Ten years is a big time to unleash massive changes in a metropolis like Delhi. But certain features are so deep-rooted that one can feel their shadows even while the things seem to have changed drastically. This sketch about Delhi is exactly a decade old but I’m sure you will still feel these lingering shadows when you visit the national capital.
Here is an early December morning. Salutes Delhi! To make it
sound normal you are two-eyed. But they have different visions, different
dreams, different destinations. One of your pan-shots swankily zooms on the glitz-and-glamour
of the resurgent India. Whether it is right-eye pan-shot or left-eye, I do not
know. But yes the other eye's camera shot pervasively covers the classic
tragedies spread out in black and white. It’s a grizzled, murky screen having
classic comicities and tragedies spinning, whirring around the same axis. It’s Muhharram today. Many offices are
closed. It just means you can drop your purse on the DTC bus floor and still you
are left with a realistic chance of retrieving it. Eight wonder almost! So at
least you can see a few feet around you. Great solace indeed. The air too is
not stuffed with guffaws let out by infected throats and lungs, disordered
stomachs, cheap scents and Deos from Palika Bazaar and above all the usual
individual and collective frustrations. See, when the maker offered these buses
(allegedly along with the kickbacks per piece and which is more important to
our rampaging politicians) the real cost of the machine is just meant to carry
this type of load, the festival load, once-in-a-time load when people do not
travel on account of holidays or some other emergency.
On this observable stage, a 14-year-old man-kid jumbles into
the finally justified interiors of the poor green line. Boy he is a real man, carries
a pole that would tower above the poor bus if their vertical components
competed. He slants it, his small hands maneuver it smartly and the camel is
safely in the room. The pole is the dancing axis of many types of cheapest kid
toys as you might say can be afforded by the childhood mushrooming in slums.
All fellow-riders watch him in half amuse and half irritation. Lampoons like
yours truly even laugh at the free show.
Anyways, coming back to this character valiantly playing its
part in the grizzly black and white ever-spooling movie. He rushes to the
conductor seat after killing all the apprehensions and objections of the busvala about the pole falling and the
kids-stuff getting a playground on their heads. The boy-entrepreneur gets the DTC
day-pass costing 40 rupees. Man-o-man! How much this kid earns to afford the
pass? Anyways, that is none of our concern like most of the Delhi things should
not be. One fact is inescapable: the well-meant boy is well-prepared for the
day. The way he has tied the muffler, the way his cheap jacket is buttoned up
to the collar, the way trousers well-fit his thin legs and the way well-cleaned
shoes purchased from the road-side hawker, all these portend a good successful
business plan.
One problem with the new DTC bus is that its doors open too
invitingly with a hiss, as if it is specially inviting you for a joy-ride.
Carried by the swift winds of one such invitation, an Advasi family raids the semi-occupied bus. The conductor baulks,
'Not without tickets you thieves!' 'Hutt you miser, we have money!' the dark
old lady draped in a big raggish blanket shouts. God knows how many of them are
in the group! It is a defiant pariah unit cocking a snook at the organized
hordes of Delhi. One monkey-like infant immediately grabs the hand-rails
overhead and tries gymnastics. One of its hands also bust the balloon tied at
the upper end of the toy pole. Both its owner and the conductor shriek
painfully.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Kindly feel free to give your feedback on the posts.