WHEN THE MOUNTAIN COMES TO MOHAMMAD
Pic.: Chetna Shetty
Her
name was Mrs. Liticia. She was my class teacher when I was in third standard. I
must have been eight or nine year old, then. And, she must have been in her
early thirties. What I remember about her the most is that she was very fair
and pretty; very loving and caring. As a kid, I was very scared of most of my
teachers... But, Mrs. Liticia’s warmth and care made me feel very secure and
loved...
Nearly fifty years have rolled by... How a teacher has
touched you when you were a little boy, yes, this beautiful feeling has lasted
so long!
Some
days ago, while I was in Mangalore, my hometown, I had this strong desire in my
heart to see Synthia, one of my earliest students. I hadn't met her or talked
to her for years and years. It was just a year ago that we got in touch with
each other; even then, we hardly communicated...
Today, Synthia is
a mother of two young-children and well settled in Mangalore. When I spent
about an hour with her family, I really felt the warmth of the good-old days...
Nothing had changed, not even a bit... even though we hadn't communicated at
all, except once or twice, in all these thirty-five-years-or-so time...
While leaving their place, Synthia handed me a copy of
her dad’s (Late Mr. J.B. Lobo) famous book – ‘Home Encyclopedia’. Inside, she
wrote, “True friendship can last... even though we don’t communicate...”
My heart smiled when I thought of it... “Why do we have
to call, talk, write, enquire, chat – be desperate and frantic - in order to
feel the warmth of another soul, a fine friend?” I was thinking aloud on my way
home, that night...
The
day earlier, my nine-year-old nephew, Jeswin, had received his first
Holy-communion. In the evening, a grand celebration was held where I had raised
a touching toast for the little-one. After the function, I saw an elderly
woman, strikingly beautiful and graceful, walked very slowly towards me, with
hands stretched to embrace me. I couldn't recognize her; but, in a moment I was
within the woman’s embrace. “Boroh ushaar
zalai putha,” – “You have become very smart, my son...” I, instantly, could
feel it was Mrs. Liticia, my childhood teacher. The warmth had not diminished
even after five-long decades... For that brief moment, I, once again, felt
secure, loved and cared for!
“If Mohammad can not go to the mountain,” the old saying
reminds us, “the mountain will come to Mohammad.”
For decades, even though the students couldn't go to
their teachers, the teachers had come to their students...
It was, in deed, a special pilgrimage!
GERALD D’CUNHA
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-- Uma Rao