Chapter 7, My Life..., Towards Godliness
Bhajan, group singing of God,
has been an integral part of village life. All the 18 or 19 villages
surrounding Palghat town-proper had their own groups. Nurani Appu’s group was
head and shoulders above the rest. Each lead singer in Palghat aspired at one
time of the other that his renderings too were as melodious, soulful, and
enthralling as Appu’s. His group was always in demand, having performed in
Bombay, Delhi, Madras, and other major cities. A slightly distant second was
Thondikulam Hari. For some inexplicable reason, my father liked Hari better and
invited his group home occasionally for an enchanting evening.
The Vadakkantharai Bhajana
group was led by Kittanna. To hail his voice enchanting or haunting would be a
misnomer. His normal tone matched the high pitch of T.M. Soundararajan, the
then leading Tamil playback singer who himself sang at a high volume. So mike
for Kittanna was not redundant but out of question. But a Bhajanai is supposed
to be a mood elevator, and from that perspective Kittanna’s voice filled the
bill best. Vadakkanthara group got a half-hour or one-hour slot on a couple of
occasions in Calicut Radio Station.
At least on two annual
festivals Vadakkantharai thrilled its villagers with caparisoned towering
elephant/s going around in procession. The Nadaswaram troupe and Chendai troupe
took turns to lead the procession.
A little behind them would be the learned pandits chanting Vedas in
singular intonation and unison, but all reduced to a whisper by the domineering
blare of Chendai and Tavil. Then the central attraction – the bejeweled
majestic elephant/s with the boys of the village on top, the one holding the
replica of the village deity in front, the next hoisting a silk ornamental
umbrella, and yet another standing up at regular intervals to swivel what they
call Venchamaram to add to the overall delight. (It had always been my innate
desire to mount an elephant. But my father never allowed it. On top, he never
went on any duty travel so that I could have stolen an opportunity.) Close
behind the elephant/s would be the Bhajana group accompanied by harmonium,
mridangam and kanjira and of course cymbals. I am not sure if this was a
deliberate ploy to be at the fag end of the line so that their renderings
didn’t get drowned totally in the high-decibel of Chendai Vaadyam.
Ramanathapuram presented a
contrasting scenario. The group’s activities of were confined to Bhajanai on
Ekadasis and the early morning ones throughout the month of Markazhi (mid-Oct
to mid-Nov). Their accompaniments were bare minimum – cymbals and Kanjira.
There was not much to write home about their quality of singing. Nor did they
ever get any invitation to perform outside Ramanathapuram. On one occasion they
invited the Vadakkantharai group for a Bhajan hoping to get invited as well,
but it never happened.
For the Ekadasi Bhajani there
was hardly any sponsor for prasadam. But at the same time the tradition should
not come to a standstill. So there was an unwritten understanding that on the
days there was no sponsor, Venkacham mama, owner of a petty shop in bazaar,
would part with six bananas when he closed his shop for the day. The group in
turn would wait for his arrival; and he would be the lead singer for a minimum
number of songs. It was a given that we would exchange no side-glances for his
tonal lapses nor for taal going awry.
The programme would begin with
around eight or nine members present. But the tacit understanding of the core
group was that the Bhajanai would continue in full tempo till such time the
number got reduced to six. Thus there was no need to split the bananas; each
could have one whole banana. This went on Eakadasi after Ekadasi.
The School Master uncle
normally went to bed at 8 pm and rose at 4 am. But he delayed his bedtime by
two hours on Ekadasi days to attend the Bhajan in the pious hope that at least
twice a month a banana the previous night might give respite for his
constipation the next morning. Thus it turned out that by sheer persistence he
was always the seventh. And the moment he left the Bhajana Mandapam the group
would sing Mangalam on fast track and have one full banana each. On one
occasion, he left the premises and, as usual, the Aarathi was performed and
prasadam distributed. Unfortunately he had stepped out only to ease himself. So
when he saw the swift succession of events leading up to our being half way
through the bananas, all in such a short span, he flared up at our deliberate
and cheap act and swore to expose us to the Village President.
The early morning Markazi
Bhajanai was month long. It would be chill and windy in the morning at that
time of the year. So it was arranged that by turn one person would get up a
little earlier and wake up the rest. Then when ready the group would sing
Bhajan and cover the entire village in slow motion. On three or four occasions
in the entire month, some benevolent householder would sponsor outside his
house a ten-minute break for hot coffee.
All the group members slept in
their front yard (Thinnai) to be woken up early. One day it was the turn of
Rajai. He came to wake up my uncle Ramachandran. Two or three initial calls,
followed by shakes mild to wild, did not elicit any response but just some
protesting sounds. Rajai upgraded the level and started tickling and caressing
him, when he suddenly felt a tuft. He had seen my uncle only the previous night
and definitely there was no way a tuft would grow in leaps and bounds
overnight. So he viewed more minutely, darkness despite, and realized the faux
pas. It was my grandfather. Later he came to know that Ramachandran had very
bad cold and cough and Thatha woke up at midnight and asked him to go inside
and sleep, and exchanged place with him. Rajai never came face to face with
Thatha for the next ten days.
During the entire Markazi
month, they prepared Chakkara Pongal for Neivedyam in the Perumal temple. A new priest from Coimbatore had just
been appointed. The previous Vadhyar was a cinema addict and went regularly for
late-night shows. But he never faltered in his duties. On one occasion he
however overslept and opened the temple only at 6.30 am – one hour late, that
is. And that cost him his job, and he left the village. He was pro-children and
used to distribute most of the prasadam to us and kept very little for himself.
The new Vadhyar was just the reverse. And we just could not put up with this
sudden turn of events. So the four of us devised a plan. After offering to the
principal deity, he would go around the temple and offer to the other
installations also. Three would accompany him, while the fourth would stay back
quietly near the temple kitchen and take a big chunk out of it to be shared
later among the four. A couple of days later when it was my turn for kitchen
duty, he hastened back to the kitchen half way through saying he had forgotten
something – a deliberate police job. I was caught in the act of transferring.
But I sped away, and ran into the first house (Babu’s), rushed to the backyard,
climbed the boundary wall, and two more, and coasted home. He had seen me enter
the first house. So he barged in and complained to the lady of what her son had
done. She reasoned out with him that Babu had gone to the pond for a bath. But
he persisted. The lady spotted Babu returning from the pond. Gesturing to him,
she asked the priest if he was the one who did it. He said, “No, the other;
your other son.” “But I have no
other, just this son only,” she retorted. The priest murmured and left in a
huff.
Being in a village, I could not
escape for long. He spotted me a day or two later and complained to my
grandfather. Normally grandfather dispensed with justice on a cash-and-carry
basis – on the spot, and with whatever he had readily at hand. But at that time
he was sweeping the backyard with a broomstick, and saw me already having taken
bath. So he delivered a pro tem justice with a verbal dressing down with a
concluding remark, “We also prepare Payasam in our house on all the 30 days of
Markazi. Aren’t you happy eating that?” He then shouted for my grandmother from
the backyard and ordered her, more meant for me, “From today onwards give your favourite (intending sarcasm) grandson
two extra ladles of Payasam, so that he doesn’t steal from the Lord’s house.”
To be
continued.
Phoenix
21 May 2012
1 comment:
How can i get in touch with you. I am harimam's son. I am in Bangalore, Need to meet you. I can reach on 9742225932.
Regards
Vinod Hariharan.
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