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'Freedom Is Not given 바카라 It Is Taken': Bose's Words Are Reminder Of How To Win Back Unity In Diversity

Having been a critical messenger to Subhash Bose across borders, my grandfather had joined the 바카라Bengal Volunteers바카라 party at the age of 15 and told me that he realised his life바카라s mission right then 바카라 to serve and die for his country, writes Isheeta Ganguly.

'Freedom Is Not given 바카라 It Is Taken': Bose's Words Are Reminder Of How To Win Back Unity In Diversity
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On Subhash Chandra Bose바카라s death anniversary amid the continued post-Independence Day deliberations on democracy and freedom, I have one recurrent thought. I miss the old-world charms of pre-liberalised 1980바카라s Calcutta 바카라 my notion of idyllic India. I miss the water handpumps, kerosene stoves, boiled water, home-made coconut naarus and paatishaapta, famous five chocolate bars, gems and tiny-sized, thick, square toasted bread with jam. I miss New Market Christmas trees and cakes, I miss pre-megamall shopping for trinkets in Gariahat. But more than that I miss my grandparents바카라 Park Circus home and paara.

32 Dilkhusa Street was the ultimate dilkhush place--a largely Muslim dominated neighborhood, where multiple religions not only co-existed but were co-respected 바카라 yes, as a verb. Despite the scarcity constraints of pre-liberalised uni-brand India (Lakme, Godrej and Bata land), there was a pluralism of post-Naxalite/pre-Babri Masjid 1980s Calcutta that was real, palpable and now aspirational.

My grandfather was a freedom fighter from the Subhash Chandra Bose camp. He was charismatic, a brilliant singer, orator and storyteller. He was the erudite English honors with distinction, a brilliant architect of limericks and rhymes and simply the most elegant, handsome, well-read, and delightful human ever. If I could have serenaded Sting바카라s 바카라every little thing he does is magic바카라 바카라 I would. Because he was. Having been a critical messenger to Subhash Bose across borders, he had joined the 바카라Bengal Volunteers바카라 party at the age of 15 and told me that he realised his life바카라s mission right then 바카라 to serve and die for his country. When he was 21 in 1941, Bose sent him to Kabul disguised as a 바카라Pathaan바카라 (under the code name 바카라Sher Zaman바카라) to deliver a key message to the INA. He spent days and nights on end on foot without his next meal or a place to sleep in sight. They were lonely nights laced in fear of being discovered. During the pandemic바카라s migrant crisis, I often thought about those days my grandfather spent on foot without food, water or shelter in sight. His survival came from random acts of kindness from the Pathans in Afghanistan. Those days of his life fostered a lifelong love and loyalty towards folks in our neighborhood which he never forgot. The random acts of kindness bestowed on him by complete strangers saved his life again and again.

His other greatest companion outside reading The Statesman and books of every genre was song. Our mornings began with toast, jam and chhana(sweet paneer) over the All India Radio 바카라Akash Bani바카라 offering Rabindra Sangeet, to which he would sing along and also reminisce other 바카라swadeshi바카라 songs, which kept him and his companions going during eight years of jail time.

On one of my earliest trips, when I was roughly four, he taught me DL Roy바카라s Amar Jaunmo Bhumi(the soil of my birth), in his perfect pitch, marvelous tenor voice. I imbibed the verses while attempting to apply a scarlet red liquid bindi to my forehead. When he commented on my being inattentive (with the red bindi liquid now smeared all over my forehead), I sang back all four verses to him verbatim. He was stunned. This song then became our anthem duet on every drive to and from Calcutta Dum Dum airport where the arrivals felt like a wedding and the departures were like a funeral. The departures inevitably with a pit in my stomach where the lines 바카라Amar ei deshetei jaunmo jano ei deshetei mori바카라 (바카라let me die in this country where I was born바카라) would evoke an intense melancholy.

So the root of this annual Calcutta love fest was of course family and songs. My cousin and I would spend the summers in 바카라lockdown바카라 style in our grandparents바카라 bungalow creating havoc. It was a party every day. We were never bored. We had a free reign of the house reading, play-acting, singing and conducting 바카라school바카라 for staff and anyone willing to attend every afternoon. We dumped our rannabatti (pots and pans) for baribari (house 바카라 if you can call it that) where we draped our grandmothers바카라 carefully ironed sarees over the four polls of the glorious colonial style canopy beds for them to discover later in the day. We went out only occasionally to restaurants, movies or the zoo, but it didn바카라t matter. Our imaginations were the virtual reality movie. Our no nonsense but indulgent grandmothers set the bar high - both having been full-time teachers they hosted former colleagues (girlfriends) who were often inter-faith, Muslim and Christian, who came home for nimki and chai over laughter and adda on all things under the sunMy grandfather and his younger brother, both former freedom fighters and cricket addicts, were clearly overshadowed by the quiet powerhouse women they were married to.

Secularism wasn바카라t just a theoretical 바카라idea바카라 in those days, it was living by doing. Our driver was my cousin and my playmate and ludo partner and India-Pakistan test cricket matches on black and white TVs were obsessively watched. While our neighborhood often did cheer for Pakistan, there were no particular hard feelings. My grandfather would go to get the daily fish and vegetables from vendors who rehashed the match and my grandfather, with his arresting charm and unmistakable laugh, would deflect either a good win or loss to Pakistan.

In our neighborhood, namaaz was read peacefully and openly in a cluster of balconies across from our house at routine times. Across the street there was also Akhtar Ali, a famous tennis player on one floor, with the Pachuris on the second floor, and the Mukherjees on the third. That was normal. That just was. Aktar Ali바카라s daughter Liloufer was a close friend who would come over and play with me and my cousin during idyllic afternoons where we would eat shooji(halwa), sweet or savory on different days. Then there were the balcony chats with my cousin바카라s classmate across wrought-iron paned, green shuttered windows. We would call for her from the bathroom window and someone would summon her so the three of us could jam. But we rarely made it to each other바카라s houses. She wasn바카라t really allowed to step out and we weren바카라t allowed to go anywhere unaccompanied. There was just an understanding and acceptance of those constraints. There was no one-upmanship. Those days seem unimaginable now.

The 바카라otherisation바카라 on caste, class and religion during the pandemic lockdown will remain a devastating black mark in our history. Did we even individually show enough empathy and goodwill? Did we truly put our ourselves in others바카라 shoes? As much as I gave to the causes in little ways I could, I still find myself on many occasions being short, irritable with staff only to be corrected by my husband. Where is collective progress then?

We got stuck in time. Both my grandfathers were Brahmin Gangulis who married a Sarkar and Basu out of caste in those days. My great grandfather, a freedom fighter and Gandhian, made it clear to all guests invited to the weddings that if they had issues with an inter-caste marriage they should kindly not attend. He also told the fathers of both brides that dowry of any kind was not only unwelcome but simply would not be accepted. Sadly, we have hardly progressed enough in a century.

Cerebral discussions on caste, religion, and the divides in India won바카라t move us forward. It ultimately has to come at a heart level, beyond politics. That can바카라t happen only through reading books and articles. Art is a transformative tool 바카라 street theatre, music of every genre, cinema and theatre where we win back the romance of 바카라unity in diversity바카라. We need to celebrate this cool jambalaya with unique ingredients and distinct flavors. The Dalit rapper Dule who바카라s speaking out on India바카라s poor tells us to get off our butts, out of our houses and do something. This echoes Bose for 바카라freedom is not given 바카라 it is taken바카라. For ultimately, it바카라s our jaunmo bhumi.

 (The author is a writer, director & Tagore fusion singer with a Masters in Public Health from Columbia University. She tweets at @3threewomen. Views expressed are personal.)

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