Friday, December 6, 2019

Northern India Calling


Weeks before what is closest to our heart, in-house functions, were announced (Rajyotsava, Bhajan by renowned artists, and the Shata Rudrabhishaka ), we had booked our tickets to Amritsar, Mathura and Delhi. The dates clashed leaving us with the option of this or that. Our trip was basically to attend a marriage reception in Mathura.

Skipping home breakfast – nay - postponing it for a tempting one at the airport lounge that the otherwise always-on-a-loss platinum Debit Card entitles, we boarded Akram’s Innova, and picked up en route our friends, the Hebbal couple, Narayan and Sarasa. On the way I got a WhatsApp message from my Rudram-Chamakam friend: “Sir, don’t miss Kesar Da Dhaba for Amritsari kulche-chole, Lachhi Parotta, and a refreshing Lassi, or, to taste the pure-ghee Jalebi from Gurdas Man… Short of naming the nearest medical shop for a possible stomach disorder he had listed every eatery. Must be a connoisseur of food, his deceptive frail body notwithstanding, I guessed. Another friend recommended Brother’s Dhaba, and yet another…. We obliged all of them, and thankfully were able to move on to our next destination in one piece.

Might is right rules the roost in Amritsar too like in some other Indian cities when it comes to traffic. But in the Golden Temple area, a lady with an iron hand, a la Kiran Bedi, handles violators ruthlessly. She moved around with a plier in hand, and cutting off the clutch-wires mercilessly in erring three-wheelers.

The Golden temple visit was very rewarding. What impressed us most was the neatness of the premises, dedication, discipline of the crowd, and the impeccable langar service (free food). As is wont, temple foods, wherever they are, enjoy special taste. Out of the four of us, Sarasa and I were ill at ease sitting on the floor for langar, so we chose the steps of the nearby staircase. The Sevaks reassured we would be served. But everything has a price. While Aunty and Narayan got all items - and steaming hot - Sarasa and I missed some really delicious items, reminding me of Sri Guru Nanak Dev ji’s own words, Waqt se pehle, aur muquaddar se zyada kuch nahi milega. You will not get anything before the stipulated time, or more than destined.

We were glad we didn’t miss the Wagah border show. The forty-five minute ceremony arouses patriotic fervor. You raise your voice unwittingly each time, as never before, with Vande Mataram, Jai Hind, or Bharat Mata ki Jai, just to make sure that it is heard by your counterparts on the other side of the border watching their show. We reached the venue just ten minutes before the show, but were offered the front row thanks to our senior status. Fed up of doctors brushing off any aliment as ‘age-related; anything else?’ it was nice to see that, for a change, age-card stood you in good stead.

We bade farewell to Amritsar adding jointly to our material possessions with a cosy quilt, dry fruits directly from Kabul, Amritsari papad, ladies garments, and a steel kada that Narayan bought for himself. He fancied it. He said Vishnuvardhan had it in a movie. His all-time hero however is Rajkumar. As a youth, he saw one of his films 13 times. Can’t vouch if that accounted for the closure of his father’s small-time hotel business in Mysore.

Hospitality would steal the show if what we experienced in Mathura were universal.  Long ago Narayan was Bank Manager in Mathura for just three years. But the way he was taken care (and us, in the process) is a living example for Athiti Devo Bhava. “You may visit Vrindavan, Barsana or Govardhan, but you will have breakfast, lunch and dinner here,” were the non-negotiable commands of the hosts. I whispered to Narayan, “For the hospitality you got for three years of stay (that too as a stickler for rules in sanctioning loans, etc.), for my 40-odd years of stay I should be carried on the shoulders on arrival in Delhi, but I assure you no one would turn up.”

Aunty and I stayed back in Delhi to visit friends and relatives, not to miss my uncle’s house. He passed away two years ago. He was the one who brought me to Delhi to eke out a living.

2 comments:

Padma said...

Wonderfully written.

Unknown said...

Jallianwalabagh is not covered sir

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