Monday, 23 December 2013

चावीच्या छिद्रा पलीकडे



चावीच्या छिद्रा पलीकडे 
असते एक दार. असते त्याला एक चावीचे छिद्र. 'बाहेरून छिद्राला डोळे लाऊन आपल्या कडे कोणी पाहत तर नसेल? ', मनात एक भीती. 'आपण आहोत खरे चार भिंतींच्या आंत, पण बाहेरून कोणी आपले ऐकत तर नसेल ? म्हणतात ना  - भिंतीना असतात कान आणि  छिद्राला असतात डोळे!' मनांतील ही छिद्रा बद्धल असलेली साशंकता स्वाभाविक! आणि स्त्रियांच्या बाबतीत ती भीती अधिक असणे साहाजिक! आणि असे काही ऐकले वा वाचले म्हणजे -----

अलीकडे मी असे  वाचले  - ओर्थोपेडीक्स मध्ये पोस्ट - ग्रॅजुयेशन करीत असलेला  सत्तावीस वर्षांचा कोणी एक डॉक्टर, आपल्याच दोन स्त्री सहकारी डॉक्टरांचे, त्या बाथरूम मध्ये आंघोळ करीत असताना, त्यांच्या नकळत त्यांचे स्वतःच्या  कॅमेऱ्यात विडीयो शूट केले. त्याच्या ह्या अनैतिक वर्तना बद्धल अटक झाली आहे,  आणि कालांतराने शिक्षा देखील होईल. पोस्ट - ग्रॅजुयेशन परीक्षेसाठी सध्या तो जामिन्यावर बाहेर आहे. पण काय हो, तुम्हाला असल्या अनैतिक डॉक्टर कडून स्वतःचा किंवा आपल्या आई- बहिणींचा इलाज करून घेण्यास आवडेल का? असल्या शिक्षणाचा काय उपयोग? 'एथिक्स', शिष्टाचार, मॉरल्स (नैतिकता),कॉन्शन्स(सदसद्विवेकबुद्धी) - हे सारे त्याच्या शब्द कोशात नसावेत. ह्या साऱ्यावरून त्या माणसाच्या चारित्र्याची सहज कल्पना करता येते. हा माणूस चावीच्या छिद्रा पलीकडे राहून खोलीच्या आंत चोरून पहाणाऱ्या पैकी असावा. आणि भिंतीला कान लाऊन ऐकणाऱ्यातला (an eaves dropper) देखील! 

आम्हाला शाळेत 'नैतिक शास्त्र' (Moral Science) शिकवले जाई. शाळेचे उपमुख्याध्यापक, रेवेरेंड फादर अलमेडा शिकवीत. गार्डिनर ह्यांच्या 'On keyhole morals' चा आधार घेत ते आम्हाला सांगत होते, "मुलांनो, तुमची- आमची खरी ओळख काय? आपले स्वतःचे मोजमापन कसे कराल? समाजात तुम्ही कसे वागतात त्यावरून? नाही! लोकांना दाखवण्यासाठी आपण सारे काही करतो - रीतभात सांभाळतो, आपल्यावर कसे चांगले संस्कार आहेत असे भासवतो - लोकांकरिता एक मुखवटा -एक आवरण! तुमची 'पबलिक इमेज' म्हणजे फक्त तुमची एक इच्छा - जगाने आपल्याला असे ओळखले पाहिजे. पण खरोखर तुम्ही तसे आहात? आपल्याला लोकांचे सर्टीकेट,त्यांचे चांगले मत हवे असते. त्यासाठी आपण शिष्टाचार, लोकांमध्ये उठायचे - बसायचे कसे, प्रसंगाला शोभणारे कपडे कसे घालायचे - केवळ लोकांनी आपल्याला चांगले म्हणावे आणि समजावे म्हणून! आपल्याकडे जगाचे लक्ष आहे, त्या बारीक चावीच्या छिद्रातून ते सारे आपल्याला पाहत आहेत, ह्याची आपल्याला सतत जाणीव असते म्हणून आपण काळजी घेऊन स्वतःला त्यांच्या पुढे सादर  करतो.  तुम्हाला स्वतःची ओळख करायची असेल तर असे समजा - आपल्याकडे कोणही त्या छिद्रातून पाहत नाही आणि मग तुम्ही कसे वागाल  ते ठरवील तुम्ही कोण आहात ते!" 
त्या डॉक्टरने देखील शाळेत नैतिक शास्त्रातील धडे घेतले असतील, पण बोध काही घेतलेला नाही. तुम्ही आणि मी देखील हे धडे गिरविले, बरोबर? चवीच्या छिद्रातून कोण आपल्याला चोरून बघणार नाही ह्याची खबरदारी घेतो आणि ते अगदी रास्त आहे. 'चावीचे छिद्र' हे केवळ सांकेतिक आहे. चावीच्या छिद्रा पलीकडे कोणही नाही आपल्याला पाहत, आपल्याला त्याची पूर्ण खात्री मग आपण कशे वागतो हे महत्वाचे! केवळ लोकांसमवेत किंवा आप्तेष्ट मध्ये नव्हे तर स्वतःशीच कसे वागतो हे महत्वाचे. चावीच्या छिद्रातून आपल्या लहान मुलांकडे बारीक नजर असणे बरोबर असते -ते काय करतात, कोठे जातात, काय  वाचतात - हे सारे आपण करतो त्यांच्याच भल्यासाठी. त्यातून दिसते ती म्हणजे आपल्या मुलांसाठी तुम्हाला वाटणारी आस्था व तिडीक.  पण जेंव्हा मुलं मार्गाला लागलेली असतात तेंव्हामात्र  ते करणे जरुरीचे नसते. अगदी परवाचीच गोष्ट. माझ्या एका मित्राने चुकून आपल्या विवाहित मुलाचा कोट घातला. कोटाच्या किश्यात त्याला बरेच कागद पत्रे सापडली. बंद लिफाफे मुलाच्या नावे होती. इतर पत्र बंद लिफाफ्यात नव्हती.  घरी परत गेल्यावर त्याने ती सारी आपल्या मुलाकडे सुपूर्त केली, त्यांतील कोणताही मजकूर न वाचता. एक कुतूहल म्हणून  तो वाचू शकला असता- अगदी एकांतात - कोणालाही समजले नसते. चावीच्या छिद्रा पलीकडे कोणाही नव्हते. पण त्याने तसे केले नाही. तसे केले असते तर तो स्वतःच्याच नजरेतून उतरला असता. आणि ह्याला म्हणतात 'decency'. असो. 
काहीशा ह्याच दिशेने वाटचाल करीत माझे एक स्नेही, भावीन झांखारिया, आपल्या 'The Gifting Dilemma' ह्या लेखात लिहितात : त्यांना एका ऑर्थोपेडिक डॉक्टर मित्राने असा एक इमेल पाठविला, ' आम्हाला आमच्या सहकाऱ्याने दोन स्वीटसची बॉक्सेस, एक - फेर्रेरो रोषर आणि दुसरे  चायनाची शिंगदाणा चिक्की. दोन्ही होत्या शिळ्या. आम्ही त्या गुपचूप फेकून द्याव्या का त्या मित्रास ते सांगावे? कदाचित त्यांना हे माहित नसावे आणि ते त्या सप्लायरला सांगून रिफंड मिळवतील.  किंवा ते पुन्हा बांधाबांध करून कोणालातरी, ज्या प्रमाणे बरेच लोक करतात, भेट म्हणून पाठवू? त्याला अनेक प्रतिउत्तरे मिळाली. 
  •   एकाने लिहिले की त्यांने स्वतःस एक सामान्य मॉर्टल समजून ते गिफ्ट रिसायकल करावे.
  •  दुसऱ्याने सांगितले गप्प बस आणि सारे विसरून जा. 
  • तिसऱ्याने लिहिले असाच इमेल त्याला देखील पाठव म्हणजे तो समजून जाईल.
  • आणि चौथा (जो एकमेव डॉक्टर नव्हता), त्याने सांगितले सदैव सत्य बोलावे, तो जर खरा मित्र असेल तर तो दुखावेल  जरूर पण काही काळच पण तो तुझी कदर करील.
  •  माझ्या त्या स्नेही मित्राने त्यासअसा उपदेश केला की सध्या काही न करता ती मिठाई फेकून दे. मग सवडीने त्या मिठाईची विषय काढ आणि मग त्यास विचार की त्याने ती कोठून खरेदी केली. मग राग रंग बघून पुढचे पाऊल उचल. 
     
मित्रानो, तुम्ही काय केले असते? ह्यात ठरेल तुमची  चावीच्या छिद्रा पलीकडील पात्रता!
                                                                              विनय त्रिलोकेकर

Saturday, 14 December 2013

THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE BEAUTIFUL!



THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE BEAUTIFUL!

There was a time when people asked you, 'What's front page news? What are the headlines?' But now a days the first two pages are reserved for advertisement, so have the whole page spread of 'India declare war on Hair Loss', '--- DYNASTY: A KINGDOM OF YOUR OWN', 'WE'D LIKE YOU TO PAY FOR A HOME, NOT FOR A BLUEPRINT - The ---Group', '---REALITY-THE NEXT LEVEL-YOU TRAVEL FIRST CLASS.SO WHY NOT LIVE IT TOO. (Forget the punctuation)' and all these back to back ads,mind you. Then the third page of the paper becomes the first page of your 'read'. And what do you have there? 'THE END OF A LOVE STORY' ( private life of someone made public) greets your eyes on the first page you read, while 'Handcuffing of a lady Indian diplomat, Indian Deputy Consul General of NY to be precise, arresting her in Public, without having a lady constable present during the arrest,thus violating her human rights and which humiliates the Indian Government, Indian Officials in US and all of us - all Indians living all over the world' you get to read in the inner pages of your paper. Sometimes an advertisement covers the third page, if you call this page 'a page' for it is not even half the size of the normal size of your paper. But why should we even call it 'Our Paper'? The news that we get to read these days reminds you how difficult times have become, how people no longer care for others, how men (some) don't respect women and how man (again some men) and woman (again some women) don't trust other, the reason why Shobhaa De has devised this Plan B for women and one of my  FB friends has post this:
 Man, " My dear, a woman can't be trusted too far."
Woman,"May be. But man can't be trusted too near."
These Tejpals, Gangulys and Asarams have given us bad image and now the ball is our court to present a good image of ourselves.

  Starting your day with reading about tragedies, political turmoils, rising inflation, etc. gets you down. No, I am not cynical. In fact, I am a jovial person, a thick- skinned fellow, you may call. But it's only when these 'paper-wallas' write about them that I am suddenly woken from my sweet dreams. But all of us have this dream, if someone takes you to such a place, such a land---

 आ चल के तुझे
मै लेके चालू 
 एक ऐसे गगन तले 
 जहाँ घम भी न हो 
आंसूं भी न हो 
 बस प्यार ही प्यार पले
 आ चल के तुझे
मै लेके चालू 
 एक ऐसे गगन तले 
 जहाँ घम भी न हो 
आंसूं भी न हो 
 बस प्यार ही प्यार पले 
एक ऐसे गगन तले 
 सूरज की पहली किरण से  
 आशा का सवेरा जागे 
चन्दा की किरण से  धुलकर  
 घनघोर अँधेरा भागे 
 कभी धुप खिले  कभी चाव मिले 
-----जहाँ दूर नजर दौडीयन 
 आज़ाद गगन लहराये 
 जहाँ रंग बिरंगे पंछी   आशा का संदेशा लाएं
 ----सपनों के ऐसे जहां में 
 जहाँ प्यार ही प्यार खिला हो
  हम जाके वहाँ खो जाएँ  
शिकवा न कोई गीला हो 
कहीं बैर न हो  
कोई गैर न हो 
सब मिल के ये चलते चलें
 
 आ चल के तुझे
मै लेके चालू 
 एक ऐसे गगन तले 
 जहाँ घम भी न हो 
आंसूं भी न हो 
 बस प्यार ही प्यार पले

The other day was moved by these three news items, one was good the second was bad and the third was beautiful - THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE BEAUTIFUL Now I am just doing a 'copy- paste' job, in case you have missed it.
  • ·        THE GOOD:

Docs use Whats App to save heart patients


Doctors at KEM Hospital have turned to the most ubiquitous personal technology - the smart-phone - to speed up diagnosis of patients with suspected heart complications. 

They have started using the popular smartphone messenger 'WhatsApp' to send pictures of patients' electrocardiograms (ECG) to each other for a quick review, saving time spent on reaching the emergency ward and checking the actual report.
 

The approach enables them to begin the treatment of a person who has suffered a heart attack within the crucial golden hour, the period when emergency care is most likely to be successful. Delay in proper diagnosis and treatment during this period results in amajority of cardiac fatalities.
 

In fact, over 60 per cent of patients who have suffered a heart attack reach the hospital way beyond the golden hour, the average being about five hours. So every moment they spend waiting for the doctor to arrive and study their ECG increases the risks.
 

"The moment a patient walks in here complaining of chest pain or any other related problem, a specialist takes out an ECG and sends the image to the doctors on hand," said Dr Prafulla Kerkar, head of KEM's cardiology department. "We, in fact, have a WhatsApp group where the experts in our department are signed in."
 

Already, 250 heart patients have benefited from the new report-sharing approach at KEM. "It is like a 'transtelephonic' use of the smart phone to read the ECG of a patient in need of emergency care," said Kerkar, who came up with the idea of sharing reports on WhatsApp.
 

In the West, a trans-telephonic electrocardiogram is recorded while the patient is on the way to the hospital in an ambulance, and sent to experts over the phone using a special monitor.
 

At KEM, however, a doctor designated as a 'chest pain registrar' clicks a photograph of the ECG and puts it up on the cardiology department's WhatsApp group, 'ACS Care'. (ACS stands for acute coronary syndrome.)
 

Any of the four senior doctors in the group quickly reviews the ECG and suggests the line of treatment. Dr Kerkar and Dr Milind Nadkar, head of KEM's emergency medical services, are among them. "This cuts the time of moving the patient around or waiting for the senior doctor to arrive. It also helps us give a senior consultant-level care by keeping a junior doctor on duty," Dr Kerkar said.
 

The chest pain registrar, who is currently pursuing cardiology as his specialty, may not always need a second opinion from the seniors, but often there are cases in which expert advice helps. "The most important thing is to be able to diagnose a heart attack on the ECG," said Dr Kerkar. "However the ECG may not always indicate the same. Depending on the diagnosis, the patient may be immediately put on a clot buster therapy, sent to the cathlab for a primary angioplasty or be asked to be kept under observation."
 

The aim of the new initiative at KEM is to reduce the 'door-to-needle' time, or the time when the patient walks into the hospital door and eventually gets treatment.
 

"A majority of our patients come from far off suburbs," said Dr Kerkar. "In most cases, the golden hour is lost. By this system, we are trying to ensure there is no further loss of time."
Fro


  • ·        THE BAD:

FB conman, 18, feigns heartbreak and dupes girl, 14, of Rs 10 lakh



College dropout uses fake profile to sweet-talk girl into stealing her mother's jewellery. Within 15 days, cops turn the tables, lure him with a fake profile of their own.

The police have arrested an 18-year-old college dropout who posed as a businessman on Facebook and sweet-talked a 14-year-old into giving him Rs 10 lakh worth jewellery and cash she had stolen from home. 

Fittingly, the cops nabbed the accused, identified as Misbah Ayub Ali Khan, by baiting him by creating a fake Facebook profile of a woman. Khan, who was arrested from his hometown in Uttar Pradesh, has been remanded to police custody till December 16. 

"The accused was a student of hotel management in Rizvi but had stopped going to college some months ago," said DCP Mahesh Patil, who headed the investigation. "All he was interested in was making a fast buck. 

We are working towards recovering the jewellery and cash as soon as possible." 

Here is how Khan, who was living with his grandparents in Saki Naka, orchestrated his elaborate con. Last month, he created two Facebook profiles, one in the name of Shaili Parikh and the other in the name of Armaan Kapoor. He then posted his own photos on both profiles. After a few days, he started posting messages from the Shaili profile saying she intended to break up with Armaan. 'Shaili' nonetheless offered to hook up any interested person with Armaan, because 'they were still good friends.' 

"Soon, a few unsuspecting girls befriended Shaili and told her they would like to meet the good-looking Armaan," said an officer. "Khan then used Armaan's profile to befriend these girls." 

After chatting with some of the girls for a few days using the Armaan profile, Khan decided his target - a 14-year-old schoolgirl. He told her though he looked young, he is a fairly successful businessman who owns a lot of property in India and abroad. The girl fell for his lies and soon the two were talking of getting married. She was comfortable enough to start meeting him in person without her parents' knowledge. 

"Khan then told the girl he had bought a Rs 2-crore worth plot in a hill station near Mumbai," said the officer. "He told her he would construct a villa where the two of them would live after getting married." 

But, Khan told the girl, there was hitch. He had raised Rs 1.7 crore, but was falling short of Rs 30 lakh as his money was locked in some projects. 

The girl immediately volunteered to help and said she could do her bit. The next day, she stole 19 thola of her mother's gold jewellery and some cash - all totalling Rs 10 lakh - and handed it over to Armaan during their next meeting. 

That was the last she saw of him. The girl panicked when she could not reach Khan's phone. When the 'Armaan' Facebook profile went dormant for several days, she realised she had been cheated. On November 28, she mustered the courage and confessed to her parents. 

Following her parents' complaint, the police swung into action. They first visited Khan's grandparents at Saki Naka. They were told Khan, whose father is a real estate developer in Sarjanpur in Uttar Pradesh, had not come home for 10 days and even they were worried. 

Malad police inspector Maruti Sangle, who was investigating the case, decided to wait for two days. When there was no sign of Khan coming back home, he decided to turn the tables on him. 

Sangle created a Facebook profile in a girl's name and sent 'Armaan' a friend request. 

Khan bit the bait and accepted Sangle's fake profile as a friend. 

This time it was Khan's turn to be sweet-talked into doing something stupid. Posing as his new admirer, Sangle told him he heard Armaan wanted money to buy a plot and that 'she' was willing to pitch in. Khan readily admitted he was in Uttar Pradesh and even gave out his mobile number. 

Sangle now got a lady constable to talk to Khan on the phone and get him to reveal his whereabouts. A cagey Khan refused to give her his location. But the cops had his cell phone coordinates. The next day Sangle and his constables, Ulhas Shinde and Nitin Shinde, landed at Khan's house. The game was up.

 ( Don't pry into their privacy, give them space but do keep tabs on your teenage kids.)

  • ·        AND THE BEAUTIFUL

India Inc’s rainbow ads earn plaudits, win hearts



MUMBAI: In a rare show of solidarity some of India's largest companies expressed their support for gay rights on Facebook and Twitter by releasing online advertisements. Allen Solly, an apparel brand belonging to the Aditya Birla group on its official facebook page changed its cover image to the rainbow colours with the text ``All colours were created equal sec 377''. 

Jewellery brand Tanishq, which is owned by
 Titan, a Tata group company, on its twitter page uploaded an ad which showed a pair of diamond earrings with the words `` Two of a kind always make a beautiful pair! #sec 377''. Diary brand Amul, continued its practise [It should be practice (noun) and not practise. But these days there is hardly any worthwhile editing being done.], which is a verb of commenting on current issues. Its iconic Amul girl was shown laying a wreath on a tombstone which read `Freedom of Choice, died in 2013''. 

The advertisements have won the brands plaudits not only from the
 LGBT community but also across social media sites. The jewellery brand, recently won praise for its unconventional television advertisment that featured a bride getting married for the second time. Thursday's ad was retweeted immediately across the social media sites. 

``Kudos to Tanishq for such beautiful and socially relevant advertisements,'' said a twitter user Nikita Khattar. Another user Dhurvesh tweeted: ``respect for this brand.'' Tanishq could not be reached for comment.
 

Allen Solly's picture in a few hours garnered over 400 likes. ``Proud of your stance,'' said a FB user.
 

``We are not making a big statement. It was part of our ad campaign for the brand Allen Solly that all colours are created equal, and we also extended our support for the LGBT community,'' said Pranab Barua, Business Director, Aditya Birla group (retail business).
 

LGBT activists welcome the initiatives by the companies. ``It is nice to see young brands that are trying to connect with new India. Today young people feel its ok to be gay or lesbian or have LGBT friends. They are more likely to connect with a brand that respects diversity and acceptance,'' said Pallav Patankar, director, Humsafar Trust.
 

Loving yours - VINAY TRILOKEKAR

Friday, 13 December 2013

READING BOOKS AND STORIES, WRITING LETTERS AND ME



READING BOOKS, TELLING STORIES, WRITING LETTERS AND ME


One of my nephews, Harshul Nayak, shared this on his timeline on Face book:

“One of the sad realities today is that very few people, especially young people, read books. Unless we can find imaginative ways of addressing this reality, future generations are in danger of losing their history,” Nelson Mandela.

  
And it gave me fodder for my current article. Yes, indeed very few people read books. However, we were some of those few who do read. Like our mother, all of us, my sisters and me, are voracious readers and read everything that comes in our hands. There is a funny side to this reading habit of ours, but that's another story. This habit has helped me in telling stories. 

Story telling is an integral part of growing up and the bond that connects cultures across the world. With the size of the families shrinking and living spaces becoming exclusive, many families in the cities do not have anyone to tell children stories, which people like you and me, heard from our mother and grannies. My children had been lucky too. My mother was a very good story teller and she passed this knack of story-telling down to all of us, to all her five children. She would narrate her childhood stories, her mysterious experiences, stories from the movies and stories from Baburao Arnalkar’s ‘Detective stuff’. Just like my mother Jaini mami, my maternal aunt, was a good story teller. Their story telling sessions were fantastic, both would modulate their voices to match different characters from their stories, there would even background scores, giving you goose-bumps and making you shriek at times or making you laugh till your stomach ached and eyes watered. They would take you inside the story, making you a part of it. My mother also inculcated in me this good habit of reading.  I have always been a good listener and a good reader and it helped. Even as a child, I think, I was fairly good at it; I could spin a yarn at the drop of a hat. I would make my own stories. After reading Gulliver’s Travel, I had my own version. I would tell my cousin, Jyoti, how I had got lost in a jungle during our school picnic and how I came across some Lilliputian people, size of my thumb and mind you I must have been around eight or ten years of age and she three –four years my junior. I had my own adventures in that jungle. I had also told her how I had brought back some of these tiny people and their tiny pets and kept them hidden in my drawer without telling anyone about it. She believed every word of mine. She would ask me often to show them to her and each time I would get away by promising to show them to her ‘someday’ until she came up to our house and insisted, “Vinay, where are those tiny people and their pets?”

“Just yesterday, Aai (mother) disposed off the cupboard to a ‘bhangar walla’ (scrap merchant) and my tiny friends too went along with it. No one knows about it and would never know,” I replied promptly, “I am very sad.” There were actually tears in my eyes, I am sure, when I told her about losing my imaginative tiny friends (I deserved an ‘Oscar’).

  I remember another funny incidence. I would often read detective fictions. I was fascinated by Erle Stanley Gardner, be it his Perry Mason defending seemingly indefensible defendant (especially a lady in distress) with the aid of secretary Della Street and investigator Paul Drake or his ‘Donald Lam and Bertha Cool’ episodes which he wrote under his pen name ‘A.A.Fair’. I loved reading ‘James Hadley Chase’. I was equally fascinated by बाबुराव अर्नाळकर  ह्यांच्या  धनंजय - छोटू काळापहाड कथा in Marathi. So I decided to try my hand at writing detective fictions. I must have been in eighth or ninth then. I mixed E.S. Gardner, James H. Chase and Baburao Anarnalkar, churned all the Perry Masons, Dellas, Drakes, सारे Dhananjays (धनंजय), Chotus (छोटू) आणि  Chandravadans (चान्द्रवधन) put together and I had my own recipe, a six-seven pages of my own detective fiction, written in Marathi. But as luck would have it, these pages landed in the hands of my sister, Usha. She showed it our eldest sister, Pushpa. Look on their faces said it all. But utter astonishment, they called my other sister.


"शुभानि! हे काय लिहिले आहेस?" they summoned her in this manner.

"किती अशुद्ध. र्हस्व- दीर्घ ह्यांचा काही तुला समज आहे की नाही? जे लिहिले आहेस ते चांगले आहे पण भाषेचे काय? मराठीतून शिकून सुद्धा तुझे मराठी इतके अशुद्ध कसे?" पुष्पा आणि उषाचे बिचारीला बौद्धिक डोस पाजणे चालू होते. Poor Shubha was going through this intellectual torture and all because of me.

Shubha asked them to show those papers to her.
" बघू मला. हे अक्षरच मुळात माझे नाही," she was trying to defend herself and even Perry Mason, I bet, would have failed in his mission to defend her.

"मग काय हे विनयने लिहिलाय? तो कसा काय लिहिणार. माहित आहे ना तो सेंट SEBASTIAN मध्ये जातो, नाही का? अंग्रेजी मध्यम, नाही  काय , पुष्पा?" Usha was prosecuting her. I imagined her to be Hamilton Burger, the district attorney himself (oops herself).




"होय, उषा तेंव्हा आम्हाला खात्री झालाय. शुभा,तूच लिहिले आहेस! कबुल कर," Pushpa announced her verdict and I imagined her as a judge in her black robe, a white wig on her head and grave and stern face to go with it, striking the hammer or gravel and declaring, “Guilty!” 




 I felt sorry for my sister. However, I remained silent. I haven’t disclosed that I was the owner of those few pages till this day. But then budding Marathi writer in me was thus stifled, the desire in  to write in Marathi being nipped in the bud itself.


Nevertheless, I continued with my story- telling activity, throughout my younger days telling stories to my cousins, who would also lend me their patient ears, especially my cousin Dilip, and continued to do so in my adulthood as well, telling stories to my own children as well as other children, sometimes reading books / fairy tales / adventures and other stories for them and making them read as well. And I still enjoy telling stories even now, especially to Sarah, my grand-daughter. Once, she was about three years or so. We, my wife and I, were visiting them in Sharjah (in the UAE) and we, my wife and me, would tell her stories in turns during her bedtime. It was my turn that night. After telling her ‘n’ number of stories I was about to sleep when she exclaimed, “ बाबा, स्तोली बोलो!"                                  
 “Why should I say sorry?” I asked.                                                                           
 But again she repeated, “ बाबा, स्तोली बोलो, प्लीज.”                                                   
 “But tell me why should I say sorry to you,” I almost shouted at her “I haven’t done anything wrong, have I?”                                                                                        
  “Baba, not sorry, स्तोली, राजा और रानीकी स्तोली!"                                              

“Oh! So you want a story of a king and a queen.”                                                   
  “ Yes, Baba!”  Then she slept in my lap and the smile on her face gave me immense happiness.


Today Sarah is eleven plus and now when we visit them in Saudi she reads and tells us stories that she has read. She too has picked up the art of story-telling and my heart swells with pride! Some years back  she had phoned me to tell, " Baba, I got the first prize in story telling competition in school."
 "Wow! What was the story?" I asked.
 "Baba, the one, you had told me once. It's bout a bear and two men,"the eight year was telling me proudly,"How his so called friend climbed a tree and abandoned him as a bear approached them. How he pretended to be dead when the bear came near. I remembered the whole story. How he told his friend what the bear had whispered in his ears, 'Never trust a selfish friend, who deserts you at difficult time'. Baba,everybody clapped when I had finished telling the story.  Baba, I want hear some more stories - when are you and Aai coming here?"

We are still there for our grand child to tell stories and to listen to her stories. I always encouraged my children to read everything, but kept them away from those American comics at least in their formative years, till the kids were thorough in Grammar and advised my son to do likewise.

As a child, I was scared of reading comics. And there were some elders in the family who would make me read them and would laugh at my pronunciations, made fun of me and they seemed to enjoy watching me wince. Satirical fellows? Sadists, you would call; but at that age I did not know that word. But I must confess I simply couldn't read or understand those colloquial phrases and words. And some of them still live in their wicked world and still think that I take assistance from children to write all this. Now tell me who haven't grown.






'I GONNA DO', 'I DUNNO', I'M PURTY SURE; 'FEITERS BREAKIN'JAIL', 'VAMOOSE', 'THAT GAL'------------all these were simply beyond my understanding,at least then.So my friends if you give your kids these comics to read, you read out to them explain these phrases and words and tell them what's correct.

I was totally aghast to learn that some city schools have included lessons on Internet acronyms and emoticons in their English syllabus. I am horrified when kids use this lingo (oops, pardon me for using foreign email language) in their essays and letters as well.  But now they have official permission to so. They will soon learn '2 write lyk ds wey in der scul'. Why just in School? They may even use it at home. Don't be surprised to find on the door of your teenage kid's room, a tag reading 'DND' for 'Do no disturb' sign. They will not write in complete sentences and may soon forget the correct spellings of the words.But don't ever ridicule them even they write 'ridikulas', correct them instead.
 As I have said or rather written that story telling is an integral part of growing up. However, there are other children who are not so fortunate as yours or my kids. There is no one at home to tell them stories. Their mother and father come home late from work and have no time or energy to tell them stories. They certainly miss their grand- parents. The digital revolution may have filled this gap to some extent. There are DVDs and animated videos of children stories. But all these gadgets are just mechanical. There is no ‘Life’ or 'Soul' in them. These devices can’t react to the child’s response to the story or can't answer the child's innocent questions.


Now I shall dwell on 'Letter Writing', which is no doubt a lost art, but my favourite. What do expect with advance technology. The telephone and the fax, the telegraph and the emails have completed the destruction of the art of letter-writing. But I loved this art even when I was school going kid. My journey into the letter-writing world began when I joined the 'Pen Friends Club'. (Yes, they had such clubs then) I must have been in seventh or eighth then. My first pen friend was an American girl, who was more interested in exchanging gifts than views and thoughts. Our wave lengths did not match, and her frequent requests for gifts were beyond my pocket,which was empty most of the time anyway ('pocket-money' concept was unheard of in our house and my children too never had this luxury). So I ceased to write her letters.In the meantime I had also cultivated another pen friend, purposefully selecting a matured college going guy, who was five-six years my senior. To impress him I had once written to him thus:

Dear Ravi,
               Isn't that your name? Ravindrakumaram Kuriakose is all very well, but you see when you are dreadfully busy in studies for X exams (as currently I am), you will certainly have no to time write such long names; particularly when it takes you more than an hour to remember how to spell it. Again there is another difficulty you may face - of finding the 'Malayalam-English & English - Malayam' Dictionary. Do you have one? Even if you do have such a dictionary, you have to actually find it, then see  if you have spelt the name correctly, which will come only after you have made out which is dictionary and which is dust and there is job of finding where 'R' in Malayalam be located. So with all this bother that I may have to undergo, I am sure that you won't mind my writing it short and calling you 'Dear Ravi'-----  

Whether he was impressed or not, I do not know. But he did write to me several letters and most of them were on similar lines, about his college life, his science subjects, how he found it difficult to grasp physics and how he was totally lost in maths. With all his difficulties he did manage to move forward and was now in Engineering College. Gradually his letters became infrequently frequent.Then suddenly one day I received a letter from his married sister, Rohini. She wrote:

Dear Vinay,

I am Ravi's eldest sister. Ravi is busy in his studies. Even if he wasn't, he would hardly write. He doesn't love writing letters. It was me who pushed him into it. He wrote all those letters to you and his several pen friends, but they were my thoughts. It made me feel young, about 15-20 years younger, about your age. I am in my forties and you must around 16-17, right? I liked what you write and written so far. We, my husband and me, have often read together your letters (to my brother.Anyway he hardly ever reads them.). 

Vinay, one thing I would like to tell you, like an elder sister would to her younger brother,  is that to write a good letter you must approach the job in the lightest and most casual way. You must be personal, not abstract. You must not say, "This is too small a thing to put down." You must say, "This is just the sort of small thing we talk about at home. If I tell them this they will see me, as it were, they'll hear my voice, they'll know what I'm about." You could write about how your sisters had laughed at your bad jokes.If you intend to write such volumes you must know it will be impossible for you to keep any order or method in what you write; that will come first which is uppermost in your mind, not that which is uppermost in your heart--. A letter written in this fashion eliminates distance; it continues the personal gossip, the intimate communion (sharing of thoughts, in case do not know what communion is), that has been interrupted by separation ( you may be physically present); it preserves one's presence in absence. It cannot be too simple, too commonplace, too colloquial. Its familiarity is not its weakness, but its supreme virtue. If it attempts to be orderly and stately and elaborate, it may be a good essay, but it will certainly be a bad letter. Perhaps you may not understand all this right now, but one day you will.---- she went on telling me about Ravi's progress, his completing of graduation, how he had secured addmission in MBA and finally signing off as --Yours ever loving sis Rohini.

Subsequently, we exchanged several letters. I had completed my B.Sc. Her letters had ceased coming. Then I received a letter from her husband informing me that she was dead. She had never ever mentioned in her letters to me that she had been suffering for several years, suffering from leukaemia. Rohini, may her soul rest in peace!

During my college days my classmate, Farooq Ruknodian, would send letters from  Cape Town,South Africa,where he would go during our vacations. He wrote about the Apartheid, about the beauty of the Afrikaans and about his beautiful country and its wild life. After graduation he left India for good and never came from his native country and never written to me since then.

Another college classmate on mine, Neville Mistry would write good letters, about our college days, his Karate Workshops, movies and a lot of varied subjects. Now he writes letters no more to me, but sends emails to me of 'Forwards' (some of them are quite interesting) he receives from others or some 'copy- paste' quotes, and sometimes sends me sms, like 'Happy Birthday', Happy Diwali or some other festival', 'Thnks', etc. on my mobile. But that personal touch is missing.
 
Francis is a close friend and  a colleague. We worked together in Chowgule's. Subsequently he went to Saudi Arabia and was working there for more than thirty years in ARAMCO.  He too wrote good. letters. He had an eye for details. His letters were always clean, neat, orderly and yet quite interesting. In his very first letter he had written how different (as compared to working here in India) it was working there and how satisfying it was to work under an American boss. Now he began to write 'I've a very busy Sketjule (for schedule)' Our colour was replaced by his color. But otherwise he hadn't changed. He was impressed by the typewriter that he was using, some electronic variety; he had even sent me a type-written letter. About his boss he had written thus: 
He is small and stout (a rare feature for an American), with short arms,short legs and a round head with a red pimply face, planted direcly on his trunk, which is also round and short, and with apparantly no neck, which gives him a froggish appearance. But don't go by his looks. Beneath that thick round there is a very sharp and clever brain and under that thick and stout chest there is a kind heart. When he appreciates your work he gives  solid pat on your back or even hugs you and exclaims, "Very nice work,pal!" I feel very embarrassed when he does this. (That's my shy and modest fellow!)

Now you must have realized what I meant when I said he had an eye for details.

This then is all my take on READING BOOKS AND STORIES, TELLING STORIES AND WRITING LETTERS.
  
My friends, I shall always remain wordfully (THERE IS NO SUCH WORD, I BELIEVE.) yours ever VINAY TRILOKEKAR