Withered Tulsi,
Shattered Shaligram and a Smiling Lad: Remembering Amma
Someone has rightly opined, time
has wings, it flies….since then, twenty years have passed but the incident that
took place on the early morning of the 10th day of October 1992 is
so fresh in my mind as if it had taken place just a just few moments ago. I was
10+ then and 30+ now. One may wonder why I took so long, why I didn’t say
anything earlier. Was it because I did not miss her? Or I was running away from
that memory because that would hurt me? Nothing like that, the choice I made,
that is, to keep mum was a conscious choice. Truly speaking, I denied that event;
I could never believe that she is not around me. Yeah, she is around, but with
the only difference that this presence is COVERT one which I often witness more
powerfully than the overt ones. I could see, her taking pride when her, by
now grown up, son speaks in some seminar, and gets surprised to see how her
erstwhile super shy kiddie smartly talks and persuades young ladies, and
admonishes and cools when I try to become violent and do harm to others. Why,
then, this clarification now, is everything aright? or is this case an indication that something has gone wrong. This is the case indeed, I became unsettled, to be truthful, for a few moments I lost my
confidence when I happened to encounter Tulsi-Shaligram during latest visit to
my home. Last January, the moment I reached the door which connects the inner
and outer blocks of my ancestral house, my glance fell on the corner where once
used to be a splendid Tulsi-Chabutara, exactly the place where Amma used
circumambulate every morning with a water-lutki in her hand, and used to tie
nuptial knot of Tulsi and Shaligram on the auspicious kartik-ekadashi. I
recalled the view of shy green Tulsi covered in red piece of cloth sitting
pleasantly with the bright Shaligram placed in a brass throne. Now, there was
no escape, I had to deal with my old friends who received nourishment from the
same care-giver. “How r u ? our little friend” ask the divine couple ruefully.
Without waiting for my response, Shaligram continued “don’t you miss her? Oh, now
you are grown up.” The condition, in which I found my old friends, unsettled me
immensely and the sorrow was to take me in its grip but suddenly a couplet
from, Nida Fazli, which I had heard in a Mushaira from poet himself appeared in my mind....
Mai tumhare kabra pe faatiha
parhne nahi aayaa
Tu jinda hai meri in ungaliyon me…… ( don’t think I remember the 2nd line of the couplet correctly)
Which he had written for his
father.
As a matter of fact, she is not only alive in my
physical body alone but she manifests herself in whatever goodness and purity
(shivatwa aur shuchita) is there in me. It’s largely due to her grace that I have
been able to suppress, to some extent though, my wild animal instincts.
So poetry saved my life once again. I told
smilingly, to my old friends, its not the case that I have forgotten the things,
histories cant be changed, However I consciously wish to be oblivious of the
incident that had taken place on that day, for, I believe, feeling her COVERT PRESENCE makes much more sense to me than missing her OVERT ABSENCE. Hence, O divine
couple, if you desire so, you too follow this mortals' path and keep on smiling.