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Tuesday, 25. July 2006

Self, Sardarjis, Madrasis & Bollywood - Part 1



Since I want to cover some ideas regarding the Indian identity etc, as I understand them through my personal experiences, I will be writing this post in two or three parts.

So I was huffing up a hill during my daily run, and suddenly, for no particular reason, I remembered a snapshot from my childhood: of sitting on a charpoy with a Sikh, as I was straining at my still limited fund of second or third grade CBSE Hindi to understand his Punjabi inflected speech. You see, in what was then a lower middle class Hyderabadi neighborhood in my childhood, home owners, including my parents, usually let out a part of their house to strangers to supplement their incomes with rents. And this transitory sardarji (how I wish I remembered his name) was a tenant in a single room in the house across the gali - a warren of rooms that was not discriminatory towards who stayed in them as long as they could pay.

My father, who had picked up Hindi in the course of working as a foreman in construction and subsequently in his secretarial study, was quite curious about, and perhaps sympathetic to, this saradarji, who was obviously quite far from his native grounds. So I was encouraged to converse with him; I suppose to improve my Hindi. I don't remember what I might have said to him, and what he might have replied. I even don't recall his facial features, other than that he was powerfully built (for a while I think he was the "gurkha" or night watchman for our half empty colony, which then lay at the fringe of a sleepy city), and very “fair”. (Yes, at a young age a skin color chart is injected into the Indian child)

Soon after he left that house, I think, to take up the job of trucker, leaving in my head these amorphous memories of a man with a steel bangle, long hair, and a beard; who lounged on a charpoy in the open during Sunday afternoons; who ate thick rotis* ; and who perhaps was lonely enough to attempt to communicate with a nerdy boy who couldn’t understand him.

*Rotis/ chapattis/ pulkas played a part in defining my identity vis-à-vis those of my cousins who were (and are) more deeply wedded to their regional & caste markers; they held that rotis were essentially foreign (even Turka, i.e., Muslim) food for South Indians ate rice in their meals, and by incorporating them into our meals, our family had become ‘contaminated’ in some sense. It didn’t help that the Telugu I and my sister grew up speaking had many elements of the the Telengana and Hyderabadi dialect. No wonder, in the recent state elections, a Telengana secessionist party won a considerable number of seats to the AP assembly, on a plank of overcoming "costal" dominance, and creating a seperate state a la Jharkhand or Uttaranchal.




My Daily Notes

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It's so strange this roti/rice thing. When I was growing up, it was always a special occasion when had rice, always some sort of special biryani when Shilpy aunty showed up :) Now of course, I eat rice everyday and I'm gonna have to wait until I get home to eat roti. I wonder how your sardarji found the patience to make his rotis.

And poetry day today huh? Why do you call her the woman in red; did she wear red a lot or was she just an angry angry person :)

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Rice/Roti

I suppose he was an expert cook, K? That said rice/roti wasn't that much of an either/or proposition for me growing up beacuse my parents quite frequently ate rotis for breakfast, and dinner. Lunch was rice mainly because my mom worked. I even have fond memories to going to the millers to get atta made from wheat. I tried making rotis once here but it was simply a massive disaster, and I decided not to wrestle with flour again. Thankfully, now one can buy packets of ready to eat rotis in desi stores here, quite tasty etc even if they are a little expensive.

Poetry, well I was just revising and salvaging older poems (I think these are in the 400 range filed away here), and being nostalgic. And that "red" woman happened to wear a red coat when we hung out twice that winter. I suppose my wicked verses killed any minor interest she may have had in yours truely. :P

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rotti shotti

so true about the rotis. i always felt that north-indians also made much better rotis than south-indians (being from the south myself) but..of course, i haven't sampled enough.

awaiting the next few parts, very nicely written.

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Thanku Bhery Much!

As Apu in Simpsons says, "please come again". Also if you have a blog etc, pliss be leaving the address etc.

Obviously, while folks from the North will turn out a better rotti just as folks from the South will turn out a better dosa, I still prefer my mom's rottis. :)

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