“Country roads, take me home
To the place I belong…..
Take me home, down country roads”
To the place I belong…..
Take me home, down country roads”
-Went the lyrics of the John
Denver song that Gargi Bose started listening to- with earphones plugged in- being
played on the FM app of her mobile, as she ascended the stairs leading to the
security checking area of the Bagdogra Airport, boarding pass of her flight to
Bangalore in hand.
Ms. Bose, a senior manager of an ace pharmaceutical company, had flown in to Bagdogra just a day earlier to attend a special business conference with the key area managers of the concern’s eastern zone- held at Mainak Tourist Lodge, Siliguri, in the evening. She was a Bangalore based person, who had moved in to the city in 2002 post her marriage to Mr. Arnab Bose, who worked as a superintendent in a P.S.U. there.
Ms. Bose, a senior manager of an ace pharmaceutical company, had flown in to Bagdogra just a day earlier to attend a special business conference with the key area managers of the concern’s eastern zone- held at Mainak Tourist Lodge, Siliguri, in the evening. She was a Bangalore based person, who had moved in to the city in 2002 post her marriage to Mr. Arnab Bose, who worked as a superintendent in a P.S.U. there.
The words of the song struck a chord- it was the very
song that she as a teenager loved listening to, while being a school student in
the 1990s. Though the singer had longed for his own country home in the song, it
made Gargi yearn for the country home that she knew- her ancestral home at
Andul.
***********************************************************
Gargi’s parents used to stay in Calcutta for her father’s
job and her schooling at South Point. However, their ancestral home in the
countryside at Andul frequently turned out to be their destination for spending
the weekend. In that country home, resided Gargi’s paternal grandparents
together with her uncle, his wife and his son Satya, who was a year older than
Gargi and studied at a local high school.
Those were times that “tripped
by on rosy wings”. All the joyous festivals and rites typical to a Bengali
household used to be observed at their Andul home with great pomp and gaiety, and
with the family always being together on such occasions. The quintessential ‘baro
mashe tero parbon’ (the thirteen festive occasions in the twelve months of
the year) were celebrated thoroughly, together with some more. Gargi used to keenly
observe and follow with immense interest- the rituals of the festivals, the
recipes of the delicacies being made on such occasions, the traditional attire
being put on by the men and the women, and everything else associated with the
festivals.
With time, however, the pursuance
of higher education towards building of a career and similar other compulsions
took predominance over such tender joys- in the lives of both Gargi and her
cousin Satya. Satya, went for doing an M.C.A. from K.I.I.T., Odisha, while
Gargi choose to take up B. Pharma from Jadavpur University, Calcutta. Soon after completion of the B. Pharma
course, her parents convinced Gargi to marry Arnab, the groom they had seen for
her. Thereafter, a new life awaited Gargi at Bangalore.
In the meantime, Gargi’s
grandparents passed away and her uncle too shifted to Calcutta (now rechristened
as Kolkata) with his wife. The family finally sold out the land and home at
Andul- albeit with a heavy heart, owing to increasing difficulties in managing
the property. So, Kolkata was the only paternal home for Gargi now. The country
home was no more!
************************************************************
It was the first day of October 2019. Durga Puja, the biggest
annual festival of the region, was just a few days to go. The distinctive fragrance
of the ‘shiuli’ (night-flowering jasmine- also known as ‘parijat’)
flowers, which grow in abundance and signal the advent of autumn in eastern
India, wafted to Gargi’s nostrils. The setting up of pandals on the roadside and
the sight of ‘dhaakis’ (professional drum beaters) standing at bus stops
with their ‘dhaaks’ (traditionally decorated drums)- as seen on her way
to the airport- had reminded her of the upcoming festival. Musing that though
the divine ‘daughter’ Uma can visit her paternal home with her children
for at least four days during autumn, not all daughters of the land are as
fortunate, she sighed.
Just upon reaching the top of the flight of stairs
leading to the security checking area of the Bagdogra airport, a placard placed
there caught her attention. It read: ‘Esho esho aamar ghor e esho aamar ghor
e’ (a line from Tagore imploring- “Come, come ye to my home, my very own
home”). It was part of an enterprise of
the Department of Tourism, Government of West Bengal to beckon travellers en
route to various destinations to contemplate making visits to places of
attraction in the state. And quite nearby was a store that displayed
interesting traditional artefacts related to rural Bengal. It was the ‘Biswa
Bangla’ showroom. This was an endeavour of the Government of West Bengal to
showcase handcrafted heritage products from the state for connoisseurs of the
world today. The interesting bright and colourful artefacts on display- showcased
at the store immediately caught Gargi’s attention. Finding that she had some
time in hand, she decided to walk into the store.
The offerings at the store indeed echoed the heartbeat
of Bengal- via its art, craft and culture. Visitors/connoisseurs coming in can
verily get connected to the lives of the people of the land and their myriad
expressions simply by browsing over the items on offer. What is more welcoming
is that while the products retain the deep-rooted elements of the state’s
heritage, yet they are strategically developed or slightly modified thoughtfully-
to suit the contemporary requirements, tastes and preferences.
At the showroom were dolls from various parts of the
state, ‘dokra’ handicrafts, traditional household metal utensils including Puja/worship
paraphernalia, muslin products including handkerchiefs, dhotis, boxer pants,
bed sheets, and apparel for men and women. The Carmichael Rumal, a handkerchief made of Murshidabad silk- a
product being revived- was also there on display! Besides, attractive packets
and boxes of the world famous flavourful Darjeeling tea were there. There were
also masks made by craftsmen of various districts of the state- mainly of
various gods/demigods. The aroma of the collection of attar- perfumes unique to
the state- mesmerized Gargi.
Finding bottles of the cherished mustard sauce or ‘kasundi’
on the shelves of the showroom made Gargi feel nostalgic. She remembered how
her grandmother used to prepare this item at home, quite painstakingly, during
the auspicious period of Akshay Tritiya
in summer- using raw mangoes, mustard seeds etc. as ingredients. This was
something she missed quite dearly now, in a faraway land. Also available in the store was special honey sourced
from the forests of the Sunderbans.
Gargi found to her surprise that packets of ‘Gobindobhog rice’ were also there on the
shelves. This lustrous, short grained, aged, fragrant rice variety of Bengal
favoured by the mortals and (presumably) immortals alike, has been a
quintessential element of all festivals. In an instant her mind went back to
the days when festivals/Pujas in her home at Andul would just be unthinkable
without the rice. And the most coveted preparation made using the rice would be
payesh- a sweet rice pudding typically included in every celebration. Payesh made with the savoury nolen gur
(liquid date palm jaggery) available during the winters would taste heavenly,
she reminisced. Just then, some brightly coloured tubes stocked on a
shelf caught her attention. And, lo, it was the very delicious nolen gur that
she longed for- packaged in special toothpaste-style tubes, which increased its
shelf-life greatly- making it available round the year!
Further, in the showroom, copies of CDs and esteemed
literary works of the celebrated musicians/singers/writers/poets/thinkers of
the land of Bengal- down the ages- were also available. Gargi had been an avid
reader and quickly picked up some books of contemporary authors- of her choice.
Such books in her native language just could not easily be procured from
elsewhere.
Overjoyed and bewitched at getting to check out and
buy from the wide variety of quality offerings here, Gargi left the store after
purchasing many a thing to her heart’s content. The encountering of the
showroom seemed nothing short of an opportunity bestowed by providence to her, and
thus had to be made the best use of!
With all the ‘bounties’
collected, the weight of her hand baggage might have increased by a few
kilograms, however, the feeling of heaviness that had developed in her heart at
being unable to be at her home during the festive season yet one more time,
felt significantly reduced! After all, she would not be
missing on the celebrations during the festival this year! While her people
would be ecstatically observing the Pujas some twelve hundred miles away, she too
would be celebrating in her own way, with great fervour- celebrating her
homeland in its entirety- thoroughly savouring the land’s cherishes!
Gargi went ahead to enter the
security check area for boarding- while spontaneously reciting from a work of esteemed
poet Jibananda Das- “Aabar aashibo phire….ei Banglay”, pledging
to return….to this (beloved) land of Bengal- her homeland.
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