men were exercising on the road, perhaps after an undisturbed walk on the flyover itself. The atmosphere was one of joie de vivre. What a nice social gathering! I now turned my gaze in the direction of a young plus-size woman, dressed in a white smock and black leggings. Her presence was considerable, not her physical bulk, mind you, but the quick pace she was maintaining in spite of it. Her tired and bedraggled father – or husband, I’m not sure – who was jogging to keep up with her was a poor sight.

Now a passer-by, a middle-aged chappie with a lorry-driver look, stopped by the cart. He pulled his bandanna down, took out a cigarette from his pocket and licked it, and I took a cautious SD step back. ‘Sir,’ grinned the man, amused by the look of disgust on my face, ‘the gaali (wind) is blowing in the opposite direction.’ The stub of cigarette jutting from his lips glowed like a malevolent virus. He kept at the task squinting his eyes against the smoke, and, when the cigarette could no longer be used, he stubbed out the butt, coughed violently, spat out the phlegm, watched it with satisfaction for a moment and moved off as though he had stopped at the greengrocer’s only to upset me.

‘How much?’ I asked the vendor, a burly woman who reminded me of Chaucer’s Wife of Bath.

‘Two twenty,’ she said.

‘Two hundred and twenty rupees! Before the lockdown ends, you will be rich enough to buy the Novotel,’ I said handing her the money.

‘Why would I need the Novotel, Ayyagaru?’ she said with a coy smile which showed through her mask, a playful tilt of her head and a quick spin of the sari around herself.

In front of us the Novotel wore a deserted look not least because of SD.

#COVID19Stories


Thursday, March 12, 2020

Father Arakal goes the way of all flesh


Father Jacob Arakal, SJ, has passed away. He breathed his last, last night. I’ve just got the news from Father C J John, a former Principal of Andhra Loyola College (ALC). The funeral will be held at Loyola Academy, Secunderabad, at 3 o’clock in the afternoon tomorrow (13 March 2020).

I’m sure that everyone who was acquainted with this wise and lovely priest in his 96-year-long life has a story to tell. Here’s my own story.

It was my first day at ALC. The moment I stepped on to the campus, I gasped in wonderment at the lofty luxuriance that lay before me. Not that I was unused to the lushness of nature: there was a lavish display of nature’s bounty on the campus of Madras Christian College where I had studied for five years. But the Loyola landscape had something mystical about it. The “wild secluded scene,” as Wordsworth would have described it, seemed to fill the mind with thoughts of deep seclusion. As I walked further down reflecting that the place was redolent of the peace and quiet of a hermitage, a hermit-like figure came cycling along. When the cycle came closer, the “hermit” peered over his spectacles for a moment, gave a faint smile through his grey beard, and rode on. And I took an instant liking to him. About a month later, when I joined ALC as a lecturer, I ran into the “hermit” again. He asked me to stay in a guest room in his hostel where I led almost a cloistered life for more than two years.

Father Jacob Arakal was that “hermit.” I have since been acquainted with scores of Jesuits. I have admired some of them, hero-worshipped one or two of them, and been indifferent to many of them. But I have always regarded that “hermit” on the bicycle, the first ever Jesuit in my life, as a special person. I have even said in an interview to a Jesuit magazine that Father Arakal, a priest of indisputable excellence, is a kind of touchstone that could be applied to other Jesuits to assess their priestly merits.

Simple, sincere, austere – it is easy to describe Father Arakal. These trite expressions, mindlessly bandied about on occasions such as this, acquire a rare elegance and a ring of authenticity when used with reference to priests like Douglas Gordon (1912-1994), Joseph Kuriakose (1925-1994) and Jacob Arakal (1924-2020). There was nothing contrived about their practice of these great virtues because it was a part of their vocation. It is said that the test of a vocation is the love of drudgery it involves. The Jesuit administrative system is of necessity sheer drudgery: unless the Jesuits who operate the system are devoted to a life of humdrum chores, they cannot ensure the smooth functioning of the system. By accepting the drudgery that the operation of the system involved with the greatest willingness and interest, Father Arakal has contributed significantly to the smooth functioning of the system.

Let me conclude my humble tribute to this great Jesuit with a prayer I put together, after Holland’s ‘God, give us men!’ when Fr Arakal celebrated his diamond jubilee as a Jesuit in 2005:

God, give us men like Jacob Arakal:
Strong minds, great hearts, true faith and ready hands;
Men whom the lust of office does not kill;
Men whom the spoils of office cannot buy;
Men who possess opinions and a will;
Men who have honour: Men who will not lie;
Men who can stand before a demagogue
And damn his treacherous flatteries without winking!
Tall men, sun-crowned, who live above the fog
In public duty and in private thinking.

Rest in peace, Fr Arakal!


Saturday, February 22, 2020

A visit to BSNL Bhavan


I have been associated with BSNL for over a quarter century now. In the past, I used to be in awe of the tall buildings at BSNL Bhavan, Chuttugunta (Vijayawada) and the huge crowds that packed those buildings as well as the lawns. My work was almost always at Finance which is housed in a separate building behind the GM’s office.

It was 11.30 in the morning. I dropped by Finance on my way home from the government treasury which I had visited to submit a digital life certificate for this year. Finance had owed me some money for over six months. They were supposed to transfer it to my bank account, but since that hadn’t happened, I thought meeting the accounts officer might help.

I entered Finance only to see dozens of vacant cabins. There were only three employees in the entire office on the ground floor. Two of them must have been attendants; they were chatting at the entrance. The third one, a young man, was at a table with a computer in front of him.

‘Where are the others?’ I asked him after explaining the purpose of my visit.

‘They’ve taken VRS,’ he said turning his computer on.

‘Voluntary retirement? So many of them?’

‘Yes. They didn’t want to be on a sinking ship any longer. When an option was given, they got off.’

‘How, then, will work get done here?’

He shrugged it off and smiled. ‘There is no money. We haven’t got our salaries for months together.’ He kept searching for my claim on the computer. I didn’t want to disturb him.

‘Sir, your payment was approved six months ago,’ he said lifting his head.

‘I know that,’ I said. ‘I came to collect the money.’

‘You must be joking, sir,’ he said with a nervous laugh. ‘There’s no money. Since 2018, we haven’t cleared any debts. Even if money comes in May or June, the 2018 cases will take priority. Yours is a mid-2019 one.’

‘Which means I should be prepared to write it off?’ I said. ‘But tell me, are you heading for a shutdown? I think the budget said something about funding BSNL and MTNL.’ He shrugged his shoulders as if to say he didn’t know what the hell was going on.

Time was when BSNL was a monopoly with profits over 10,000 crore a year. Now it seems to be on its last gasp. Poor management, overstaffing, hopeless services, delayed modernization, and inability to cope with competition – that’s the story on BSNL.