Monday, 26 October 2015

Minu Jasdanwala's story (Back in 20/4/1993)

             Back in 20/4/1993

‘Just look at him’, I love the way he talks.
‘Me too’, but more than that his iPhone 6, the best phone of the year 2015.
‘Shut up…his tattoos…’
‘Sshh…he is coming”
‘Good morning students. Are you ready for the return?’
‘We don’t want to’, shouted a little teenage girl from the rear seat of the bus.
‘Yes, yes’, joined the other from the bus which made the protest of the girl stronger. After a very eventful tour of his class students, the teacher and the students were ready to return from the country. The teacher was by and large loved by his pupils. Some appreciated him on his face, some through emails, some through the whatsapp messenger, and some sent their wishes through other friends of theirs. He was one of the most sought teachers to be regularly stalked on the social media. His displays were awaited twice a day. When someone complimented him, he felt glad. One word was recurrent on his social network statuses. It was used specifically for someone gone and dead who was very dear to the teacher.
The bus started slowly. The teacher felt the unhappy faces who did not want to return to their school life.
‘Next month we will plan for something new again’, consoled the teacher. But the little masters did not buy his cliché which the teacher knew very well.
‘Sir, can we stay please for one more day’, asked one little boy earnestly.
‘No my love, we cannot. There is time for everything. We all must do things in installments, each at a time with utmost dedication, only then we enjoy doing them. Going to school, doing work is as important as playing on the field and wandering out. One cannot say NO to school. One gets bored if one keeps on doing one thing repeatedly. If you overeat or overdrink or overplay you get sick. There is time my dear friends for everything’.
When the teacher talked, no student could resist not listening. The teacher illustrated his every philosophy which made his pupils to buy his ideas. After a while, it was time to debus. It was difficult for the students, the teacher knew exactly. The teacher started searching his cricket bat in the bus. English Willow it was. He was kneeling down at every passenger’s seat but could not discover his bat. He became little impatient. It was his father’s gift when he as a child played cricket for his district team. His eyes fell on numerous wafer and biscuits wrappers which the students had left during the tour. Suddenly his eyes fell on something dustbin worthy thing. He got interested to discover what was inside that battered paper as it was the only paper lying with the family of plastic wrappers. He opened it and there was poorly written questions and answers in it. The handwriting he saw was very poor. He felt as if he has seen such a text somewhere before in time. One can perceive the tension on his face and his sweat glands overflowing on his forehead. The text troubled him much. It was like noticing the left traces after having committed the crime. It reminded of his own handwriting when he was a child. He noticed the date which said 20.4.1993. He could not stand on his feet. He felt the ground was sliding away from him. He could not control himself. His head spun like a roller coaster. There was a great noise inside his head. The past overtook him. His palms and his heels began to feel cold which was pretty usual for him when he saw things evoking from the past. His eyelids fell down in agony.
He was a timid shabby fellow, a mamma’s boy who did not like schools and he hated his most teachers. He lived an unhappy life. He had to be bundled up to be sent to school. He was without life. He was more dead than alive, only a walking form if you will. He did not brush his teeth nor did he feel the necessity to take regular showers. His mother took him to a bus stop early in the morning. He prayed for his school bus to be late or never to come. It was 90’s, a boy of roughly 7, a 3rd grader who was learning to frame sentences in poor text. His books were untidy. They were full of red threatening remarks addressed to the parents. He failed to get a smiley face both from his teachers and also from his real life. Friend he had none.  
The bus entered the school premises. The students had all left the bus with their bags and bottles and caps and glasses. The parents collected their children. The teacher was lost in time. The bus driver came up to him and said, ‘Sir, the students have left, don’t you want to see the Principal?’
‘No Mummy, I don’t want to go to school!’

                                                                                                            Minu Jasdanwala

                                                                                                            (25/10/15)

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