Aug 20, 2016

Kerala Bhraman- An Evening Over Coffee


In case you are missing out on our earlier endeavors, drive off to the Travels section of my blog and get updated.  


Shibu uncle’s house in Attingal, was situated about thirty kilometers from Trivandrum. The gates opened to a sloping driveway. A white kennel that resembled a small temple stood at the mouth of the slope below. Shibu uncles dog a four month old canine had a pensive look on it's face. Opposite to the kennel was the garage where he had parked his gypsy and his bike. He told us to wait in the porch above and he would open the door from inside. 
A tulsi mancha welcomed us on our way to the porch. The front yard was a salad of trees growing wild and awaiting a long time due reparation; the rains had left its mark.
“Are there snakes here?” My mother asked. Her expression evidently indicated her distaste for snakes.
Shibu uncle nodded his head; obviously and he shared the incident when he had encountered a cobra.

The cobra had injected the poison into a frog and was waiting for it to die. Watching it tremble and slowly turn blue while a malignant glare froze in its grey eyes. Shibu uncle hadn’t noticed it and had continued his chores in the garage. His dog on the contrary had kept a vigil look on the beast and had bellowed in an unusual manner. That must have cautioned Shibu uncle and the snake too. Unlike other men, uncle didn’t scurry but let the snake leave on its own which it did. But it left its prey behind.
Shibu uncle recalled that the snake had returned for its hard earned feast after he had left.
He said that he had no intention to bother the beings that lived in the wilderness of his house; “This is their land after all.”

Attingal, built about 800 years ago used to be the residence of the women of the Venad royal family. This was the time when only the Rani used to hold all the power. The Attingal Palace was constructed in 1305 A.D. 

The folks of Attingal were bitter about the liberty that was being given to the East India Company. The Britishers had penetrated the spice market and had begun playing with the black pepper price. The final blow was the sanction to build the Anchuthengu Fort in 1694 which pretty much alienated the Attingal public. We had come across the small squarish fort on our way to Varkala from the Trivandrum airport. 
In the aftermath of a repercussion of their deeds, Gyfford of the East India Company sought to present gifts to the Rani as an amend to the mess. 
The Ettuveetil Pillamar were noblemen from the Nair house at the time when the Venad family ruled and felt that they had the sole monopoly to present gifts to the Rani of the family; anyone foreign who intended to gift the ladies had to pass through these Lords of Eight Houses. 
But Gyfford was adamant and wanted to gift the Rani in person and not through any subordinate. So he marched with an army of 140 men from The Fort to the Palace. His display of force had irked the noblemen and the local people and they rebelled and killed each and every British on the road to the palace. They laid siege to the fort for six months until fresh British troops entered from Tellicherry.

In history, this rebellion came to be the first ever organised attack on the British in Kerala. While that might give us goosebumps on one hand, on the other it only turns into grief for the unfortunate turn of events. An agreement between the Company and the Rani gave the Company the sole monopoly to trade in pepper and the permission to build factories wherever the Company deemed fit. Not to mention that the crown paid for all the mess done by the attack on the fort. Sigh!    

Shibu uncle escorted us to his studio which had a lofty ceiling to facilitate him to paint larger works.  A canvas was set on a stand; a still of a doe and her fawn in making. A mirror was propped beside the still and another blank canvas stood beside the mirror; self-portraits where indeed fun to paint. Several oil paint tubes and palettes were strewn on the table alongside the canvases.


Shibu uncle in his studio


Shibu uncle's fondness of reading was evident from the several cupboards filled with books in English and Malayalam both in his studio and his living room. Along with the books arranged were records; a turntable sat on a nearby table along with a stereo. Shibu uncle had once told us that he painted by the day and danced by the night.
A rocking chair beheld the studio while a living room lay quiet in the dark behind it.

Shibu uncle’s cot was placed in the best way one could possibly do with the bookish cupboards at the head and the pantry at the feet. We sat in the living room where two luxurious couches shared a table on which lay a stack of books on various renowned painters. The room was well lit owing to the wide open windows overlooking the porch and the sunrise. Rains were a thrill through those windows; watching the tree leaves nod with the shower and the front yard get slowly wet.
A solo sound of Carnatic music was being played in a temple somewhere. Rest everything was silent. The house was in peace; located close to the road yet away from it.

Time flew in that room while talking at a stretch about politics, Tamil Nadu and Kerala, Raja Ravi Varma, Amrita Sher- Gill, Kumara Asan, Rameswaram, the ghost town of Dhanushkodi and the Jeeva Samadhi custom of Tamil Nadu over a cup of black Nilgiri coffee. We learned that Raja Ravi Varma used to live nearby and that his granddaughters were adopted by his sister in law who belonged to the ruling family of Attingal. As a change of topic, we discussed the initial planning for cross country road trips to Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia and even Europe.

A Chat over coffee
Kerala’s main sources of income were the tourist, coir, tea, coffee and spice industries. Shibu uncle had revealed much to our amazement that most of the vegetables in Kerala were actually imported from other states; they weren’t very keen on cultivation. Most of the youth were off to the Gulf countries to find work and hence remittance was another source of foreign exchange.
An ironic revelation was that despite of the proximity to the ocean, a meager population of Trivandrum were swimmers. Shibu uncle giggled  while we had our hands over our heads.

The houses in Kerala were all surrounded by the vegetation that had naturally grown around long before the foundations had been set. Only the undergrowth that came in way of the area for the house’s requirements had been cleared, rest all had dauntlessly stayed, thus giving a wild appearance to each dwelling.
We concluded that the people in Kerala like to keep nature in its pristine form, the way it was meant to be, the way it had all began. It might be very well possible that they have been devout to the elements of nature and this was one way of showing gratitude. Live and Let Live!

There is nothing like the view from a terrace. It gives a different perspective of the place; only the birds get a better look. From Shibu uncle’s terrace everything up to the horizon were tree tops leaving some gigantic palms and teaks. We looked upon heaven that floated on trees, not clouds. Up above the heaven was a sky flocked by clouds bordered grey and a yellowish hue sprayed across it; merely a canvas of another artist. Only the birds called as they flew over the house and the distant sound from the temple persisted.
From the top, Shibu uncle named the trees in his property- Mango, palm, coconut, teak, betel nut, acacia, rambutan, bamboo, papaya and a lot many whose name I do not remember; nor him maybe!

Why does he not fetch the coconuts? The trees are beaming with a lot of them.
Yes, of course! If you have a coconut tree in your house it doesn’t compel you to be a brilliant coconut fetcher. Climbing trees, that to a coconut tree is not a cup of tea for anyone. The coconut fetchers know that very well! They know who would be the first man you would call if you are extremely thirsty and have the necessary source to quench it. You call and ask them to come home. There’s your first error in concept- you don’t simply call them and expect them to turn up at your doorstep. You need to bring them to your doorstep. Accepted!
Watch out!

The expert would then inspect your tree to check if it’s the right time to make the climb. They would accordingly make their schedule for the process. Needless to say, they will have a lunch break, but what good is any break when you are high up on a tree- your one hand firm around the tree trunk and another close to the fruit? Remember not to interrupt them in the middle of their contemplation. You are likely to ruin their plans and your thirst.
Anyways, you will get what you had wanted. No worries. You make the payment and then cut open two coconuts; one for the service. But that’s not it. The man is still waiting- his hands on his waist, his foot tapping on the floor constantly and his face in a half frown. “What is it?” you may want to ask but the clever reply from deep within would be “Don’t.” Just drop the man back home.       

It was getting dark and we had to start early next morning for Thekkady if we had to enter the reserve before five in the evening. It was almost past dinner time back at Varkala’s Marine Palace but we wanted to make it to the hotel anyhow. So, we immediately left for the hotel on Shibu uncle’s Fabia- leaving the windows open on the way letting the cool wind tousle our hair.
We reached the helipad soon after and bid Shibu uncle farewell until next time. The sky was so neat and clear that we could see the stars; like diamonds in the sky. The cliff was dark and so was the sea, its tides hitting the beach with gusto.   
Back in the hotel restaurant, we feasted on grilled Butterfish and coconut rice as the sound of the waves flushed our minds of everything, belittling every other sound.

18 comments:

  1. Very nice. Really liked this line - "he painted by the day and danced by the night." Sounds more like a poet than a painter :)

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  2. Illustration gulo asadharon hocche. As usual, superb!

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  3. Another major source of Kerala's income is remittance.

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    1. Thank you for telling that. I will put that up in the post :)

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  4. Lovely imagery and interesting use of words. I liked that you attached links to your work, it enriched the experience :)

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    1. :)
      Thank you! My idea was to draw the picture through writing. I wish to write it in a way in which I imagined at first sight.

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  5. khub bhalo laglo lekha arr anka , Dadu Bhai .

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  6. Yes I enjoyed every line in fact I have read it twice already. You could easily be dubbed as the modern day R. K. Laxman. Excellent narrative , interspersed with historical facts ( which added more glamour to your writing)and those superb sketches are admirable. You are indeed a versatile writer.

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    1. Thank you pishi! :)
      Comments from the readers motivate me to keep on writing and improve too.

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  7. Yes I enjoyed every line in fact I have read it twice already. You could easily be dubbed as the modern day R. K. Laxman. Excellent narrative , interspersed with historical facts ( which added more glamour to your writing)and those superb sketches are admirable. You are indeed a versatile writer.

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  8. I am enjoying your travelogue every page, by page.
    As I was all along with you through the journey, I am reliving the expeience as I am reading through. Story telling is more enhanced through the sketches, specially the way you imagined the coconut fetching :)

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    1. I want to keep the memories of those days alive through these writings. The sketches are illustrations that bring a smile to whoever reads it. :)

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  9. Wreek, khub bhalo lekha. Enjoying while reading....each sentence. The way you are writing, one couldnt stop reading the next sentence untill it ends with last fullstop. Carry on...

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    1. Thank you Bidesh uncle :)
      Compliments from the readers give me confidence that my purpose is being served.

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  10. That evening's adda is well captured. The stories of Jeeva Shamadhi as told by Shibu were amazing. You also captured the essence of the coconut harvesting very nicely with a very apt picture.

    Continue .....

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