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And if God forbids by chance
their eyes meet for a second (though they always try not to look at each other
by hard gazing at the ground) they hurriedly change their course to the ground,
as if their eyes were capable of calling the doomsday if they met.
I was intrigued on
encountering this phenomenon on my very first evening walk in Chandigarh. My son who works here as a clerk in
Municipal Corporation brought me here. In reality, I was coerced by him to
leave my ancestral village Pandherkheri in Ludhiana,
Punjab to live with him in Chandigarh
after my wife’s sudden and sad demise due to heart attack.
My son thought that I will
die lonely in my village and after a few days of death of my wife, I too felt
the need of company but what both of us did not know that in search of company
we would get a rude shock.
That evening he took me to a
park called terrace garden for my evening walk. I was excited at the prospect
of meeting new people and getting a chance to talk incessantly to the
intelligentsia of this city.
At that time, I did not know
that I was actually offending him. I was supposed to mind my own business in a
city.
This gentleman casted a whole
weird look from my head to toe and instead of wishing me back, shrank his nose
and diverted his eyes to the ground and ran past me.
I was unable to understand
such kind of rude behaviour from a gentleman especially a city gentleman who
are known for their gentlemanly behaviour.
On second thought, I concluded
that my attire consisting of dhoti-kurta might have given him a look of an
illiterate fellow.
As I was trying to heal my wounded self respect by
trying to devise some new excuse for this shocking matter, my son gently tapped
on my shoulder and said, “ Babu ji you are not supposed to call any stranger
here.”
“Everyone is a stranger to me
here beta,” I protested.
“It’s the way of the city,”
replied my son with a long sigh.
I did not reply to him.
Then many people of various
ages and both genders passed me but none of them even bothered to take a glance
on my face. All of them were busy hard gazing the ground as if they were trying
to decipher some code written on the ground.
Until now we have taken four
circle rounds of this small park and already I was feeling my head revolving. I
was not accustomed to this manner of walking where you have to make rounds of a
small place repeatedly amidst the ocean of humans acting as robots.
And to add insult to injury
these robots are used to walk only the narrow concrete path laid in a round
manner in the park. The concrete area is so small that there is literally a
kind of jam where everyone is trying to overtake you and some of them do not
care if they have to push you off this track to make their way.
On encountering, this I
reminded the lines of my son that it is the way of the city.
Where you can be trampled if
you do not fasten your pace or give way to others.
On remembering about my
village walks I became nostalgic. I think my son was able to sense this as when
we reached home and I asked his permission to go back he did not protest.
I took a sigh of relief on
reaching my village where the whole village was waiting for their wise man, who
was a mad man in the city.
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