After tossing and turning restlessly in bed for a whole night, I finally made my decision. I would not drown the clay Ganesha in a bucket of water in the backyard. The reason, of course, was my mother’s winning argument: "We already have only 2 decent buckets in the house. If Ganesha sits in one bucket for a week, then how to wash clothes??"
So I checked the newspaper for alternatives they might have for ecologically concerned, but bucket-deficient people who had a Ganesha idol to dunk. Ulsoor Lake** was mentioned as one such solution. Images of shorts-clad jawans wiping sweat and green goo off their body while cleaning up the stinky, hyacinth filled, silted lake a year ago flashed in my mind. But I read on: "An area would be clearly separated from the main lake and will be set aside exclusively for immersing the Ganesha idols."
And so, the lake it had to be. Rather, the tank-in-corner-of-lake-generously-alloted-for-marrying-religion-and-ecology it had to be. So the idol securely placed in the leg-space of my Scooty, I rode my way to the said tank. All the while, I was painfully balancing my legs in the air (thanks to amma’s "Don’t keep your feet anywhere near the idol!"). I’m still amazed at how everyone on the road had the same reaction to my antics:
Absent looking around to find where the loud metallic clanging was coming from >> Realisation that it’s my bike >> Double take on seeing my bike gymnastics >> Idiotic, self-satisfied grin >> Ganesha idol noticed >> Instant look of forgiveness
Now, as soon as I parked my bike near the lake, a young man walked towards me.
I noticed that his pants were wet knee-down. I nodded and stepped aside.
He touched his hand to his lip, then to his chest, closing his eyes and breathing in deeply. Then he lifted my Ganesha, faced it frontwards, stuck it to his chest, and walked towards the tank.
I scurried after him.
At the edge of the tank, he paused and gave me a brief, blank look.
I subtlely touched my handbag.
He turned away from me, and walked into the tank. He went upto a point where the water level was such that his pants wouldn’t get wetter. Now he turned toward me, but looked skyward. Dip, dip, dip. Thrice. Then he floated the idol away.
I looked into my bag and fished out a 10 rupee note. He took the money and went back to the parking lot. We hadn’t spoken even once.
I looked around. A middle-aged brahmin man, dry as a bone, his face purple, and his strained veins popping in a V-shape in the middle of his forehead, was hysterically yelling at a little boy (also wet knee-down) in tamil: "You are not supposed to touch Ganapati till we reach the edge of the tank! Who asked you to take it from me here itself?? Now I have to do puja from beginning, you dirty idiot!!"
He swung his hand violently towards the boy’s face.
I turned away. But I heard the sharp sound of hand on cheek.
I walked quickly towards where some more men wet knee-down were having silent conversations with more people bringing Ganeshas on bikes.
....
**The municipal corporation has put these little ads on street lamps all over town, that applaud Bangalore for being ‘The City of Gardens’, ‘The City of Lakes’, ‘…IT’, ‘…Pubs’, ‘…Parks’, ‘…Kempegowda’(courtier who planned the city). Although I love Bengloor with all my heart, I must confess that the corporation is a big fat liar. But I must say, they’re clever with colours. The City of Gardens board is green, the lakes board is blue, and the Kempegowda board is golden yellow- to signify royalty, of course.
11 comments:
dunk the old man in the lake the next time around
....the city still scores over the others ro, just needs more help frm journos like ya
Know what's one of the few things I don't like about Nimma Bengaluru? One doesn't get Fresh-Lime-soda...and even if one does it costs the earth. As far as that goes - Kerala Junctions - 1, Bangalore - 0.
Vinayakkayaa tanneela potte Ro? ;)
not true kraz! Lime-juice available at Ganesh Fruit Juice Centre at corner of almost every road. Rs.2 vonly. If want non-chill, Re.1 extraa.
Welcome to bengloor. :)
Hmm Ro,
Pls note: I said fresh-lime-SODA. (Uppu-naaranga-soda). Not available for Rs. 2 or Rs.3 at every street corner. Available at Empire...err...Mascot(???) for vonly Rs.15.
how much is the fresh lime soda in kerala kraz?
kraz,
sigh... alright FINE. you can hold on to the naranga SODA (sheri?) and even the ben (=bun) & chaaya. But we have darshinis!! ok, lets chuck the score system. you have perennial strikes, and we have potholes.
kraz, will you please shake my hand in truce before i become an unbearably competitive cheap-shot-taking horned monster (green even)?? (chewing nails in horror)
Hmmm.....where's that white flag now? Ahh I get it, I'll just pull down this CITU White flag with red star from any of these posts here in Kerala and wave it. OK OK Ceasefire, though I would have loved to see you turning into a green monster.
Nelson,
It costs anywhere between Rs.2.50 to Rs.3.50, and its the best hangover killer known to man...unless of course you misx some butter-milk (moru...Ro?) with it.
kraz... 'moru'??! pleez.. majjige.
nelly... have superrr weekend da! :D i could awwww to the high heavens!
hey ro,
no religion, no god, no immersion.
perfect bliss
dragonfly
bravecoward...
may the day of self-destructible ganeshas never come. Imagine: New & Improved, the new-age ganpu (short for ganapati). He fights crime... he wipes off grime... aannnnnd he's sublime!!!
NO.
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