shevlin's world
Thursday, February 13, 2025
People I don’t know
On Sunday morning, I set out on a jog in a lane behind my house in Kochi. The lane is usually deserted. There are trees on either side. There are many houses with gardens in front. A large building is also there.
It is quiet enough that I can hear the cawing of crows and the chirping of sparrows. Of course, to listen to these sounds, I have to quieten the crashing sound of colliding thoughts in my head — happy moments, sad recollections, angry exclamations, revengeful desires, and nostalgic situations.
I often saw a thin man clad in a banian and a dhoti. He had grey hair and large eyes. He lived in a house in that lane. Sometimes, I smiled. He waved. Or he would say, “Good morning.” I would squeeze out some sound because I was breathing hard through my mouth. But we had no conversations at all. Neither did I know his name, nor did he know mine. It was a ‘Hi and bye’ acquaintance.
Then a couple of months ago, I realised he no longer came for his morning walk. What happened? Had he become ill? Has he been struck by a stroke and is bedridden? Is he suffering from dementia? Or has he passed away? Or a more comfortable thought: he might have gone for a long vacation.
Whatever the reason, I could knock on the door of his house and find out. But somehow, I haven’t. I am afraid to know the answer. And I prefer to remember him as I had seen him, with a pleasant smile and a gentle wave of the hand.
For many years, I would see a middle-aged man and woman go for a morning walk. He was tall and bespectacled. She reached his shoulders. But she always spoke animatedly, always moving her hands. And he listened with an occasional nod of his head. Then one day, he began walking alone…
One morning, someone put up a flex board on a pole announcing a death. A lady has passed away. She was 63. A group of women stand near it. One of them said, “Do you know who she is?”
And yes, one woman knows and explains.
When I look at the photo, I realise I don’t know her. Neither do I remember having ever seen her. Yet, she stayed nearby. This is city life. People live in their bubbles.
There have been other deaths in our lane.
A 60-year-old man, who had spent decades in the United Arab Emirates, returned. He was all set to spend the rest of his years with his wife and family.
But one morning he collapsed in the bathroom following a heart attack and passed away. As her husband lay on a mat on the floor, the devastated wife placed her head on the lap of her daughter. The son shed tears. Neighbours came and offered their condolences. Many who lived in the lane did not know them personally. But at this moment of tragedy, they felt the need to offer solace.
In a quiet lane, life-shattering events were taking place.
There is also silent suffering. A widow lives all alone. Children are away. Visitors are rare. Only the maid comes to cook and clean the floors. Her company is a TV set, and walls and windows.
Sometimes I run past a house where the owner has died. The children are abroad. The doors and windows are closed. That is the case with thousands of homes across Kerala. The Malayalis want to leave because of dismal job opportunities. And the people from other states, especially labour, want to come here because of good daily wages.
What a paradox!
On a recent morning, it is cloudy. A gentle breeze blew. I inhale deeply. I had reasons to be grateful for this fresh air. In Delhi, during Diwali, the Air Quality Index was 330, while in Kochi it was 60.
By this time, the dopamine has been released in my brain. My mood becomes lighter. I feel calmer.
And I am grateful to be alive.
(Published in rediff.com)
Thursday, February 06, 2025
The India of Today and Yesterday
Author Pradeep Damodaran travelled to many cities and towns associated with the freedom movement. He wanted to get a feel of whether the history still resonates. He also focused on the daily life of the people.
By
Shevlin Sebastian
In
February 2022, author Pradeep Damodaran visited the Sabarmati Ashram in
Ahmedabad. Expectedly, there were plenty of visitors, ranging from the young to
the old. Pradeep checked out Hriday Kunj, the home of Mahatma Gandhi and
Kasturba, between 1918 and 1930. He also walked through the museums and photo
galleries.
When
Pradeep perused the visitor’s book, he got a surprise.
One
visitor wrote that Gandhi would rot in hell for what he did to all Indians.
‘Even after 75 years of Independence, still we are crying, dying because of
you, Mr. Gandhi. I realised why BABASAHEB B.R. AMBEDKAR did not call you
Mahatma. Because of you, more than one crore people died during partition. Only
soldiers dead in Kashmir as of today’s count is 90,000!’ Pradeep added in
brackets: ‘No idea how he arrived at this figure.’
When
he pointed this out to Atul Pandya, director of the Sabarmati Ashram
Preservation and Memorial Trust, he said that this freedom to criticise Gandhi
was exactly what the man had fought for. ‘Let them try to openly criticise
today’s leaders and see if they can get away with that,’ said Atul
Pradeep
went to Juhapura, the Muslim ghetto in Ahmedabad and the Gulbarg Society in
Chamanpura.
This
is how he described what he saw at the Gulbarg Society where 69 people,
including women and children, were hacked to death by rioters in 2002: ‘An
eerie silence engulfed us. The entire gated community was desolate and
lifeless… At the entrance, to my right, were sprawling two-storey homes with
spacious balconies, porticos with round pillars and tiled flooring completely
blanketed by dust, soot and scars of burnt human flesh and blood. Doors and
windows had been ripped off, probably stolen by anti-socials. Fans and
furniture in areas not destroyed by the fire were also missing. Spacious living
rooms and bedrooms were bereft of furniture; burnt clothes and glass pieces lay
scattered upon piles of other debris, mostly burnt
wood.’
He
met Rafiq Qasim Mansoori, who was wearing sunglasses. Asked whether he had been
present during the massacre, Rafiq took off his sunglasses. His right eye
looked completely smashed. ‘A stone hit me in the eye,’ he said, by way of
explanation about what happened to him during the attack. ‘I lost nineteen
family members that day and that included my wife and infant son.’
In
Godhra, Pradeep dwells on the long history of communalism in the town, which
was a revelation. Muslims in Godhra belonged to the Ghanchis branch. They were
mostly poor and uneducated.
During
Partition, many Sindhis, belonging to the Bhaiband sect, migrated from Karachi
and settled near Godhra. They had experienced horrendous suffering at the hands
of the Muslims in 1947. That memory remained strong. The Hindu communalists
took advantage of this resentment.
The
first large-scale communal riot took place in 1948 between the Sindhis and the
Ghanchis. The Sindhis burned down over 3500 properties belonging to the
Ghanchis. They had to flee. The Sindhis took over the lands. ‘Even at that
time, arson was the top choice for rioters in this region,’ wrote Pradeep. The
riots between the two communities have continued intermittently over the
decades.
At
one time, Pradeep went to interview Maulana Iqbal Hussain Bokda, the principal
of the Polan Bazar Urdu School. When the Maulana spoke about the social
isolation and economic backwardness of Muslims, Pradeep asked whether the
Maulana had regretted not emigrating to Pakistan.
A
disturbed Bokda led Pradeep down a corridor and pointed, through a window, at
the tricolour flying high outside. ‘You see that tiranga? Since 2005, the flag
has been hoisted every day at 7 a.m. and is brought down at 5 p.m.,’ said
Bokda. ‘You tell me if you can find this anywhere in India. The tiranga is
hoisted every single day! If one person cannot do it, someone else does. You
know why? It is because we are Indians and we believe in this country.’
All
these stories are recounted in the book, ‘In Pursuit of Freedom — Travels
Across Patriotic Lands’. Pradeep would go to a particular place, which had some
link with the freedom movement. There, he would describe his encounters with
the local people. Then he would delve into the history of the place, as
connected to the freedom movement.
So,
in Bardoli, he talked about the Bardoli Satyagraha against the British by
farmers against high land taxes in 1928. Its success resonated across India.
The concept of nonviolent resistance became an idea that nobody could resist.
And it led to the independence of India, although it took another two
decades.
In
the first section, Pradeep goes to different places in Gujarat. In Part 2, he
goes to Uttar Pradesh. His first stop is Jhansi. Pradeep wanted to find out
whether the residents still remembered Rani Lakshmibhai.
And
yes, she is very much alive through hoardings, government flex boards and names
of colleges and other institutions. He visited the Jhansi Fort and marvelled at
its construction.
While
in Jhansi, Pradeep had an unusual experience. People would often ask him which
religion he belonged to. They would feel unnerved when Pradeep said he was an
atheist.
He
noted that those who asked this question had ‘never moved out of their native
towns and villages for generations. They had been fed stories about the
grandeur and courage associated with their religion. Merely seventy-five years
of imposed secularism are, perhaps, hardly sufficient to erase over 1000 years
of religious devotion, as I could see first-hand,’ writes
Pradeep.
In
Pala Pahadi village, Pradeep heard a familiar nationwide lament echoed by a villager:
‘What is there to say? Can’t you see for yourself? Everything is rotting here;
nothing has changed in the past seventy-five years. We have no roads, no
drinking water, nor any form of sanitation. Where are the free toilets? Where
are the schemes the government has announced? We have got nothing.’
In
Nandulan Khera, the people had converted over 90 percent of the Swachh Bharat
toilets into storerooms for storing hay and other non-essential stuff. The
problem with the toilets was that the government had not installed a septic
tank. And for the few who built septic tanks, once it got full, no lorries
could come to their village to get it emptied because of a lack of proper
roads. So the people stopped using the toilets and went back to the fields for their
ablutions.
In
Unnao, Pradeep went to the village of Mankhi, 17 kms away. He wanted to meet
the girl, whom ex-BJP MLA Kuldeep Singh Sengar raped on June 4, 2017, to
national outrage. Later, her father died in police custody. Pradeep discovered
that because of the danger to their lives, the family no longer lived in the
village. They had moved to Unnao.
Back
in Unnao, Pradeep met the girl’s mother, Asha Singh, a Congress candidate for
the UP Assembly elections. She detailed the sequence of events that took place.
Asha bemoaned the fact that men continued to rape women, especially of the
lower castes, with impunity. All the publicity associated with her daughter’s
case had changed nothing. The caste system remained powerfully rooted in
people’s minds.
Standing
next to Asha was a young woman who looked confident and sophisticated. It was
much later that Pradeep came to know she was the victim. ‘She was definitely
smart; perhaps in a decade or so, she would be ready for the polls and Unnao
might then have a serious contender from the fairer sex,’ said
Pradeep.
Some
of the other places Pradeep visited included Chauri Chaura, Champaran, and
Motihari.
In
the third section, Pradeep goes to Punjab, where he focuses on the Ghadar
movement. These were expatriate Indians, mostly Punjabis, who fought to
overturn British rule in India. He also visited Don Parewa (Nainital), Tamluk
(Bengal), Tentuligumma (Odisha), Panchalankurichi and Idinthakarai (Tamil Nadu)
This
is an eye-opening book. It is a history lesson and a picture of modern-day
India. This history, told as truthfully as possible, is important especially
when there is a lot of rewriting and erasure taking place these days. For
example, the National Council of Educational Research and Training has removed
all chapters on the history of the Mughals and of Gandhi’s opposition to Hindu
nationalism.
The
book shows that while progress has been made, in many areas, things have stayed
the same just as they were one hundred years ago. But the people fight on. There
is a deep sense of frustration and anger at the government because of the lack
of jobs for the young and for its failure to provide basic services. In the
end, this book is an insightful addition to help us better understand the India
of today and yesterday.
(A shorter version was published in the Sunday Magazine, The Hindustan Times)
Sunday, February 02, 2025
Hindi audio version of 'The Stolen Necklace' can be heard on Kuku FM
Saturday, January 18, 2025
The Burnt House
By Shevlin Sebastian
At
7 am, the day after the burial of his wife and two daughters, Nasir Khan stood
outside his house. The tiled roof had caved in, while the walls had dark stains
on them. The floor inside was a mess of ash, burnt wooden planks, sarees, and
children’s clothing. There were several collapsed bricks in the middle of the
dining room. An acrid smell permeated the house. He walked from room to room.
Nasir saw the half-burnt bed on which he and his wife Ruksana slept.
It
had taken so many years to build his dream house. Now it had taken a group of
young men less than an hour to reduce the house to a shell and destroy his
family. When the house caught fire, they became trapped inside.
When
he stepped out, he noticed his cycle had also been burnt. The tyres had melted
into a gooey mass on the ground.
An
image came to his mind. Of his two daughters running up to him when he returned
with packets of sweets. The sweet smiles and the affection in their eyes. Then
Nasir blinked, as tears welled up and the image vanished. He continued to stare
at the house. Other houses nearby were also in the same burnt condition. But he
was told the people had left much earlier. He was not sure why Ruksana did not
go away. Maybe she had been waiting for him. Or maybe she did not feel it would
be dangerous.
Nasir
Khan is 60 years old. The silver-haired man is a labour contractor. He had been
in Azamgarh on business the day when his life turned into darkness. Nasir knew
it had all to do with the coming assembly elections. Polarisation was the best
way to get the votes of the majority community. Riots acted like a vacuum
cleaner, to mop up the votes.
Some
altercation had taken place outside the mosque. Soon, armed men raided their
mohalla. They carried knives, country-made revolvers and cans of kerosene.
Nasir’s house was near the mosque. It suffered the most damage.
Nasir
saw from the corner of his eyes that a young man was watching him. He had a
beard and wore jeans and sneakers. ‘English fellow,’ thought Nasir. The youth
approached Nasir.
He
bowed his head and said in a low voice, “I am sorry for your loss.”
Nasir’s
lips curled in one corner. He was not sure whether the commiseration was
genuine. ‘Who is this man?’ he thought. ‘Where does he come from?’
“Sir,
I am a journalist from Lucknow,” the man said. “I write for an English
newspaper.”
When
Nasir remained silent, the man said, “I am Abbas.”
‘A
Muslim journalist,’ thought Nasir. ‘Okay.’
Nasir
nodded.
“Sir,
what happened?” Abbas said.
Nasir
explained what had happened. Or rather, he recounted what he had heard. Abbas
took down notes on a small notepad using a ballpoint pen.
As
Nasir spoke, he could feel the constriction in his heart easing up. His throat
seemed to open up. He spoke a bit more easily.
Abbas
asked a steady stream of questions calmly. Nasir answered them as best as he
could. For years, he held a resentment against these privileged, well-educated
city boys. Many of them were cocky. Sometimes, he felt like giving them a slap
when he saw them misbehave on the streets. But he knew if he did something like
that, their parents, with their influential contacts, would ensure he would
land up in jail. Then how would he feed his family? ‘Opt for safety,’ he
thought. But now Abbas was changing his perceptions. There were good youngsters
too. Well-behaved and polite.
As
Abbas paused in his questioning, Nasir said, “Why don’t we have a cup of
chai?”
“Sure,
Nasir Bhai,” said Abbas.
They
walked towards the road, crossed it, walked a hundred metres and came to Ramu
Yadav’s roadside shop. The one-room shack had benches placed outside.
“Two
chai,” said Nasir, as he and Abbas sat down beside each other on a bench.
Nasir
closed his eyes and rubbed his forehead with his thumb and forefinger.
“I
am so sorry about what had happened,” said Ramu.
Nasir
nodded.
“What
are you going to do now?” Abbas said in a low voice. “Will the government
provide compensation?”
“They
should, if they have any humanity,” he said, feeling a surge of anger whip through
him. It seemed as if his breath had stopped.
Nasir
observed Abbas sideways. The journalist had blinked, taken aback by his sudden
change in tone.
“It
is going to be difficult to move on,” said Nasir, in a softer voice. “For whom
should I live now?”
There
was a silence between them.
Ramu
brought two earthen cups for them.
A
tuft of smoke arose from the cups.
They
sipped the tea in silence.
The
sun arose in the sky.
In
a low voice, Nasir said, “Politicians will do anything to win votes.”
Abbas
placed the cup beside him on the bench and noted the sentence in his
diary.
Some
labourers drifted to the shop to have tea, bread and bananas.
Nasir
and Abbas finished their tea. They threw the cups into a bin nearby.
Abbas
pulled out his purse from his hip pocket and paid the money.
The
duo stepped out onto the road.
Abbas
took a few mobile shots of Nasir. Then he shook Nasir’s hand and said, “I will
send the report through WhatsApp when it gets published.”
Nasir
gave a brief smile and said, “I cannot read English, but I will ask somebody to
translate for me.”
They
again shook hands. Abbas stood at the bus stop.
Nasir
began to walk away, to his sister’s house two kilometres away. He was staying there
temporarily. Nasir would repair the house. And then maybe sell it and move off
somewhere else. Then he wouldn’t have to be reminded all the time about what
had happened. Nasir was surprised to feel a sense of relief in him. Abbas had
listened without interrupting him. Thus, in a way, Nasir could unburden
himself.
But
he also knew life would never be the same. Overnight, he had become the sole
surviving member of his family. Nasir looked down at the road and thought,
‘Allah, why did this happen? What wrong did I do? Or my wife and daughters? Why
is it that nothing seemed to happen to the people who did this? Why does the
innocent suffer all the time?’
As
he continued to walk, a visual appeared in his head. It was of the Yateem
orphanage, which was a few kilometres away. Every month, Nasir would donate
some money.
Once,
he had gone with his wife and children to meet the youngsters. Many people had
abandoned these children because of pregnancy out of wedlock. Some became
orphans because of riots. Someone had killed their parents. Nasir knew many of
them had psychological scars. You could see it in the sadness of their eyes and
their nervous gestures, like rubbing their face or touching the ears. His
family was deeply affected by what they saw. “Consider how lucky you are,” he
had told his daughters, and they nodded their heads solemnly.
Now,
they are dead. And a rage and anger coursed through Nasir’s body. He knew he
had to do something. Otherwise, hate would consume him. And so, Nasir decided
he would become a volunteer at the orphanage. He was sure interacting with the
children would enable him to fill the void in his heart. And he could have a
purpose in his life. He felt the children would heal him. In turn, he could
also heal them.
And
hopefully, one day, way off into the future, he would forgive the killers of
his family. Misguided, silly youth with no independent thought processes. Just
being exploited by callous politicians. These young men could end up in jail if
the authorities didn’t defend them properly in court.
‘Yes,’
he told himself. ‘Tomorrow I will go to the orphanage and see what I can
do.’
Abbas
got a window seat on the bus. His thoughts also revolved around Nasir and the
ruined houses he saw. ‘Nothing makes sense,’ he thought. But Abbas was glad
that thanks to his job he could see what happened first hand.
Abbas
had experienced none of the tragedies which Nasir was facing now. He belonged
to an upper-middle-class family in Lucknow. His father was a successful
criminal lawyer. His mother was a principal of a private college. He had
studied at La Martiniere school in Lucknow and St Stephen’s College in Delhi.
Abbas gravitated towards journalism because he enjoyed writing.
Two
Muslims from two different worlds met, consoled each other and went off in
different directions. Probably they would never meet again.
(Published in Muse India)
Tuesday, January 07, 2025
It’s all about going green
Former banker Ajay Gopinath runs Grow Greens, a firm that sells multigreens. Ajay says that they are the one-stop answer for all vitamins
By Shevlin Sebastian
One day, in 2006, Ajay Gopinath went to a restaurant in Bengaluru for lunch. He ordered a paneer dish. When the waiter brought it, Ajay noticed that there were leaves sprinkled on it in the shape of a triangle.
Ajay had seen curry and coriander leaves used as garnish. He knew their taste. But he noticed these leaves looked different. When Ajay tasted it, he felt it was unique. He asked the chef about it and was told that these were mustard microgreens. The chef said somebody was delivering them to the restaurant. But he did not have any more information.
Ajay headed the credit cards and personal loans division at Citi Bank in Bengaluru. He had been a staffer for 14 years. Ajay loved his work, but there was one problem. It was a 24/7 job. He found he could devote very little time to the family.
One day, in 2007, he quit. “It was an impulsive decision,” he said, at his home in Kochi. “I also wanted to get out of my comfort zone.”
He returned to Kochi, where his family lived. He has two children, a boy and a girl. His wife is a lawyer. For the next five years, Ajay enjoyed his free time. He roamed around, met friends and went on holidays. Then in 2012, he began working for a dental implants firm and helped them in marketing the products. Ajay worked till 2016.
One morning, in 2017, when he awoke, an idea popped into his mind. What about doing a business involving microgreens? He met many chefs in Kochi. They told him they were getting their supplies from Bengaluru. But it was not available in the shops or in supermarkets.
In the beginning, Ajay grew microgreens for the use of his family. The tray is 2 ft. by 1 ft. Each tray produces 500 grams. His family could not consume it all. Since it is a perishable product, Ajay began distributing it to his friends, relatives and neighbours. “The taste was different but everybody, including my family, liked it,” said Ajay. Soon, his friends said that instead of giving free samples, he should start selling them.
It was only in December, 2020 that he started his company, Grow Greens. He increased the number of trays.
Ajay’s method of growing is to use the cocopeat. This is a natural, growing medium made from coconut husks. The cocopeat is used as a base. He places the seeds on it. Then the trays are closed for three days because you need darkness for the germination to take place. Then it is exposed to 20-watt white LED tube lights hanging above the trays, for 10-12 hours. You have to pour water once or twice a day. The temperature should be below 25 degrees centigrade while the humidity is below 60 percent.
Today, he has 60 trays in an 80 sq. ft. room. Ajay grows radish, mustard, yellow American, bok choy (Chinese), sunflower, kohlrabi and many others.
Ajay imports seeds from the United Kingdom, the US, Australia, Italy and Israel. “The prices range from Rs 600 per kg to Rs 1 lakh,” said Ajay. The seeds have a shelf life of between six and eight months. But Ajay uses them within three months. He uses around 25 varieties.
To get the right seeds within India, Ajay travelled to Delhi, Ranikhet, and Nainital. He also went to G. B. Pant University of Agriculture and Technology, Uttarakhand. There they nurture organic seeds. In these places, they do not use inorganic seeds, fertilisers or pesticides.
On the plus points of consuming microgreens, Ajay said, “It is good for the eyes and skin. There are health sites which state that it prevents Alzheimer’s disease and cancer. It restores the calcium deficiencies in the body and solves knee pain. There is an increased protein intake. Most people have low levels of sodium. This helps to reach the right levels. Microgreens have protein and magnesium. There are macro and micronutrients. What else do we need?”
Ajay tells a story.
Raghu Nair (name changed), was getting chemotherapy at the Aster Medicity Hospital in Kochi. The doctor told Raghu’s son Mahesh that his father needed to have a lot of protein. “It is better to have microgreens,” the doctor said.
So Mahesh came to Ajay Gopinath’s house. Ajay gave him sprouted green gram.
When Mahesh said the doctor told him to buy 100 grams of each variety, Ajay said that over 25 grams a day is not good. “You must be careful that your father’s body can absorb these proteins,” Ajay told Mahesh. “You can consume beetroot, bok choy and sunflower. Then it will be a complete protein food.”
Raghu consumed the greens for three months. Ajay felt vindicated that when the doctor checked the protein levels, it was off the charts. The doctor immediately told Mahesh not to buy any more microgreens for the next month. This was the only way to bring down the protein level.
“It was a confirmation of the tremendous benefits of microgreens,” said Ajay. The good news was that Raghu went into remission, so the doctors stopped his chemotherapy.
Microgreens cost between Rs 150 and Rs 250 per 100 grams. You should consume the greens within seven days. The best way is to eat it raw. Or you can add it to a salad.
However, those who are consuming blood thinning medicines should consult with a doctor before consuming microgreens. “When people are on blood thinners, their Vitamin K levels are regulated,” Ajay explained. “When you consume microgreens, it increases the Vitamin K.”
Patients can consume microgreens which have a paltry amount of Vitamin K, like beetroot.
Grow Greens deliver to individuals, shops, hotels, gyms, hospitals, supermarkets and schools. Ajay delivers 5-8 kgs a day.
And since the nurturing is inside the house, Ajay does not have to suffer the vagaries of climate change. “I can grow 365 days a year,” said Ajay.
Asked about the difference between being an entrepreneur and working for a bank, Ajay said, “The salary which I was getting I am paying its equivalent to my five-member staff.”
But for Ajay, it is not about profit and loss only. “When I started, it was a passion for me to see how the seeds were growing,” he said. “I also think that these are natural plants, and hence good for human beings. We can solve the malnutrition issue. So, there is a social commitment.”
Ajay says that when he observes the leaves, he gets a message from them. “If the water is less, or it needs more light, the leaves might droop,” he said. “And if we forget to switch off the light, the next morning the leaves will look tired. It is through experience I can spot this. It is a living organism and has emotions. When we play music, the leaves look happy.”
Ajay said that in many Malayalam movies and families over the centuries, the grandmother would talk to the Tulsi plant. To allay one’s scepticism, he suggested the book, ‘The Secret Life of Plants’ by Peter Tompkins and Christopher Bird. According to Wikipedia, the authors talk about the ability of plants to communicate with other creatures, including humans.
(Published in Good Food Movement website)
Sunday, December 08, 2024
After the darkness comes the light
Psychotherapist Sonali Gupta’s book, ‘You Will Be All Right - A Guide to Navigating Grief,’ will help you understand what death does to you when a loved one passes away. It provides ways to cope with it.
By Shevlin Sebastian
Psychotherapist Sonali Gupta’s book, ‘You Will Be All Right — A Guide to Navigating Grief,’ begins with a quote by Elizabeth Gilbert, the bestselling author of ‘Eat, Pray Love,’: ‘It’s an honour to be in grief. It’s an honour to feel that much, to have loved that much.’
In the introduction, Sonali spoke about the intergenerational silence about death that exists in Indian families. And she gave an example.
Mayuri, 43, told Sonali, ‘This is the first time in years that I am crying while thinking about my mother’s death. I was six when my mother died in an accident. No one asked me how I felt or even tried to talk to me about what I was feeling. At home, there was sadness; yet my dad made it feel like life had to go on. I was not allowed to go to the funeral.’
Sonali begins the main section by clearing up some myths. For example, the belief that we only experience grief when we lose a loved one to death.
This was a fallacy. If you are not conceiving, you experience grief. The same is the case when a person is going through a separation or divorce, a break-up with a close friend, a miscarriage, infidelity, bankruptcy, and a loss of autonomy.
Here’s another myth that we all believe in: we will recover from grief and get over it as time passes.
But the author said that this is not true. ‘Unlike other emotions, which come and go, grief stays with us,’ she wrote. ‘It’s not a phase we get done with or move on from. David Kessler, an author and expert on grief, says that grief is not the flu, which we can recover from…. we learn to live with it.’
Grief causes many feelings to arise in you. A primary emotion is fear. How will life be now that the beloved has gone away?
Then there is anxiety. A patient Sujoy, who lost a brother, said, ‘I find myself worrying about everybody’s health. I’m constantly overthinking about my wife’s health. I’m anxious about my mum, who is fit and fine.’
Other feelings include anger, loneliness, isolation, emptiness, hopelessness and a longing for the loved one. But there is also relief, especially if the loved one is suffering from a long-standing illness or having mental issues like dementia or Alzheimer’s disease.
Alisha, a 35-year-old whose mother had dementia for four years, said, “We didn’t know how she was feeling. When she died, we all felt relief as she was in too much pain and there was nothing more we could have done. I love her and still think of her and miss her.”
Sonali wrote, ‘It is important to remember that relief and deep sorrow can co-exist.’
In most societies, there are rituals which help people to cope with death.
Mary Frances O’Connor, author of ‘The Grieving Brain: The Surprising Science of How We Love and Learn from Loss’, states that mourning rituals can offer constancy and comfort when everything can feel uncertain. ‘By connecting us to rituals that have existed for hundreds of years, we are reminded that those who came before us have experienced grief and uncertainty and they have carried on and restored meaningful lives.’
The book also delineates the physical reaction to grief. These include aches and pains, nausea, headaches, loss of libido, lack of appetite, weight gain or loss, insomnia or sleeping too much. There is also a psychosomatic reaction. A person has headaches, constipation, chest, back, body, or joint pains, breathing difficulties, or feeling feverish.
But what is a fact is that you will never recover from the death of a loved one. Dr. Elisabeth Kubler Ross, a Swiss American psychiatrist who wrote the bestselling book, ‘On Death and Dying’, said, ‘You will learn to live with it. You will heal and you will rebuild yourself around the loss you have suffered. You will be whole again, but you will never be the same. Nor should you be the same, nor would you want to.’
Elisabeth spoke about the five stages of loss: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance.
There is another type of grief that everybody experiences, but nobody talks about it. This is called anticipatory grief. We imagine what will happen to us when a loved one, or a parent, dies even though the people are healthy at the moment.
It brings guilt to the people who experience it, so they keep quiet about it. But people experience this all the time. And there is nothing to be ashamed about. It comes about from a fear that there is limited time. And one day, inevitably, death will come calling.
Then there is disenfranchised grief. This is the grief that one experiences when a maid, watchman, a former teacher, or a pet dies. And the people around them cannot understand why their wife, father or friend is having this intense reaction to the death of an acquaintance.
It is a grief that is not publicly mourned or socially accepted. This grief can be socially isolating. Sonali went through something similar when a former client died. She did not know how to process the grief. A supervisor told her, “It’s okay if you haven't met the person for years, the bond remains. Allow yourself to grieve. Find a way to express what you are feeling.” So Sonali took to writing a journal and felt better after a few days.
Members of the LGBTQ community, who have not come out, have to suffer grief in private and in isolation when a partner dies. This also happens when you lose a pet. Except for pet lovers, the rest of society does not understand your grief. “Why feel sad? It’s just a dog. You can get another pet,” is the common refrain.
Other events which cause disenfranchised grief include celebrity deaths. When Hollywood star Robin Williams died of suicide, Sonali started crying. ‘He was my favourite actor, and I associated some of my fondest memories with his movies,’ she wrote.
Then people may experience delayed grief. This happens when a person dies by suicide, or drug or alcohol overdose. The spouse may be in shock for months. He or she cannot talk openly about what has happened. They may go through panic, anxiety, or fear attacks. It is only after a long period that they permit themselves to grieve about what has happened.
In the last section, the author wrote movingly about the culture of silence that surrounds people when a close relative has died. Once, Ravi, a 50-year-old whose wife died of cancer, entered his office canteen. He saw that all his teammates who were laughing suddenly became silent.
“I don’t know if they felt uncomfortable being happy around me because of what happened, or they felt pity for me,” he said. “But I had reached a place where I wanted to leave the organisation, as I was tired of these silences.”
Author Katherine May succinctly describes this feeling in her book, ‘Wintering: The Power of Rest and Retreat in Difficult Times’: ‘Wintering is a season in the cold. It is a fallow period in life when you are cut off from the world, feeling rejected, sidelined, blocked from progress, or cast into the role of an outsider. Perhaps it results from an illness; perhaps from a life event such as bereavement or the birth of a child; perhaps it comes from humiliation or failure.’ But all of us have to struggle through the darkness till we see the light again.
This is a book everyone should read, especially if you have encountered the death of a near one. You will understand with clarity the tumultuous emotions you are going through. And if you see somebody who is struggling to cope because of the death of a close relative, this is a good book to present to them. It will make them less lonely and realise what they are going through is what humanity has gone through for millennia and will continue to do so.
Whether we like it or not, accept it or not, death is an inescapable fact of life. We are born, we live, then we die. This happens to everybody and to all the people we love. There is no escape from this finality. But books like this are a soothing balm to apply to our pain and provide us with the motivation to live life again.
Or to paraphrase Sonali: ‘We have to learn to carry love and loss together.’
Published in kitaab.org
Sunday, December 01, 2024
When a community dies
Photos: Queenie Hallegua at her home in Fort Kochi; David Hallegua with his mother; David and his sister Flory with Queenie; David with his wife Cici and daughter Eliana
On August 11, Queenie Hallegua passed away at 89. She was almost the last of the Sephardi (White Jews) in Fort Kochi after a 500-year presence. Her son David Hallegua reflected on his mother’s death and of his life growing up in Kerala
By Shevlin Sebastian
At 5.45 p.m. in Los Angeles on August 10, Eliana, 22, called her father David Hallegua and said, “Dad, I am in a panic. I don’t know what is wrong with me.”
About 14,900 kms away, in Fort Kochi, at 6.15 am on August 11, David was feeling groggy. He was suffering from jetlag after arriving from Los Angeles. At 3 am, he went to sleep in his parents’ house on Synagogue Lane. Even so, he told Eliana, “You have not had enough water to drink.” Eliana did that. Then she lay down and felt better.
As soon as David hung up, the housekeeper, Flory, came to his room and said, “I want you to check up on Mom.”
David immediately went to his mother’s bed, and even though her body was warm, Queenie, 89, was no longer breathing. David realised that at the moment Eliana felt anxiety and discomfort, her grandmother had passed away.
Queenie was almost the last of the Sephardi (White Jews) in Fort Kochi. Only her nephew Keith Hallegua, 65, a bachelor, remains. She was the wife of Samuel, a community leader and a prominent proprietor, who passed away in 2009.
Queenie’s funeral took place at the Gan Shalom Jewish cemetery. This is near the Paradesi Synagogue. David’s sister Fiona had flown down from New York.
“It was the end of that chapter of my life with her,” she said. “I felt relieved my mother was not in pain anymore.”
Asked about his mother’s last words, David said it happened on his previous visit in July. He had come home when Queenie had taken ill with congestive heart problems. As David was returning to the USA, he told his mother he was leaving. “She looked at me and smiled,” said David.
Then Flory told her, “Give your son a blessing.”
Queenie placed her palm on David’s head and said, “May you get everything that you desire in life. May God bless you!”
David feels sad that the community has died out. In the 1950s, there were about 2000 Jews in Fort Kochi and Mattancherry. But many emigrated to Israel when the country came into being in 1948. “A lot of Jewish customs and practices have disappeared,” he said.
David’s early life
David did his schooling at St. John De Britto’s Anglo-Indian High School at Fort Kochi. His best friend was Elvis D’Cruz. They sat on the same bench.
When David and Elvis were in Class 8, they realised that both their fathers were students of the same school. They studied in the same class.
After 30 years, Elvis and David met again in Kochi in 2023. Elvis lived in Dubai for many years and had moved to Fort Kochi. “It was so good to catch up with Elvis after so many years,” said David. “Elvis again came to see me when my mother passed away.”
After his Class 10, David did his pre-degree from Sacred Heart College in Thevara. Thereafter, he went to Trivandrum Medical College because he wanted to be a doctor. After completing his course, in 1988, he went to the USA for further medical studies. Today, David is a practising rheumatologist (the management of arthritis). His wife Cici is a chartered accountant while Eliana works at the Capitol Records music company.
Asked whether because he was a Jew, he felt different while growing up in Fort Kochi, David said, “My original identity was that of a South Indian. I speak Malayalam fluently. It was my first language. But in my daily life, I am Jewish.”
So David would not eat meat in a restaurant that was not kosher. But his friends, Christians, Hindus and Muslims understood and accepted it. In medical school, his friends would say, “We can’t go to that restaurant because there is nothing that David could eat there.”
David said that all his friends would come over during the Jewish festivals, like Rosh Hashanah and the Shabbat. He also had a joyous celebration for his bar mitzvah. This is a coming-of-age ceremony when a boy turns 13 and marks his transition to becoming an adult.
David celebrated the Onam festival in the house of his Hindu friends. He also enjoyed Christmas with his Christian friends and Id with the Muslims. Not to forget the Gujarati and Parsi festivals.
Asked how Fort Kochi has changed, over the decades, David said, “It has become a commercialised tourist hub.”
David lived on the lane that led to the Jewish synagogue. “By 10 am, nowadays, the lane is very crowded,” said David. “Thousands of tourists come every day.”
David remembered it as a quiet lane. “My sister and I would have impromptu games with other boys and girls,” said David. “It was boisterous and full of joy. The elders would get together and have a drink. Some drank liquor or soda, while others had soft drinks.”
The Jews would have guests like Hamsa, a Muslim lawyer, Babu Seth, a Gujarati lawyer, a Parsi gentleman named Sorabjee, and a Hindu by the name of Sundaram. “It was a melting pot in one person’s living room,” said David
On tables and chairs placed outside, the women, including Queenie, played a South American game called Canasta (a type of rummy). “It was very competitive,” said David with a smile.
When asked whether syncretism, after hundreds of years, is alive and thriving in Fort Kochi, David said, “Yes, everybody lives in harmony. They depend economically on each other. Nobody wants any trouble that will disturb the peace.”
(Published in rediff.com)
https://www.rediff.com/news/special/kochis-jews-pass-into-history/20241121.htm
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
Some thoughts after my uncle passed away
Photos: Joseph Vadakel with his wife Rani, daughter Reena, son-in-law Monis and grandchildren Joseph and Rosina; the house in Muvattupuzha where my my mother and uncle grew up; interstellar space
When my mother was a child, she and her younger brother Joseph (Babu) would go for morning mass at the Holy Magi church in Muvattupuzha. On the walk back home, a distance of about 800 metres, at some point, they would start sprinting. Each wanted to reach home before the other so they could read the newspaper first.
This was one of my mother’s most enduring memories. She would keep repeating this story over the decades, but she never told us who won, and we, self-absorbed children, forgot to ask. For my mother, the thrill was in the race.
My uncle Babu Vadakel was an advocate. He practised for decades in the Kerala High Court. Babu Uncle was known among his family members for having a sharp brain, a quick wit, and a charming smile. His eyes gave this message: ‘I know what you are up to. You cannot fool me.’
My cousin Joseph said, “During our younger days, we would be in awe of Babu Chettan. He had smart looks and a stylish dress sense. Babu Uncle had an exemplary skill of blowing the smoke out in circular rings one after the other.”
My conversations with Babu Uncle were interesting. I gained many insights.
Life went on. However, in the latter stages of his life, his health broke down.
On November 20, Babu Uncle passed away, aged 83, at his home in Kochi. He leaves behind his wife Rani, daughter Reena, son-in-law Monis, and grandchildren, Joseph and Rosina.
Of nine brothers and sisters, only my mother, now 87, and her youngest sibling, Anthony, 76, remain.
When cousins of my generation viewed Babu Uncle’s body, many had a shocked look on their faces. Some had a realisation that death was going to come to all of us. My uncle himself may have attended hundreds of funerals in his lifetime. Now it was his turn, just like it will be for us.
Each time a close relative dies, there is a blow to the heart, followed by heaviness. And sometimes a thought arises: what is the meaning of our lives? Where do we go in the universe?
Stereoscopic 3D filmmaker AK Saiber, my neighbour, has made a scintillating 90-minute 3D film for school students. It is about the solar system and the universe. The distances are all in lakhs of kilometres. The temperatures on some planets, like Neptune, are hundreds of degrees below freezing point. On Jupiter, there is a continuous storm every day and night of the year. It has been going on for centuries.
Saiber takes the viewer out of the solar system into interstellar space. Then the camera reverses and a voiceover states the Earth is too tiny to be seen from the outer limits of space.
And then you wonder where in this vast universe the souls go. Where is their resting place? Considering the long history of the earth, could there be millions of souls? Where is Babu Uncle now? Has he met his parents, siblings, friends, and acquaintances who were on the other side? Can he see us even though he is not in physical form? Is there divine energy? Can Babu Uncle see God finally? Many people who had suffered a temporary clinical death spoke about sensing other people and silently communicating with them.
When my uncle was in the last month of his life, he kept saying that he could see his parents and siblings. This happened to my father when he was nearing his death.
Hussain, 35, was the home nurse who looked after my father. He told me that in all the 24 deaths that he had overseen, in every instance, the parents and relatives had come in the final stages. It seemed they provided reassurance and to tell their loved ones not to be afraid. But none of Babu Uncle’s family members saw anything.
So, does this happen? Science has dismissed them as hallucinations.
There are many questions. However, we will not get any answers till we die and go to the other side.
All these thoughts swirled through my mind as I stared at my uncle lying in peace in the coffin.