Wednesday 30 September 2015

A Real Life Adventure Through Facebook.



          I met a young man five years ago on Facebook. It took me that long to hear his voice and see him in flesh. This is the unusual story of a friendship that didn’t concern him, of which he was a conduit at one stage. Complicated? Let me start at the beginning.
          About fifty years ago, I had a penfriend, Asha. We wrote each other letters that travelled across the sub-continent, sharing girlie secrets. As a teenager, she did para-jumping through the NCC and I did mountaineering/rock-climbing and we shared legible, cursive hand-written notes on ‘inlands’, via the Indian Posts and Telegraphs. Each letter took about ten days to reach its destination. We wrote each other at least two letters per month through our school and college years. Other penfriends petered out of my life, but this one remained steady and close for decades.
I grew up in Mumbai, Asha in Orissa. Both of us had a female and a male sibling.
          In all these years, we’d met just once, for a couple of minutes, in Delhi, where our husbands’ transferable jobs had taken us. We raised our children and ran our homes in several corners of India. And we continued, when time permitted, to write to each other, updating what was happening where, when, in our lives. The frequency of our letters had reduced, but the bond remained.
          Came the mobile phone and the internet, and instead of communication getting better, we got disconnected. Our husbands retired, our children flew the coop, we took up jobs and we didn’t know where the other was.
          Five years ago, whilst recovering from a bout of illness, I tried to track her on Facebook by typing in her post-marriage name. No luck. I then typed in her brother’s name. I knew he’d joined the Army. The search threw up one identical name. The person I tracked was also in the Defence Forces, but much, much younger. That young man belonged to the same small community as hers. He didn’t know her, but he and I became friends in the virtual world.
          “Tell me her family name and my parents will track her down immediately,” he promised. The one thing I didn’t know about her was her family name. For she had used her father’s name before marriage and her husband’s after, never a surname suffixed to her own.
          So the young man and I got ‘involved’ on Facebook, reading posts, liking them, seeing photos, sharing them, exchanging greetings and congratulations on special days, chatting through messages when we wanted to keep the conversation un-public (unless you’re on Facebook, you won’t understand this word).
From time to time I’d nudge him to ask his parents whether they’d come across Asha. His response was always in the negative. He was busy in his profession, taking exams, doing courses, working hard. I was enjoying a retired life, travelling, gossiping online, doing ‘time-pass’. In the process, I even made friends with the fellow’s mother on Facebook, making me a virtual aunt of sorts to him.
          The aforementioned five years flew by and one day he told me he was getting married, traditionally, in his ‘native place’ (we don’t use this phrase any longer now, do we?
Shri Husband and I decided to attend his wedding. We drove to a hilly district in South India to witness a most unusual ceremony. The small community my Facebook friend belonged to – Asha’s community—doesn’t have a priest conducting the marriage ceremony. Elders of the community bless the couple, garlands/rings are exchanged and that’s that. The feast and dancing continued for three days.
I’d always seen him in photographs, in jeans and t-shirts. It was a treat to see him for the first time in flesh and blood, dressed as a groom. Recognition was instant.
Like us, there were others who had travelled long distances to attend. I mingled with the guests, asking randomly if anyone knew Asha. Nyet, nope, nil.
Then, on the last day, almost in filmi style, one stranger asked me some questions: Was Asha’s father working at such-and-such job? An old memory stirred in my head. Yes! Was her brother’s pet-name so-and-so? Another cell churned in my brain. Yes, yes. Did her sister marry a coffee-plantation manager? My cerebral neurons did a creaky tandav-nritya: yes, yes, yes. He told me a likely way of tracking Asha’s brother. He had known of his whereabouts till 2014.
Back home in Goa, Shri Husband and I did a quick search, sought and found the brother’s email, sent off a message to him through the internet and within hours located Asha.
We talked like excited school-girls over the phone, filling up gaps of what had happened in our lives now, then, in between. Laughter and giggles travelled through wireless channels. We saved numbers, id’s, addresses again.
When I sent a message to my Facebook friend, now on his honeymoon, his response was immediate and smacked of astonishment: “You found her! This is destiny.”
Nope, I thought, not destiny, the wonders of modern technology, in this case Facebook, that linked so many lives.

Feedback: sheelajaywant@yahoo.co.in
         

Buying Gifts for the NRI.



          The NRI is a unique creature. Ever heard of a non-resident Norwegian? NRO from Ozzie-land, NRC from China or an NR-Eskimo? The non-resident Indian, whether a citizen of America/UK/New Zealand remains, to we who have the Ashok Chakra stamped on our passports/PAN-cards/licences, one of ‘us’. It doesn’t matter what the citizenship is, nor where the person was born, an NRI is more than just of Indian origin. S/he is, as I said before, one of ‘us’. One of our cultural peculiarities: once one of ‘us’, always one of ‘us’, even when five generations were born/resident in another continent. Our concepts, our logic, our culture, only we can understand, no?
          A visit from an NRI relative/friend can throw a clan/neighbourhood into a tizzy. Water has to be boiled no matter how recently acquired the RO/filter. New linen has to be bought, the air-conditioner cleaned and serviced, cupboards aired and pest-controlled, servants (the tribe that makes us in-resident-Indians envied) cajoled/bribed to not bunk, etc. And, ever-defensive, we avoid topics like uncleared garbage.
          Some things have changed. We no longer eagerly/curiously inspect gifts brought from ‘foreign’. Once upon a time, ball-point pens, cameras, fancy-shaped or liquor-filled chocolates and tissue-paper-napkin packets were enjoyed by only those who had close relatives abroad or in the airlines/merchant navy. Synthetic, uncrushable, long-lasting fabric used as saris or converted into dresses were the envy of those who didn’t own it. That fabric, quite indestructible, was carefully preserved and talked about for decades. After-use recycling included converting it into curtains. The upping of India’s handicraft and synthetic yarn industries short-changed the NRI’s gifts’ value.
          With the arrival of cable television and the internet, times changed even more. Now, as we plan our holidays with siblings’ families who’ve settled in the lands of dreams and dollars, we struggle with the what-gifts-to-buy syndrome. If one goes on a group tour, one is spared that trouble.
          “Take ‘sukke-baangde’,” Bai Goanna suggested. “You don’t get those outside India except in the UAE where the Malayalis have thronged. All coastal people, no, they like dried fish, hanh. When it’s raining-raining, it tastes ‘besht’.”
          Shri Husband’s dirty look bounced off her and landed on me. “Smelly.” One word that meant “not taking, don’t even think about it”.
          “Pickles, masalas, papads, every Indian grocery store stocks those,” he said aloud.
          “But,” I was going to argue, “It’s so different getting Indian stuff from India.” I kept quiet because people I know buy authentic foreign-made liquors and liqueurs right here. And they tell me they get better tandoori and sambar powders in the land of the ‘goras’ than in the land of their (the masalas’, not the white-skins’) origin.
“Homemade mango jam. Guava jelly. Neuros. Chaklyo. Doodh-phene,” Bai Goanna went on and on.
Silence. Bai Goanna figured food items weren’t ok. She isn’t the type to give up either. She suggested: “Take silk stoles.”  
          “There are garages full of those flimsy dupattas,” Shri Husband is more than a match for her. He doesn’t understand the concept of matching accessories, that more can’t be enough. Thus we struck off hand-made paper, paper-crafted lampshades, Kolhapuri chappals, north-Indian razais, south-Indian brass lamps, Bengali/Gujerati embroideries, weaves from various states, wines (oh yes, that now goes from hither Nashik to thither New York, legally), and more.
          “You get better cheeses in India,” a well-jetted friend said. No one believed her.
          “Take jewellery,” another piped up. That was shot down with cries of “fashions vary”, “ours is too ornate for western tastes”, and “too expensive, unless you’re planning to carry fakes”. Those last couple of words helped changed the topic completely.
          Saris?  No one wears them any longer. Linen? Theirs is more absorbable. Music? You-tube and various downloads are preferred sources. Art? You mean original? Too expensive and hard to lug around. T-shirts with prints? No-oo, they’ll be misused, they won’t even know what they’re worth.
          We struggled with ideas for weeks. None of our well-wishers knew what a perfect gift might be. Indian tea? Most people drink coffee. Coffee, then? From here…you must be joking.
          Interestingly, we found that several local mementoes that were/are sold to tourists were not made in India at all. We took a look at the magnets (gifted by other travellers to us) on our fridge; they were made in Thailand/ Korea/ China. A trouser bought at an expensive store in America was made in Bangla Desh. Whoever said the world had shrunk spoke the truth.
          A seldom met acquaintance with many NRI relatives said it’s best to carry along an empty suitcase. Smart people have done homework on what people really want and stocked Duty Free with those: overpriced so the recipient is happy, and tax-free, so the buyer doesn’t feel cheated. Nothing that we won’t get elsewhere, like cigarettes, after-shaves, nicely-packed nail-clippers, shiny mobile-phone-cases, biscuit-filled tins that have real-looking pictures of the attractions closest to one’s destination. Duty-free at an airport means we can stuff it into our empty suitcase, not wheel it very far… everyone’s happy.
          “Just imagine,” Shri Husband thought he was going to have the last word. “What NRI relatives/friends go through when they visit us here. They have to choose little mementoes for everyone.”
          I had mine instead. I said: “The truth you speak.”
          He had to hold his tongue, for we’d agreed on something after a very long time.
         
          Feedback: sheelajaywant@yahoo.co.in