Nevaan is six-year-old now. On
this Diwali he has proved that he is entitled to be called a gentleman kid. On
the neighboring roof some children are bursting firecrackers. Massive plumes of
smoke engulf the surroundings. He coughs and says, ‘Diwali is a festival of
pollution.’ Well, he is entitled to draw his innocent conclusions. ‘Diwali is a
festival of lights, laugher and joy. But we turn it into pollution,’ I try to
retain his faith in our traditional festivals.
Some moments later, the
adolescent boys in the locality set off an exclusive cracker. It’s a serial
bombardment into the skies, almost an artillery fire—explosions, sparklings,
smoke, boom, bust. It surely sounds and seems like a wartime artillery charge.
‘Atankwadi aa gaye, atankwadi aa gaye!’
he shouts. ‘It’s a festival of terrorists!’ he yells. It sounds blasphemous and
I correct him that the word ‘terrorist’ isn’t suitable for the festival-time
merrymakers. But he doesn’t sound convinced. Well, given the already polluted
air, any addition to the smoke undoubtedly seems like an act of terrorism.
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