Thursday, 12 April 2012

The Shades of India

Somewhere amidst the chaos of beliefs and supreme powers, in the dark alleys of madmen brainwashed by the greedy politics of man, within the small joy of the known and the mysteries of the unknown, India sits at the roots of a tree, its back rested on the bark. It has no permanent address, no unique identity of its own, its eyes observing the affairs of the day, but weeping at its own helplessness. It walks with the cane of hope, its eyes hungry for a pacifying horizon. India lies in the alleys of Lahore, where a Hindu boy, plays hide and seek with a Muslim boy, India lies in the chaos of Chandni Chowk where the shopkeeper runs behind the customer with a worried smile of being able to give him what he forgot at the shop. India runs through its vast network of railway tracks encompassing the changing features of the land and the varied beauties of the faces of women walking back home after filling water at the well. India lies in the calmness of the temple courtyards, it lies in the homecoming of the eldest daughter in law, it lies in the eyes of a wife awaiting her husband as the sun sets.

As I stroll along the shores of this country, I often wonder how many shades has this portrait collected? How many colours fill this vastness with joy? On a rainy evening in Kerala, I long for a temple, where I could sleep to the music of the gods, I look out for a farmer, he alone could walk with me I suppose. I have nothing to offer him, and he has but only an embrace to offer me, and that is all I need,  I suppose. Caught up in the petty worries of our daily lives, in the mysteries of belief and belonging, in search of our own beloveds and clear identities, we are so blinded to the very hints that make us human, that make us boil down to one thing, that which is universal. Why do I feel a certain supremacy when I sit in a car and I see a farmer struggling with his cart, why do I long for a genuine smile when I'm so used to receiving that which looks beautiful, but really isn’t. Why does a tear roll down my eye when I sit at the dargah with all ears to the mysticism of Sufism, that which is not my own? Is it the language of love that I long to hear or is it the beloved that I'm searching for. Well, I found it. I found it here, in the lively alleys of this country, I found it in the dancing of children to hymns sung in praise of the one who knows it all, I found it in the peaceful silence of the night at a farmers hut, a place which did not exist for me. I found at the shores, where every wave re-inforced the rythms of my travels. I don’t know why im here, and I surely don’t where I would be, all I know is that I'm here, and the more I look, the more I smile and the more I embrace, I begin to wander into a world, the real world which is a sheer master piece. I believe India is a great country, a country with great powers to heal humanity of its wrath, to spread joy and above all to help one find himself, in the unheard stories of the invisible novels. Incredible India it is after all. That is where I rest, come along if you want to. It’s magical. 

By Raunak Deo

1 comment:

  1. Wohhh....Mr. Raunak Deo, I would like to highly praise of your usage of marvelous adjectives which makes India hold its head high up . I think this essay can make one's pain heal, one's desire fulfilled, one's apprehension removed and one's day occupied with smiles and blissful embrace's. This description intensifies my burning desire to come back to India forever each time I have read it. Furthermore, it makes me feel proud to be an Indian..

    However, I would like to know your opinion/discuss about the first line "Somewhere amidst the chaos of beliefs and supreme powers". My school is non-denominational, but most of the population of my school believes in Christianity. My Ghanaian friends usually ask me "Why do you beleive in numerous Gods?", unlike Christianity where there is only Jesus Christ or rather the Holy trinity. I would like to know why do Indians(including me) believe in so many Gods? I know this is a philosophical question. But, it just bothers me more and more as I try to sustain my religion in a different community than mine. Usually, I do not have an answer to tell them-why do I trust in so many supreme powers as I do not have a perfect answer to it myself-(I presume) but I thought you may help me to find an answer to this. Thank you.

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