Friday, 28 August 2015

Minu Jasdanwala on Stephen King

Over the last week, I am so thrilled to watch the videos featuring the master of horror Mr Stephen King. I have learnt tips on the craft of writing a story and also his eccentricities. He uses a range of simple words and expressions in his videos but with a special resonance that keeps on ringing in my ears.

Few I like the best are :

1. You can fish out the book from the toilet
2. Writing is a self hypsonis
3. It's a mind trick
4. Excuse me for chewing the cabbage twice

At the party

At the party

“Tomorrow at 8:00 pm sharp at Sarovar Portico. My whole family will be there, we will eat and enjoy.”
“I know my dear, it’s your day tomorrow. I have already this morning had a reminder of it on my iPhone. I will be there but I’ll be a little late as you know it is Saturday…”
“Sure, but be there. I’ll wait for my most loving guest”
“I most certainly will”, I said.
I hung up the phone and anticipated a big party coming up just like the last year’s.
I needed to revise my following day’s schedule and be a social butterfly for the later part of the evening. I started necessary preparations to dress up although I did not have much to choose from my closet. I browsed my last year’s photo of the same day and studied what shirt I had put upon so as not to repeat it this time. Over the years I had put a lot of restrain on buying things. Restrain prepares oneself for the worst times.
Gifting was my another concern. It is darn easy as I follow the three Bs package; the philosophy I propounded myself viz : gifting a book,  bouquet or blessings. The last one comes from my heart, the 1st one comes from someone’s heart and the second one comes from God’s greenery.
The next afternoon I wrote a letter to my host wishing on that special day, more special in the sense that the teenage span was done. Like a gentleman, as I now have begun to feel about myself, I polished my leather boots (7 years old have they become now) got off the stubble, also the white spots on my nose and greased my newly wrinkled semi fleshy cheeks for the evening. I was dressed up for none. Still dressing neatly was necessary component in my guide; being a gentleman.
As I reached the venue on the given time but only a little later, the host came out at the gate and gave me a profound hug. I found it warm and soothing. The host marked my entry on the list of having arrived guests. I was led to the 1st floor of the magnificent restaurant where there was a very lousy music being played. There was much bass, very discordant to my musical taste in the likes of Bob Dylan, Elvis Presley, Kris Kristofferson, Johny Cash and other music maestros. I saw a few faces which appear on my Whatsapp broadcast list but who barely meet me in person. I sat beside them. I offered my skinny hand. Their hands were very icy. Their party hair were dark and straight unlike any other regular day they put on. Their faces glimmered in the hue of the lounge. I felt vulnerable at low temperature inside. The AC had made the discotheque chilly and the dim lights added more cold, I felt. I was carrying my iPad, an addressee letter to the host in a closed envelope and a book to be gifted in a 50 year old camouflage bag which I had started recently to carry such things. I felt a little ashamed to have been carrying that piece of utility but mentioned with pride that there was an iPad inside to save the embarrassment of carrying that bag. I handed it to the person who seated beside me. I told myself that I must not feel ashamed for the things I have purposely chosen to use and carry. Perhaps time and understanding will compliment my direction to head further in my pursuits.
The host of the special day was very warm and kind. I already know the host’s parents too well to have a casual talk. They took the lead and introduced me to the other invited relatives. They unfolded the stories of my grandfather when they learnt that I was the grandson of the great congressman of 50s and the 60s. To touch their brownie points, I showed my grandfather’s picture with the great Jawaharlal Nehru and Taher Maula Saiffuddin who happened to be their religious hero and the most venerable man that has ever lived in the history of humankind. 
Over the years I have accepted that I do not have the understanding and the material to reach to the demands of such turn outs. I am not a frequent party goer. Besides, I feel a little out of my league to mix with those who are not advanced in years as I, although my heart is young to live a quality life of rich enjoyments. I had not spotted a soul to talk to and get past the time the way I wanted and the way I want things are mostly not the others of my age want to get past them. I was supposed to wait until the dinner was served. I kept up a smile, mostly organic until a man entered who I had met may be a couple of times at his workplace in a very crowded area of my city. I got off fairly well with him. His mouth smelt of liquor, his laborers’ palms replete with lines of latitudes and longitudes. His nails had a little dark something at the edges but well-shaped in general. He said that he had read my name in local newspapers for having arranged Minu’s Mehfil, students reciting poetry. I was all back to life at his utterance. I managed to learn that he was interested in such literary pleasures, the delight I like to get in frequently. He also mentioned my old ancestral home and a building just across to it where such readings were held. I was presented the Gujarat greats in literature which tickled my surprise element. I found him a humble man who sought my permission to share good poetry via Whatsapp to which I gladly acknowledged.
There was one element which was common in both of us; we both were not party types. I continued the lead to put forth my views on the pleasures and the pains of reading, the shallowness of the modern youth, the labour employed in reading of the masterpieces which gives pain-pleasure package, the art of letter writing and lastly the dancers who performed Garba in front of our eyes wearing Islamic outfits, the combination I was served for the very 1st time in my life of nearly 3 decades. To my amazement, he agreed to all of my observations. The host came to me with a humble invitation for cake cutting ritual with a background score of happy birthday song. It was not the one which Patty Hill and Mildred Hill wrote but the one of a local made. I was too annoyed to remember the lyrics of the number. The host’s family and friends one by one presented the gifts. I waited for the host to step aside so I could have the turn to present a letter and a book. I don’t know why I noticeably did not gift. Was my gift inferior, was it superior than others, did I think people would not understand the sentiments on the papers or have I learnt that it would not make a difference if I gift it in public or in private? With advancing sensibility, did I think my gift would be geeky for the rest? What was it that held me? I went near my host’s parents and insisted upon to read the letter to which they showed apparent readiness. When the parents saw the envelope with my name written on it, they must have fallen in love with my handwriting which I feel is only an assumption.
The dance was done, the exertion was manifested on each of the dancer’s face. It was then the meal time. I headed towards the ground floor in the buffet area where most have eaten and less were left to lift the plates. I took my plate with selected items to consume. I saw few vacant seats on the table located on a remote corner. There seated the similar faces who I met at the start of that evening. She happened to be a dear friend to my host. In fact it was I who had made them to know each other. I had noticed that she had gifted a matt finish portraiture of my host in red royal Rajwadi top, a very typical apparel of the people from my side of the world. The frame was indeed extraordinary and made of simple wood and a canvas. She, I thought she may have started to know me little by little when she in her ever soft voice, sparkling eyes and hand gestures with long fingers asked: “ so what book did you gift this time to your…?”
I was left a stranger on her willingness to learn.

                                                                                                            Minu Jasdanwala

                                                                                                            (22/8/15)

Wednesday, 26 August 2015

On Anamat, my prayers

I am so deeply touched by the violent approach that the people over the last 24 hours have taken at hand. To quote Gandhiji, with gentleness you can shake the world but somehow there is nothing like it that I am or we are undergoing now. With violent approach, there are other harmful elements getting a kick to do what they have always strived to do. I do not know the origin of these inhuman forms.

The actual question should be to fight for the rights for the underprivileged, the poor and those who are on the downside, regardless of which caste they belong to. Moreover all castes would have the mixture of the rich and the poor, the civilised and the otherwise. It is very much expected from the educated and the civil groups to showcase the fine thought and show the essence of their learning during times as these.

If a community wishes that if it does not get the required fruit than no one should but on a larger scale think if it is morally justified to do so !

My Prayers

Minu Jasdanwala

0 9928 19 19 19.

Friday, 14 August 2015

Nostalgic reading Kurush Dhossabhoy's letter

I got up this morning and felt nostalgic when I read a letter written by my student Kurush Dhossaboy (on 29/9/12 )who is currently studying hotel management. The letter came from his heart because the emotional appeal the letter still possesses made my morning. I wish the art of letter writing to not fade away if people like Kurush keep writing and make the reader like me to reply anyhow.

During the process of letter writing, one experiences oneness with the self and to the addressee and can talk and communicate things which verbally one would by and large fail to. 

Thursday, 6 August 2015

Minu's Mehfil (A collection of fragments) ISBN Book is coming soon

I am very pleased to share that my 1st book as an editor is coming soon. The book will showcase mostly the works of unpublished writers and poets who are my students. Contact : 09228191919