Thursday, January 28, 2010

Gooma....

Gooma…

 

Returning from a long journey, we stopped for breakfast at a run-down hotel in a small town on the Karnataka-Maharashtra border. It was a pleasant morning. Breakfast finished, my husband smoked a cigarette and we strolled in the rather spacious compound. On a low wall that bordered the garden sat three strikingly handsome cocks: one a wild mix of red, orange and greenish black; another a saffron yellow with a collar of furry gold; and the third a speckled black-and-white stunner with a velvety wattle. The birds knew they had admirers. Two of them flapped down to the ground and began to strut, like mannered fashion models and the third fellow set off a splendid round of music. It could have been the late morning warmth, or he might have had a ticklish throat: the crowing was all fun and falsetto.

 

As a young girl in our village, I used to hear the cocks crow early morning. It seemed wicked to even consider getting out of bed; so listening, I would sneak back into some bizarre dream until an unkind adult hand pulled back the blanket and got me up. Now that I live in a town, I hear the cocks so rarely; but I do hear them. In the darker, dingier bylanes of the congested town that is Lonavla, there is one family that rears the most wonderful country chickens. Some times, through the sound of traffic and the incessant noise of construction work, I hear him. Majestic, defiant and pure-throated, the bird seems to have adjusted to the aberrations of a bustling, small-town life. Here a cock can crow at noon and get away with it. Who listens, anyway?

 

We take something of our original selves, and our sins, everywhere we go.Early memories yield a reassuring and magical tapestry that is all yours and yours alone. Is it essential to care about such memories?

 

Six year ago we lived in the Annamalai hills of Tamil Nadu where I worked as a surgeon for a Tatas Group. One day I woke from a sort of feverish slumber and heard an owl. It was the unmistakeable, gentle ummmm-ummmm-ummmm of a variety of small-sized owls that lived high up in the thicket of bamboo near our house. From then on, every day, precisely at the same time, I would hear the bird.

 

 There are no owls to listen to in Lonavla. I miss them. In my childhood we had a wider, wilder variety of them. The most majestic I have seen was large and white – as large as a cock, with a four-foot wing span. It was dusk, with barely a few moments of fading light left in the sky. This big white creature flew out the dark branches of a tree and skimmed just above our heads before flying away in an alarming rustle of her feathers. 

 

Owls are said to hoot but that is just one variety of them and I've heard them too. You can track the course of the bird from the hoot, if you listen with some patience. I prefer the hum to the hoot though. Mmmmm…. In our Kodava dialect, we call the owl "Gooma." Just say "Gooma…" to yourself on a dark and lonely evening and you can conjure up ghosts, haunted castles and an old, toothless man with  a lantern coming for you.

 

"Wise as an owl" is a western perception. It is those remarkable rings round the eyes that give him a wise and spectacled look. But here, we perhaps look at the neckless head. "Ullu ho thum," is an Indian way calling one stupid.

 

 Wise, vulnerable, lonesome or scary, the owls are lovely birds. They are my favourite.

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Fish soup, tea and cherry preserve anyone?

I’m not trying to foist a favourite dinner menu on readers. I like fish, tea and cherries – separately, at different moments but together….

In Brothers Karamazov, this is the menu suggested by Ivan Fydorovich to his younger brother Alyosha when they meet in a tavern. Alyosha eagerly agrees to the menu and seems to enjoy it too.

Every alphabetically literate person who opens the papers to the health section believes that tea is full of anti-oxidants that keep us forever young, cherries help fight cancer and fish provided the magical omega 3 fatty acids that lower cholestrol. In 19th century Russia, they ate it simply because they loved it.

My real reason for mentioning it is the chapter, “The Grand Inquisitor” in which it appears. The novel is one of those scintillating classics that’s to be read and re-read, for its sheer complexity of human characters. In this chapter the two brothers discuss religion. Ivan explains to Alyosha how Christianity has changed so much that Christ himself would be unwelcome on earth.

Sample this line: …”and we wil give them a quiet, humble happiness, the happiness of feeble creatures.” Or, this, when a Cardinal accuses Christ of “giving mankind what it does not want – freedom of choice. What it really wants is Miracle, Mystery and Authority.”

Eh?

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

A Day of Fun


Nalanda Learning Centre, Lonavla

A Working Day...



Nalanda Learning Centre, Lonavla.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Briefly...

 

 

 

A good friend whom I asked for advice about setting up a blog, told me that the best way is go for it and not spend too much time analysing the HOW.

 

The briefest of briefs to discribe me would be: "A Quack turned Hack." In today's world, where money dictates every profession, that is only a mild pejorative that close friends would use to describe a surgeon-cum-novelist. Right now I earn only from my words but continue to treat patients. Until a few years ago, it was the other way round. Please do not ask me which of my two pursuits is more important. I might say something foolish and then have to eat my words, which would be disastrous since I'm trying to make a living from those damn things.

 

I had a good childhood. Nothing special. Except that when I first made my appearance, in my mother's village home in Coorg, my father happened to be peeping through the window of the small dark room. He watched me 'Come Out'. I feel rather special when I think of it. In that small home lived two families with four parents and nineteen children, ten of them female. My mother was the oldest among the girls. The young father needed some pluck to take the risk of watching his daughter being born.

 

I grew up like any village girl. And being from Coorg (Kodavas or Coorgs and not Coorgis, please)  I was reared on a diet of wild meat, crabs, river fish, mushroom, bamboo shoots and the like; I went barefoot to the village school and generally had a merry time. My later years took me to Delhi and then to medical college in Bangalore. I did my higher training in UK and took the fellowship of the Royal College of Surgeons, London.

 

My surgical career has mainly been in rural India -- Bihar, UP, Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. For seven years I worked for Tata group of hospitals in the south, and won the Tata Excellence Award for my work in 2001. As a member of the Association of Rural Surgeons of India, I've been on their governing council from 2004 to 2007. I now help in editing their journal.

Alongside my fascinating and full-time profession, I started to write. Mainly fiction, first for children and then adults. (My doctor friends used to be a bit embarrassed:  "You write stories?")

 

 My latest work, The Story that must Not be Told  was shortlisted for the Man Asian Literary Prize in 2008. It will be published in July 2010 by Penguin India.

 

A quick list of my adult novels:

 

Most recent first.

The Hills of Angheri. Penguin India 2005: the story of a surgeon battling the conflicts between city and rural practice.

On Wings of Butterflies, Penguin India 2002: a feminist farce about the war between women and men

Mango-coloured Fish, Penguin India 1998: a young woman studies the marriages of those she knows while wondering about her own choice

Shortlisted for the Crossword Book Award, 1999

The Scent of Pepper, Penguin India 1996: the story of three generations of a martial community deeply influenced by British settlement

Reprinted in the UK by Penguin, 2001; translated into Malayalam 2002; will appear in a new, revised edition in July 2010.

The Truth (almost) about Bharat, Penguin India 1991: a medical student takes off on a wild motorcycle journey across India, meeting bandits, politicians – and doctors

Reissued by Penguin India 2002

In the 1980s I wrote a number of short stories, three picture-books and three full-length stories for children. The books were all published by Children's Book Trust, New Delhi. Two won CBT awards and one a UNICEF award; one story was serialised on the National TV channel.

 

 I also write for the media on a variety of medical issues but my first love is fiction.

 

I now devote more time to my writing. I run a medical centre for migrant workers in Tungarli, Lonavla. Along with my husband and some friends, I also run the Nalanda Learning Centre and Library Project. (www.nalandatrust.org)