OUR PIGGYBACK RIDES
I understand Politics as much as my barber understands Nuclear Physics! Especially, our Politics – the Indian Politics!
How many times, they marry each
other… and, how many times they dump?
They know, so very well, how
badly they need each other… still, they only end up using each other – till
their stomachs are full – and, then, all of a sudden, they forget that they have
been on a piggyback ride, all along… So, they think ‘the other’ is not
required… They dump!
Now, see this way: the Parties
need us, the citizens, as much as we need them. Is that not so? So, they come
to us for votes with their folded hands, with all the possible promises in the
world… and, once we have placed them in power, they coolly forget that they had
been taken there by us… on our piggyback!
Well, there is another Politics…
the Politics of living.
The other day, my wife and I had
been to the residence of one of our friends. It was the second day of
Ganeshotsav… and, the Ganesh idol in our friends' place was to be taken for visarjan. There was a continuous flow of visitors, and our friends and their
vibrant daughter were extremely gracious in their hospitality…
It was their new house, and their 18th-floor apartment provided a breath-taking view… Inside, the
house was fabulously decorated… and, we really felt happy for our friends.
Then, we were ushered into their
third room. Two very elderly ladies were resting inside… the mothers of our
friends, the host couple. The next fifteen
minutes, both, my wife and I, sat in that room and heard the stories of these
two amazing mothers, who by now, had undergone several ups and downs in their
long and eventful lives…
More than the spectacular new
house, I was more fascinated by this all-familiar and heart-warming ambience…
Both the ladies were now widows…
Both had undergone several
operations in their lives…
One of them recounted, with great
amount of joy and pride, as to how she had raised her nine children and dozens of
grand and great-grand children… how she had survived two miscarriages… How she
had executed, personally, fifteen weddings in the family…
And, now, this remarkable
frail-looking soul was living with her youngest son…. Telling us her equally
remarkable story… Yes, the story of piggybacking, to this point of her life,
all her children and their children and theirs!
Yes, at this point of these
parents’ lives, it was for their children, grand children and great-grand
children to piggyback them…
And yes, it was happening so
beautifully… We felt even happier for my friends and their lovely parents for
this reason…
Yes, what had gone around, had
come around!
All
our lives… we use others’ backs or shoulders to ferry along… Yes, yes, our
lives are inter-dependent…. It is a continuous piggyback ride! Yet, when we
reach the ‘other side of the river…and, when our stomachs are full’… we
blissfully forget those who had piggybacked us to ‘this side’, who had helped
us fill our stomachs!
Once, there lived two friends – a camel and a
jackal – on one side of a river. On the other side, there was a sugarcane
field. Both, the camel and the jackal were very hungry. So, the jackal sat on
the camel’s back and they landed on the other side of the river. As soon as
they had landed, the jackal quickly sneaked into the fields and began to feast
himself on juicy sugarcane. Soon, his stomach was full. The big camel was
slow. He took a lot of time to walk into the fields… and, as he was about to
take the first bite, he heard his friend, jackal, running all around the fields
howling like mad! The camel couldn’t believe this stupidity of his friend…
So, as the camel had
just feared, the villagers alerted by the howling of the jackal, came running towards
their fields carrying in their hands long sticks. Yes, the agile jackal escaped…
but, the bulky camel couldn’t. He got the nasty thrashings!
Finally, the camel
could manage to reach the river, where the jackal was already waiting… As soon
as the camel got into the water, the jackal got on his back, and the
return voyage began.
The camel was in
pain… more than the pain of thrashing, he was unable to bear the pain of
betrayal by his friend; the insensitivity of a friend was too hard, too
painful to bear!
They had reached the
deep-middle of the river…and, the camel asked his friend, “Why did you do it?”
“Come on, my friend,”
the jackal tried to downplay the episode, “You know, after a good meal, I feel
so happy that I keep howling to show how happy I am… It is my habit!”
Immediately, the
camel started rolling in the water…. “Wait a minute… Why are you doing this?”
screamed the panicked jackal.
“Come on, my good
friend,” consoled the camel to his frightened, insensitive friend, “You know, when
I am very happy, I just roll in the water to show how happy I am… It is my habit!”
I hope, you won’t ask me, “What happened,
then?”
Nor, “What is the moral of the
story?”
GERALD D’CUNHA
Pics.: Gloria Pinto
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Jaanu