2B West road, West CIT Nagar, T Nagar, Madras – 35. This is
a famous address especially in the erstwhile Madras. Some knew it as a house
which housed about 3 families permanently and a number of families that lived
in depending on the time of the year. The house always smelled of filter
coffee.
There was a large gate at the entrance of the house. There was
a badly mowed lawn with a tiny clearing that led to the front door of the
house. There was a huge mango tree at the side of the house. In the shade of
that tree, resting on the wall of the house, you would always find a black Hero
cycle. The front door of the house was almost always open. It provided great
ventilation against the sultry heat of Madras. We didn’t have air conditioning
back in the day. The open doors signified something else. It was a welcome to
all the people who wanted to come in. What’s more was that we would almost
always have guests who were sitting in the front room. When there were guests
it meant one thing, more filter coffee.
The front room of the house was kind of typical. It didn’t
boast of fancy furniture but was functional. There was a table and chair at the
corner with a table lamp on top. It was always cluttered with papers. A couple
of chairs were strewn across the room. More chairs from the dining table always
found their way into front room because we invariably needed them. The most
striking thing about the house was a long bench. It was made of solid teak and
more than 6 feet in length. It was quite the “simhasanam” for my thatha. He was
that eternal host to the steady stream of guests. He was the rose to which the
bees swarmed.
If someone drew a picture of my thatha or saw a photograph
of him today he would look like an unassuming man. He always wore white. He had
this long collared kurta and a dhoti to go with it. He would have an
“angavastram”. This had to match with his dhoti. But if I remember right he
never paid a lot of attention to that. My grandmother did. His only insistence
was the angavastram should have a thin non flashy border. His insistence pretty
much reflected his personality. A man of simple living and high thinking. He
had a shock of white hair, which was always thinning due to his age, but sort
of complimented his clothes. What went very well with his clothes was a smile
on his face that was an ever present thing. Age had given him a stoop and a
shaky right hand. None of these things deterred the man fondly called SVS by
all and sundry. In his white he looked like a beacon of light that walked
amongst us.
My parents, my brother and I lived with our grandparents
till I was about 10. So my memories are from a time very long ago. I am also
envious of the fact that I wasn’t older or more matured to have more time to
spend with my thatha. There is a reason to this. I have many a story to tell
about my thatha. There is a lot that, especially, I got thanks to the proximity
I enjoyed with him. In many ways it shaped me or rather gave me the ability to
find the tools to shape me. But my envy lies in the stories that I have heard
from others as to what my thatha meant to them. There were people who used to
worship the ground he walked. I only had a chance to lie next to him during the
warm Madras afternoons as he told me stories and more stories.
My thatha was one of those rare intellectuals who had his
feet firmly on the ground. Let’s not misunderstand this to be a person with no
ounce of pride. He had his pride and when he decided to put his foot down there
was absolutely nothing stopping him from going through with it. But he had a
heart that was the size of the earth. Pretty much everyone had a place in it.
He strongly believed in causes. He was extremely principled. His knowledge was
extensive and his desire to share it was unparalleled.
He had many associations. Notable amongst them were Kalki
and the Authors Guild of India. After he came to pass I heard a couple of
stories of his associations with them. During the time I lived with him I
neither understood the significance of his role nor the relevance. They were
just associations from which my thatha met people or something the notepad on his
desk said. I never fully grasped the intellectual ocean in him. He was one of
those passionate literati. He was known for his translations, his books and the
sheer knowledge he had on all of these things. He was very passionate about
Tamil literature. During my schooling days I didn’t have an opportunity to
study Tamil. This is one of those aspects which takes me back to those other
envious people who could actually pick his brains on something related to Tamil
literature.
My memories take me back to many a sultry afternoon in the
Madras heat. I would finish school and rush back home. I always had a supply of
books or comics thanks to my dad’s job in Higginbothams Ltd. I would grab one
of them and would rush to my thatha. We would then squeeze in that bench and he
would tell me the story. The books were usually mythological comics. Ramayana
and Mahabharatha or parts of it. It wouldn’t take long for them to get over. It
never mattered to me. I would go back with the same Amar Chitra katha digest to
my favorite storyteller again and again. My thatha never refused. He would
patiently tell me those stories again and again and again. When I would replay
parts of it, just the way he said it, back to him, he would give me one of his
hearty laughs and ask as to why do I keep coming back with the same story when
I knew it by heart. I don’t think 5 year me had an intelligent retort to that.
He never expected it either. I would go back to him on another sultry Madras
afternoon with the same Amar Chitra Katha and he never said “No”.
My brother and I had this ritual of an evening stroll with
my thatha sometimes. He would take us out much to the dismay of my grandmother.
She didn’t consider my thatha responsible enough to handle two pesky kids that
too at a time when the roads were bustling with the homecoming traffic. We
nevertheless went with him and always returned with a candy, ice cream, a toy
or comics. My thatha knew full well that this act would not go unnoticed by
grandmother and he would have to hear an earful. But my thatha was the Rock of
Gibraltar and had lived with his wife long enough. He let her say all the
things she wanted to say. My grandmother knew full well what she was saying was
falling on deaf ears. Amidst all this were 2 confused kids, my brother and I,
wondering if we should start playing with the toy or not. It didn’t look like
we had many approvals in the house. Despite all the commotion my thatha’s
beaming laughter was the assurance that all was indeed well.
He would help me with my Hindi homework and that’s also one
of my favorite memories. I would often be required to write an essay and he
would dictate it to me and I would write it down. The next day the look on my
teacher’s eyes would be priceless. She would gape at me and ask who taught me
some of the words I had used. I would proudly tell her “my thatha”. I don’t
think that drew any surprise on her face. After all everybody in the household
had a title by which we were more popularly known as. My grandma was ‘SVS
mami’. My dad was SVS’ son. My brother and I were, as you would have presumed
by now, SVS’s grandsons. That title pretty much worked as our visiting card. It
was also a lot of pressure. We were always expected to be smarter than
everyone. After all we were SVS’s grandsons. But that was for the outside
world. My thatha never once asked for my marksheet from school. I would show it
to him on the day we got our progress report. I always saw pride on his face. I
could have been 3rd in class or 13th. He was still proud.
I never understood his pride when I came 13th. I kind of get it now.
Some families are blessed. Our family definitely was. When I
say our family it included a large set of people who lived with him at some
point in time. It includes close relatives, distant ones, friends, the needy
and the neglected. There wasn’t even a question that my thatha and grandma will
turn them away if they showed up at our doorstep. So they did show up and
walked away not just tummy full but wiser than ever. That was our family’s
blessing. There was this man who stood by every word he said. He had large arms
in which he wanted encompass as many people as possible and a larger heart
which fit thousands and had enough space for more.
I remember his “shatabhishekam” (80th birthday)
where the stream of guests were endless. A frail looking man and his wife were
on stage going through a long string of ceremonies. My brother, cousins and I
were running frantically because we had run out of chairs for the guests at the
venue. The venue we booked was a pretty large marriage hall but the crowd that
turned out was huge and the caterer literally had to bring out a magic wand to
feed one and half times the number of people we had placed an order for. People
came in throngs. That was the love and respect he literally commanded.
I fondly remember my thatha for what he was. He was
different from every other member in the family. He was never upset with me. He
never felt I was being too mischievous. I never warranted an admonishing from
him. He put great trust in my understanding and explained things rationally,
logically and mythologically. He just knew that the 5 year me or 8 year me
understood him. His patience was infinite and his love was vast. I still
picture him watching something on TV or stooping over the table reading the
newspaper. He just looked himself. He always insisted that my brother and I
read the newspaper. We didn’t pay heed to him then. We both do now and see a
lot of sense in what he said. My grandmother always worried after her
grandchildren as to what would happen of us. She was a very pragmatic and
worldly woman. My thatha had an unshakeable faith that we would both turn out
well. She would often pick a bone with him on his blindfolded optimism. She was
always under the impression that we had to carefully construct our future with
meticulous planning, foresight and frugality. Today somewhere in the heavens
both are smiling.
I cherish my time spent with him and attribute every word I
read and write to him. He taught me something powerful. He taught me how to
imagine. I carry that with me every day. If I had a time machine I would slip
back to that sultry afternoon after lunch. My thatha is getting ready to sleep
but I am already sitting on the bench with a comic in my hand. He just sees me
and smiles.
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