Explore this blog by clicking on the labels listed along the right-hand sidebar. There are lots of interesting stuff which you won't find on the home page
Seriously curious about me? Click on ' What sort of person am I?'

Thursday, August 15, 2024

Independence Day, and a request ... serious readers, please don't ignore

I-Day passed unusually quietly in my immediate neighbourhood, in the sense that the usual blaring, deafening 'patriotic songs' and speeches over loudspeakers that shatter my early morning beauty sleep were missing. Who knows why? I have been flooded by 'Happy Independence Day' messages, which made me wonder: has it become like 'Happy Valentine's Day' or some such inanity? After all, wasn't it supposed to be a day for sober retrospection and introspection, remembering with gratitude and awe all the great women and men who suffered and died so that we might have this enormous privilege? And then we just take it for granted and trivialize it? This was the season of the Great Freedom sale, and ads telling us 'Shop karo azaadi se'. Maybe all countries gradually become like that, but if anyone tries to glorify it or even justify it instead of lamenting over the cultural degeneration it implies, sorry, I am not on the same page.

One very personal kind of good news: the Income Tax department has just discovered that I have now become a senior citizen, and very graciously granted me a sizeable tax refund. This is the first time the government, any government, has done me a personal favour since I read in Jadavpur University at a hugely subsidized price. Since they have even withdrawn the old folks' discount on railway tickets, I guess I must be satisfied with this pittance.

I am reading a book based on the life of a real woman doctor in 15th century China - Lady Tan's Circle of Women - and I am entranced not only to know how much doctors knew in those apparently Dark Ages, and how many lives they saved even in situations where modern doctors would immediately give them up as hopeless cases. And (combined with my great grandpa's book mentioned in the last post) it reconfirms my conviction that someone I knew who grew up into a 'medical entrepreneur' and tycoon, and burnt a remark on my mind that 'a doctor is only as good as the machines at his disposal' is not only an ass, but a greedy, callous, lazy ass, unwittingly insulting countless great stalwarts living and dead in a time-honoured calling. Pity he has become so diminished, but maybe it's just the zeitgeist? Oh, by the way, I would have loved to read some comments on my last post. Readers, cat got your tongue?

Finally, one old boy, Soham Mukhopadhyay, a physicist just finishing his PhD in Vienna, has taken it upon himself to collect good memories about me from old boys and girls who have some such and would like to share. About a dozen of the best people have already written in. I now put the link here, and would love to read more contributions. They will be balm to my soul in the dusk of my life. So please do write. And nobody has to confine a reminiscence to one hundred words!

2 comments:

Tanmoy said...

Dear Suvroda
Great news on the refund!
As far as Independence Day is concerned – i wish it was more a memorial day than anything else. Sadly, it is not, and it is not going to be. Over time and increasingly the society has dismissed subtlety – so I am not surprised what you experienced.
Unnecessary extravagance was not only frowned upon but it was an object of satire. I recall how Utpal Dutt’s character in Shriman Prithviraj had a band playing “Kripa Kore Koro Ray Bahadur” – now either in real life or in social media life we are all like that.

We need to make sure we do everything so that others believe we care ! That is what matters, whether we really care or not does not really matter any more.

Regards
Tanmoy

Suvro Chatterjee said...

Tanmoy, your last line brought back to mind how the Christian priest who took care of the denizens of Pilkhana slum in Howrah back in the early 1980s (on whom a major character in the book City of Joy was modelled - the name escapes me) shooed me away when I went to interview him on behalf of The Telegraph: 'I don't do this for publicity!' Always, everywhere, those who truly care - a tiny minority - don't care what others are thinking and saying about them. Thank you for the reminder.