Sunday 12 May 2019

Reminiscing on Those Good Old Days


While I was overhauling my bookshelf, I discovered few diaries of mine. They all were written before the age of blogs, or at least before I started writing them.
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In that pile of scribbles I found this travel account. It is no piece of great work, much like most of my writings. Still I decide to share this simply because it cherishes one of those bygone moments when I felt at home with the two most special ladies of my life. It talks about a time when my life was so rosy, so complacent that I could recognize and be amazed by the simple glories of God. Yes, that was a time when I staunchly believed in the benevolence of God.
  So, this blog is only a memory walk into those happy moments under the cozy canopy of a blessed family. So much has changed since then…

My Trip To Shantiniketan
            Amusing on my naivety, I have kept the piece intact, as much as possible.
(Circa 2002. )

We drove to Shantiniketan which is in the heart of Bolepur, on 15th August, wishing to get some independence from the modern, mechanized life of Kolkata. And our expectations were fully nourished after staying there for three nights and two days.
As soon as I entered Shantiniketan, the first thing that my eyes marked was the coherent coexistence of the rural and urban life. Huts and pucca houses stood side by side, swans swam in the pond, half naked carefree street urchins played on the road side and the women gave dung cakes for drying. But adjacent to all that stood mansions with garages.  We checked in to one such construction.
That evening we went on a drive into the outskirts of Shantiniketan. The people there seemed to be feebly acquainted with automobiles. They gaped at us as we drove over  red soil … the red soil that fascinated many a poet including Rabindranath Tagore himself. These poets, especially Tagore valued  country life and Santhal culture greatly. That is why our founder of Vishwabharati always tried to uplift the Santhals but never uprooted them. That is why, essence of tribal culture can still be sensed in every nook and corner of Shantiniketan.  Not only that, he also helped tribal art, dance and music to flourish under the thickets of Chatimtala.

Such beautiful amalgamation of rural and urban, tribal and modern has been possible only because of the inhabitants of this place. All are very friendly here. Even their quarrels sound like notes of music. They have a jolly face, as if highly satisfied with life.
When we entered the lodge, in the beginning we got overwhelmed by the reception that we became a bit skeptical. But soon we realized that the warmth they showed was out of sheer simplicity. On the second day we met a bow legged old lady near the Kopai river. She spoke to us in such a manner that anybody would think we knew each other for quite a long time. She asked one coin each from my grandfather, my grandma, my father and my mother. She was so thrilled to have gotten so many coins that she invited us to her shack. She also prayed for us at their Santhal Devi temple.

But all this has started to be tainted by businessmen. Their intrusion is engulfing the farming lands. Multi-star resorts are being constructed which are maligning the serenity of the place. The proprietors of the resorts retort by saying that these ventures are encouraging tourism, which is indirectly giving boost to the economy of the place. This is true to an extent. But it must be kept in mind that beauty of Shantiniketan remains in the chastity of the place. Few have already violated it, and many others attempt to do so. And this will not stop unless all stand arm in arm against such adulteration.
Nevertheless, we had a wonderful time in Shantiniketan. We saw teachers taking classes under the trees, painters and artisans at work in the open field. We also went to Tagore’s residence and viewed many sculptures made by the talented craftsmen of Vishwa Bharati.
But the most memorable part of the trip was Varsha Mangal show. In this show the dance and music students performed Rabindra Nritya accompanied by Rabindra Sangeet. In this way they paid tribute to the rain. Spending a musical evening at Shantiniketan, sitting among the students, residents and local people was a pleasure in itself… truly “Shadhu!”(heavenly)


Those were the scribbling of my living spirit. So ancient do they sound. So much has been lost, so much has been done. Yet I failed to write one more line although I have revisited Shantiniketan several times.Was it because I got preoccupied or it was because I have gone blind?       

 
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