Tag Archives: Add new tag

Kalli

No, it’s not the Goddess of Death and it’s not that WWF monster (a favourite of India TV, yuck!). It’s an intense Mallu expression to describe a very complex emotion that we all experience, every now and then.

I turn right and enter the Tri-Shakti parking lot (the one for us lesser mortals), and the MP is working me into a nice little slot. The one that is going to ensure that I’m out of the gate in about a half-hours time after the guest lecture; which for my car pool is great going. The wife is back seat driving as usual. Suddenly, this guy pulls up behind, he’s blaring his horn and jams his way in. The others in his car look at me shrug wryly and walk away. You know the feeling that I’m talking about; that blinding rage, the anger, that fury, that utter helplessness. It’s not road rage; it’s Kalli.

Let’s do another situation. You are standing in line for that life saving coffee at Chanakya and this bloke comes over, grabs a cup, jams it in front of the machine and says, “ Jaldi karo”. What do you do? He’s three and a half feet tall, with a potbelly. Your seven–year old daughter could take him down. But you are a nice guy. You’re supposed to finish last. So you just look at him real hard. Oblivious, he chomps away to glory on his samosa. There’s stuff in his teeth, the chutney is all over his chin. You breathe deep and hard and feel. ……Yeah, you’re getting it, you feel Kalli.

Then there’s this milkman fellow outside your house on a Sunday morning. You place the vessel in front of him. It’s the beginning of a great day. You want to talk to him about the lovely weather, maybe even ask him about his cows, and how are they keeping, anything … just to share the joy of being alive in this wonderful world, this cauldron of people, events, happenings, experiences. It all goes phut when he sticks his finger deep inside his nose and says “ Dayd liter doon kya? (Give you a litre and a half?) ” …Kalli

Now you know why the production department doesn’t issue bazookas.

Look, I’m not trying to make a case against anybody. Perfection and me don’t know each other. All I want is a little consideration for your and my feelings. A little civic sense, some good manners, and as the pure Hindi wag would say Sabhya Bartav. You need not be politically correct all the time. You get wild, say so. You want to do your own thing, go ahead. However, that little bit of restraint, that check of your urge, that feeling for your brother being, will make this place a better place. With me?

I almost threw up

Surfing through a maze of blogs I hit a link to Shobha De’s interview by Karan Thapar’s on the Devil’s Advocate.

Shobhaa De: Well, if you go to West Bengal, Karan, do you hear anything but Bengali being spoken? Does anyone mind? You go to Karnataka, do you hear anything but Kannada being spoken? If you go to Tamil Nadu, do you hear anything but Tamil being spoken? So in that sense, may be a disconnect is happening in Mumbai. People think Mumbai belongs to all of India and therefore not parochially bound.

I was dumbfounded. And then came this

Shobhaa De: In a way, yes. Also, it’s a Maharashtrian city, people who choose to live there should learn and speak Marathi. If I were to make West Bengal my home, I jolly well learn Bengali. If I choose to live in Punjab, I should learn to speak in Punjabi. All the signages, all over India, happen to be in two languages, sometimes in three. You go anywhere in India, the signages are in local script. Why is it that Mumbai is being picked on for insisting on both signages – Devnagiri, which is also Marathi, and English.

I almost threw up!

Lemme get this straight. I was born in Pune. So I should know Marathi. My folks then moved to Meerut. I did learn Hindi. They then went to Jorhat, I should be spouting Ahomi. They then moved to Calcutta (then). I did manage to pick up Bengali. There was some time spent in Bangalore and Guntur – okay so Kannada and Telegu needs to be covered. I’ve done time since then in Leh, Srinagar, Bathinda and Arunanchal and am now in Jodhpur. SO that takes care of Kashmiri, Ladakhi, Punjabi and Marwari. Oh I almost forgot, My old man is a Mallu and mom is a tam-bram.

So I need to speak, read and write eleven , make that thirteen languages. Then and only then will Ms De be happy. KT rarely disappoints when he wields the knife mike.