I choose my
friends carefully.
Some of my best
friends in SP are less than 10 years old and a few in their early teens.
And I
am very comfortable and at ease amongst them.
By nature, I
am quiet and not inclined to talk much, especially in a group. Also, other than a bit of IT and some
management principles, I cannot boast of a wide spectrum of knowledge and
awareness.
Politics and cricket are not my forte and now, with a failing
eyesight, reading a newspaper is a great challenge and the Economic Times –
impossible.
Awareness and information gathered from the TV are unreliable at
best and I would not risk any info gained from this medium in a group of Sobha Palladian
intelligentsia.
Being with
kids, I have no such challenges.
I am quite
comfortable with them. They are not critically analytical or philosophical. And
so am I.
I know for
sure that there will be no conversations on Modi’s demonetisation success, the
coming 2019 general elections, Supreme Court ruling of NGT directive, Kohli’s
centuries, Trump’s policies, how to mix your drinks or a debate on where we
stand against China, or how you can cure your migraine with Yoga!
Even with
kids I do not talk much but enjoy their company & their animated conversations. When I take a
bunch of kids to the Hippocampus Library each month, I thoroughly enjoy their
endless animated chatter. And they can talk quite sensibly on Drone technology
& Tesla motors and why they like chicken pop corns amongst million other
topics!
And the
library initiative has helped me get to them closer.
A few months
back, on a Sunday morning two chubby sisters came to library to return and
issue new books. They both were fresh after a shampoo bath and with wet hairs
the younger one also pushed her toy pram with a Barbie doll inside.
She proudly displayed a pink tube.
I asked –
toothpaste? Where is the brush??
And she
squealed – NOO Uncle! It is CREAM! Mummy gave me.
‘Let’s apply
to the baby’!!
And we were
now two specialists from KAYA clinic, giving a proper beauty treatment to the
poor Barbie!
Incidentally
my granddaughter once completely squeezed out a brand-new tube of Odomos on to
plastic Goofys’s black nose, all the Barbies at home, the building blocks,
doors, dressing mirror, her toys cabinet & bottom half of Godrej! While the room smelled strongly of Odomos for
an entire month the good part was that no mosquito got in.
The white
board in the library is a great meeting point for all the young great minds!
There is
always a demand for marker pens and eraser. And I would be glad if a few
patrons contribute a few white board
marker pens every now and then.
And the kids
come up with some real good originals!
A few weeks
back we had a graffiti session. 3 kids with white board pens exhibited their
drawing skills.
I called out
– Please draw a BIG castle!
The little
one drew a tall rectangle, as high as her hand could reach and put a lot of
windows inside.
Where is the
Tower and the flag??
Now she had
to balance on her toes to draw a few cones on top and for the flag I had to
lift her up!
And Rapunzel??
The second
tiny tot jumped in and drew a smiley face inside one of the windows.
What does
Rapunzel have??
Loong Hair! All of then echoed.
And I got a
straight line from the nose of the smiley to the corner of the white board!
And them
some more blue and red wavy lines on top to make it look really real!!
And it was fun
all the way.
Unlike my
generation kids, all the kids in SP are very well behaved, cleanly dressed &
very sober.
But you
cannot take them for granted!
You act
smart wit them and you are in trouble. And I learnt it the hard way!
On the
graffiti board I drew a smiley with lots of curly hairs, a pointed nose and
large ears. And I said to one- this is
you!!
And her
response was unforgiving!!
Yes, these
soft kids can be pretty tough too. And I
am glad for them. You need to have steel in you to survive in today’s world.
Another great
thing about these kids….
Wonderful
English!! Also, perfect language, vocabulary and diction. A few also have a
stylish American accent.
In my young days
English was a challenge.!
I spoke
Tamil at home and Hindi outside. Other kids spoke Hindi everywhere. And my
school did not appreciate our broken English (Hinglish).
The
Principal was unhappy, and he passed a rule. Inside school everyone must speak in English
only, and in good English!!
And our
teachers were the worst affected! Except
for a few Anglo Indian teachers all the rest spoke passable English.
The very
next day, our lady Hindi teacher proclaimed – meri shiksha mein aap sab Hindi
he bolengey! (only Hindi in my class)
Most happy
were David Sir, Miss Andrew, and Mr & Mrs D’Souza. The D’Souza couple were the first ones I met
where the dad was shorter than the mom. Annie miss was a head taller than
William.
She was also
very sweet and beautiful. Slim and tall she wore fashionably stitched knee
length skirt, flower patterned socks/stockings and high heeled shoes! And she
wore wonderful smelling perfumes. (I think I was infatuated with her)
Bill wore
suits daily and was a gentleman. Ever smiling, he taught Shakespeare to the
senior grade students. And the couple
enthusiastically took classes on spoken English for all the teachers after school.
(the ‘mind your language’ series came much later)
For today’s
kids, English is no challenge.
And for many
it’s the only language they can speak. Especially for those kids whose parents
come from different states!
That’s sad!
While
issuing a book, a young 6-year old read out the book number N49.
Tamillla sollu
? (say that that in Tamil?).
I don’t
know.
Naa-ppathi
om-bo-du.
Nappiditi
Ombludu he blurted out!
Good try! And
for the next few times he consulted his dad and came up with the correct Tamil
numbers!!
Many times, I
wish I had learnt Tamil well.
I can read
and write Hindi but Tamil – I can only speak.
So, I have
enjoyed reading Munshi Premchand’s short stories and Maithalisharan Gupt,
Mahadevi Verma and Sumitra Nandan Pant. Even a few racy Karnal Ranjit Singh thrillers.
Sadly, I
cannot read Parthiban’s Kanavu, nor enjoy Sujata Rangarajan’s writings.
And I am
sure many of the kids might feel the same way when they reach my age. Even at schools and colleges many prefer to
take a French, Spanish, German or Japanese as an elective. No Sanskrit!
They will
all sadly miss some of the wonderfully written biographies and stories and epics and
essays and drama written in Tamil, Kannada, Marathi, Hindi, Bengali and many
other Indian languages.
And I wish somebody volunteers to teach some us spoken Kannada...
Krish..
Krish....we admire your passion and what you are inculcating within the children...thank you very much
ReplyDeleteArjun
Arjun, I enjoy every minute of my association with these children. My grand daughters live far away and they visit us maybe once in two months. But i do not miss them at all!!
DeleteBY the way there was so much wonderful graffitti that i had difficulty is selecting them.