Bas ik jhijhak - to Papa on his birthday
Since my father passed away in 2005, I’ve tried on his
birthday to write something for him, to remember him in. I haven’t always
managed to do it here – of late it has been small things on Facebook I guess.
Today too, it is almost the end of the day when I have the opportunity to write
this, a fact that as usual would have made him tsk tsk about my misplaced
priorities, my lack of real discipline.
There were many things about my father, which, as time has
gone by, and as I too am older, with a head and heart more weathered than
before, I see now, were truly special things. One of these was his love of
poetry, especially Urdu poetry. As a child in Lahore and even after moving to
Delhi during Partition, he had studied only Urdu and English. I am not sure
where his great love for Urdu poetry came from actually – whether it was part
of the cultural milieu or whether he had acquired it from some friends. But I
knew it was always there. Ghalib was his favourite poet. I did not understand
most of what was being said, but I used to enjoy always, the relish with which
my father would quote an apt verse when an incident or utterance warranted it.
I loved that relish in my Dad. He wasn’t as such a
flamboyant personality. But he had a lightness and an appreciation for beauty
which translated into a kind of simple, everyday stylishness, not flashy at
all. I think perhaps it was not uncommon in men of his generation, of a certain
type. His relish when reciting a couplet would be for so many things –
sometimes he would quote one and say, bada hi khoobsurat sher hai. Yeh lafz
bahut khoobsurat hai. It could be the words, the meanings, the cleverness of
the craft or the delight of having remembered the poem. This would happen often
especially when he and my mum were playing cards with their friends and people
were laughing and bantering. Sometimes my mum would reply with an answering
couplet as is the norm in the remembering of Urdu poetry. If they were getting
along well he would laugh – this laugh, in the picture below and say “Wah! Kya
baat hai” and repeat a bit of it.
But even if they
weren’t getting along at the time, or had perhaps argued earlier or something,
he would usually smile and appreciate the beauty of the verse.
I think now how lucky I was that I grew up with this
playfulness and pleasure and urbanity
around me in such an everyday way. There was no affectation there, only
affection really. Poetry was not made esoteric, but meant to be part of life.
Poetry illuminated life. Poetry made enjoyment happen. Poetry could make you
close your eyes in pleasure and let it self be felt on your skin. It was not
given special status, but simply showed me how each moment could be special,
how life could always give you a chance to make your eyes sparkle, how putting
a sparkle of enjoyment in someone else’s eyes was such a normal, easygoing
thing to do.
He was the same about clothes and food and conversation. It
was never a mark of sophistication. It was simply a way to live life tasting
its pleasures and pains with a certain warmth and gentleness I think.
I miss that about Papa. I miss the lightness of his love. I
miss the smile in his eye – I miss his gentle sense of fun. I look for it
everywhere I guess. I try to be that way – though I don’t know if I succeed
very much. Sometimes I am rude and impatient in so many ways, in a way he would
never ever have been because that was not ‘the way.’
I think what my father taught me through all these things,
was that it was possible to sample life’s pleasures, even perhaps submit to
them, and still be very decent to others. The two almost were a part of each
other – though I am not explaining that well. There was none of that moralism
about decadence in his aspect – or in my home and in things I saw my parents
do. He was always game to make another person’s party work, to take the trouble
to dress up in costume with my mum for a fancy dress or theme night (though my mum was the one who came up with these exciting schemes usually)– as in
this Shaam-e-Avadh party below.
My father loved Begum Akhtar and would sing her ghazals
often. He would tell us stories about how, when he was posted in Jodhpur, he
and his roommate, “Chuha” Pathak (nicknames being a bit Air Force thing) would
listen to her ghazals on Radio Pakistan, from across the border. “Chuha Pathak
would fill a glass with rum” he’d tell us. “Then he’d stand looking at the sun,
going slowly, slowly down. As soon as it set he would start drinking. That
fellow I tell you. We’d have our evening drink and listen to Begum Akhtar or
Iqbal Bano.”
My father’s favourite ghazal was one that went “Bas ik
jhijhak hai yahi, haal-e-dil sunane mein.” He would sing it sometimes at
parties or to us aise hi. I never heard a recording of it but it never occurred
to me to look even when I grew up and began to like Begum Akhtar myself.
I did ask around for it sometimes – did anyone have a
recording – because my dad would’ve loved to listen to it, but never did find
one.
When my father fell sick, we spent many days in hospital
chatting in a leisurely way, during his chemotherapy. These were strange days,
especially as it became undeniable that he would not live. Strange because I
have never quite felt love as a size, you know. We think of love as intensity
usually. But in those days, trying to care for him, always seeming to fall
short, for pain, physical and emotional seemed unpreventable, I felt love like
a large box in my heart, heavy with pain, but also heavy with purity. It sat in
me leaving no place for anything else – for nothing else was needed but to feel
this love for my father, complete with the pain of confronting loss. What was
the choice after all. What would be the point of preventing your heart from the
last chance to love the one you love the most? Even for me, who fears hurt and
pain and guards myself with such masks of casual transparency.
One of those days of his illness, I asked my father to teach
me the ghazal. I wrote down the words, I practiced it line by line. There was a
lightness and heaviness about the moment. It was nice to distract ourselves
from his pain, his fever. And yet it was underlined by the knowledge that I was
trying to hold on to things that I was now going to lose forever. But we sang
that song, I learned it well.
I eventually found the song on the internet some time after
my father passed away. This 11th November, it’s the 11th
birthday without him. I had wanted today
to record myself singing the song for Papa today.
But I find grief is strange – it changes, losing some of its
clingy sense of being on your skin all day all night all year, over time. I now have the sweetness of being able to speak about my father without feeling wretched, without that piercing emotion of loss, And
yet it is always there, just like that love, the poetry of that love for Papa
is always there in me. So though I have I find I cannot sing it without crying – therefore it
is not here. Bas ik jhijhak hai yahi, that I cannot sing it without crying, today, though of course many times I can.
Surely Ravi Karan Vohra, like a perfect dad would have said,
beta, very nice if I’d sung it, for sabka dil rakhna, that was him. But without
a doubt, he’d have liked Begum Akhtar better.
So here she is - and Happy Birthday Papu, wherever you are.
And here is the beautiful ghazal by Kaifi Azmi -
Comments
Your father was so much like mine is.
Now walking around with giant lump in throat. :')
Perhaps it was a generational thing, but we're lucky then to have had it in our lives :)
Lovely post.
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Aaru Garg
A Member of Sun Sign Calculator Team
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