Many years, back it just so happened that my
hometown and my work-town coincided.
Those were happy days which Other Half and me spent
re-discovering my beautiful place of birth, learning to look at it with new
eyes. We roved the city on his mobike from college days, a tried and trusted
Yamaha; spending entire Sundays and most evenings gallivanting around the
town’s long, lonely roads, its gullies and of course those special spots from
my growing up years.
One such evening we had gone to eat at a favourite
Chinese joint and had got delayed as we chatted with the Indian Chinese owner
and dawdled over the food. Therefore, when we were finally ready to return, the
clock hands were nearing midnight. My town was by habit an introvert and in
those leisurely times nearly two decades back, it actually went to sleep not a minute
after eight. Therefore, at twelve midnight, the streets were so deserted that
in the ensuing silence, I could almost hear the town snore.
Our bike speeded through the empty streets
mostly unhindered except for the occasional time when it was accosted by a especially
territory-conscious stray dog. It was March but winter had still not said
goodbye. The night was pleasantly chilly and the roads mostly dark as no street
lights were lit.
I spotted it from afar, a pool of saffron light,
shining in that dark night at a point on our left, at the edge of the road. As
we neared it, I could hear the loudspeaker bawl. I remembering muttering to
myself: “Ours is truly a lawless land. Just look. Loudspeakers blaring at
midnight with such impunity! Do we even have a police force????”
It
was a small pandal, set up with garish pink and red and saffron satin with a low
makeshift stage. At one end banners announcing Ramnavami celebrations scheduled
for the next day hung, adorned with photos of local political leaders complete with
insincere smiles and hands folded in sychophantic namastes.
I
remembered. It was Ram Navami tomorrow.
The
little enclosure had been set up for the neighbourhood celebrations to be held
the next day. And of course, the blameless loudspeakers were only practising for
tomorrow’s function. With Lata Mangeshkar’s Shri Ram Chandra Kripalu Bhaja
Mana............., that well known hymn by Tusidas from Ram Charita Manas.
Then
I saw him. A man. Maybe a rickshaw wallah, judging from the rickshaw standing
idly outside, sans driver. This man, the probable rickshaw puller would ordinarily
have been simply an ordinary rickshaw puller.
But
he wasn’t.
That
was because I found him dancing. To the bhajan blaring from the loudspeaker:
Shri Ram Chandra Kripalu Bhaja Mana....
He
was a local Adivasi, perhaps an Oraon, or a Santhal or a Munda, or maybe a
Birhor. I didn’t know for sure. He had a head full of thick curly hair, grey
and black and a wild moustache to match, again grey and black. A dirty gamchha
was tied like a semi turban round his head. He wore a battered full sleeved
shirt, its sleeves rolled up till his elbows; and a checked lungi that was doubled
up and tucked firmly at his waist. His skin was darker than the night and his
eyes were closed. He was dancing, hands raised to the havens, flexed at the
elbows, feet moving in slow and deliberate rhythm to the beautiful bhajan
playing from the rickety speakers.
Something
about that scene attracted me. Perhaps it was the strong surrealistic feel.
“Stop,
stop,!” I poked Other Half eagerly. Prudently, he didn’t stop but slowed down.
There
was no one else in that place at the time, except us on the bike and the
dancing man.
A
single mercury vapour lamp threw an orange glow all around and within the
pandal.
Lata
kept up her singing, her strong voice brimming with adulation: .“Shri Ram! Shri
Ram!"
The
man danced unconcerned, eyes closed, head tilted to one side, moving in slow
circle:
“Nava
Kanja Lochana Kanja Mukha Kara Kanja Pada Kanjaarunaam........”
“His
eyes are like newly blossomed lotuses; His face, His hands and His feet are
like the lotus and the red of the rising sun....”
He
reminded me of Chaitanya Mahaprabhu dancing in the rapture of his adulation for his
beloved Sri Kishna......reminded me of the whirling dervishes of Turkey,
dancing in the unadulterated ecstasy of their worship.....!
It
was really late and not quite safe for we were all alone. Very conscious of
this fact and immune to the chams of surrealism in all its forms, Other Half
picked up speed and raced home. As we wove our way through the lanes and bylanes,
I kept thinking about that man dancing alone in the night, in perfect communion
with his God. Maybe a swig too many of
Hadiya, the local rice brew had helped him attain his trance but then who was I
to judge, to come between him and his God?
If
there was ever a direct hotline established between man and the gods, I am sure
it was that night between that Adivasi rickshaw puller and his adored Shri Ram.
And
so, even today, whenever I hear the strains of Shri Ram Chandra Kripalu Bhaka Mana
(the version that has been sung by Lata mangeshkar specially), my thoughts invariably move back to that
spring night in my hometown, a saffron coloured midnight when a man danced his
prayer to his God.
One
worships ones gods in many ways and forms: through gyan or knowledge, through
service of others, through remembrance, through song, through ritual and through total
surrender. The last, that of total surrender is something akin to Love, a state when
one is immersed absolutely in adoration of the beloved, a state when the mind, the body
and the soul are absorbed completely unto one’s God.
I
contemplate wistfully, Heyyyy, wish someone loved me like that.....
Heck, wish I could love my God like that....
This kind of attachment begins with detachment
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