I went over to my daughter’s place after four months for just a little less than a fortnight, and came back to a Durgapur already blazing. It hasn’t rained for six months – I can’t remember the last time this happened – and the dust in the air is becoming unbearable: I am waiting desperately for some early nor’westers.
My
mother had gone along with me (I am too scared to leave her alone at home for
any length of time after that last horrible scare in September!), and spry as
she is despite her age, she took over the management of our little household in
Delhi like a duck taking to water. I did my mite, including going over grocery
shopping to C.R. Park and attending to some household chores, but it wasn’t
much. A visit to Sunder Nursery (what incredible greenery even in early March!)
and lunch over rumali roti and various kebabs and tikkas at Ghalib’s in
Nizamuddin were two of the highlights of our sojourn this time. My daughter is
currently doing a job which involves mostly working from home (except when she
has to go on field trips), so I managed to share a lot of time with her, which
is basically what I live for these days.
As
usual, I did a lot of rich browsing in my daughter’s ever-growing repertoire of
books. One of the most significant was The
Cases that India forgot by Chintan Chandrachud, a very readable set of
summaries of some of the landmark judgments delivered by our higher courts
since Independence. The other two were both coincidentally written by Indian women based in the US: The Twentieth Wife by Indu Sundaresan (a
wonderful re-creation of the love affair of Noor Jehan and Emperor Jehangir – I
am eagerly waiting to lay my hands on the two sequels) and The Satapur Moonstone, featuring the female lawyer-detective
Parveen Mistry, set in the early 1920s, written by Sujata Massey: after the
Mujaffar Jang books by Madhulika Liddle (I wish she’d write more), this was the
best Indian writing in this genre by any Indian author that I have read: I
shall make bold to announce that I prefer this sort of stuff over the Cormoran
Strike books by J.K. Rowling.
We
now have a bicycle in Delhi, and one afternoon I rode several kilometers along
roads chock a block with speeding motor traffic: a pretty hair-raising
experience. Seeing that a lot of people are again cycling these days, I hope
the municipal authorities would see it fit to mark out dedicated cycling lanes
along all major roads, and that soon.
The
return trip to Durgapur was harrowing. I had set out from home with two hours
in hand, and the drive normally takes barely more than twenty minutes at dawn,
but that day everything went wrong, what with a never-before-seen traffic jam
ahead of the airport (did it have something to do with the fact that the PM was
flying to Kolkata the same morning?), followed by hopelessly slow and clumsy
staff at the check-in desk, the usual swarming crowd at the security counter,
and then a very, very long scramble to the farthest of the boarding gates, my
poor mother huffing and puffing behind me – we boarded the plane with five minutes
to spare for takeoff. I’ll probably go back to arriving at the airport at
midnight and snoozing for four hours before the boarding gate. T3 is bursting
at the seams already: the sooner they get the other terminal ready the better.
Here
in Durgapur I am bracing myself for the usual admission rush at the end of this
month. I shall have no more online-class nonsense, God willing, and I hope to
start a normal session once more in April. I wish that the government(s) would
make up their minds and announce something about when they intend to let
schools reopen for the next academic year. Even if it is delayed by a month or
two, a definite decision would go a long way to clear people’s minds. Trains
and schools – those appear to be the only things that have not yet gone back to
normal.
I
have been avidly watching some of Karan Thapar’s interviews with Shashi Tharoor
on YouTube, and I have also lately developed a fascination for the young but
very articulate and dynamic Trinamul MP Mahua Moitra. Who says we don’t have polished,
educated and intelligent people among our politicians? Perhaps our real curse
is that the best of them don’t manage to rise to the top!
Have
you started laying bets on the most likely outcome of the imminent Assembly
elections in West Bengal?
1 comment:
Dear Sir,
Speaking of Karan Thapar, I would like to refer you to his other interviews. Here is the link to his famous 3-minute interview (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tAGAYL8dtic) and the consequences of that interview (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nFCRSEMRQAg).
Here is his interview with Ramachandra Guha (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iiD3i75CvqQ).
Coming to Mahua Moitra, I think she ought to have a more important footing than she currently has. As you have already noted, she is educated, an eloquent and charismatic speaker, has taken the government to task on three separate occasions(as of now); and can tackle questions. Connecting to Karan Thapar, I felt her interview with him was more of an 'Aam Khaate Hain' type of interview - he was quite soft on her. Here is a more prominent and satirical interview of her (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2OVDcde-8X0). By satirical, I mean the interviewer is playing a character. A few years ago, she also appeared on Arnab Goswami's show and gave him the finger.
Swarnava Mitra.
ICSE 2016
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