Sunday, 21 September 2025

On my grandmother Lachchmi - a poem, and then something about her grip...

 


Laxmi, Lachchmi (my grandmother)


She was a simple soul

No, she never cared about

things that are not worth caring about

For instance, she never cared about cricket,

or tv serials, or movies

And dismissed all that with a one liner

"yo laambe laambe chehre"

These long faces..

For somewhere inside she knew

that faces are better.

they are not like the diplomatic faces on the television...

that faces are better, like, like

those of her children...

'Sham, Fulad, Raj, Munna and Lala'

like, like..

those of her grandchildren,

maybe like Manu's face,

which was sweetest to her..

on whose birth she had danced and sang,

while beating spoon frantically on the plate...


And what about her grip?

the way she clutched her grandchildren's arm

and dragged them back to house

in the fear that they may get lost

Manu hated it,

for how could he know that it was out of sheer love!

how could he know that this lady, his grandmother

had lost so much in her lifetime, that losing was

a nightmare to her!

She who lost her father's family to plague,

And then many of her children at birth..

how could she manage to lose Manu...!!!

Wasn't she a saint?

Her tragedies and then, her devotion to God,

her singing of 'Bhootan ke dere mein, bhaj le pyare, tu sahara'

'where I am trapped in this pit of ghosts, it is you god, who will get me out'

every morning.....

She knew a secret, deep inside that this modern generation doesn't

(though she knew nothing of cricket scores, and once when Manu tried to explain her

cricket, he came to the point of forgetting himself)..

just one rhythm, like Meera's can take you across..it is all that matters

nothing else does....


And what about her cloth and cotton parrots?

Can any living artist suffuse so much love into his art?

the love that she suffused into the parrots she made for Manu..

Art is for love, not for diplomacy,

yes, she knew that too!

And her tale of Hallaq Kuttaq

Wasn't that masaledar??

Manu loved that

and went around the streets repeating it..

'Hallaq Kuttaq it's your turn,

Let your tail put put burn!'


She didn't know how to read and write

She couldn't write her name for that

'Laxmi...(Lachchmi as it was pronounced)'

And when somebody teased her regarding that

and said that you should learn..

Her response was epic

"Baawli na hoon mein...gadanjoge, khapparbharne, daatwe, jaadwe..."

'I am not so mad as to learn now...then some excellent abuses'

She was a simple soul

So simple that she considered her village as the whole universe

Was there something beyond 'kharkhoda' her village?

No, just forbidden zone..

She didn't know much about what was outside,

but she did know a taste of the inside..

that is lost to people now!


By - Manan sheel (Manu of the poem)


-----------------------



“And what about her grip?

the way she clutched her grandchildren's arm

and dragged them back to house

in the fear that they may get lost

Manu hated it,

for how could he know that it was out of sheer love!

how could he know that this lady, his grandmother

had lost so much in her lifetime, that losing was

a nightmare to her!

She who lost her father's family to plague,

And then many of her children at birth..

how could she manage to lose Manu...!!!”


The Grip


Manu was playing in the upper part of the house, that

belonged to his ‘Fulad’ uncle and the family of ‘Fulad’ uncle.

Some ruined stairs connected this upper part of the house to the

lower house, that belonged to Manu’s ‘Raj’ uncle. Manu was

about to descend the stairs, when he saw the figure of his

paternal grandmother coming up through stairs. He couldn’t

return to his uncle’s house on the upper stairs, for the door had

been closed, by his uncle’s wife, for she had seen enough of

Manu’s naughtiness. There was nowhere to go. Manu’s

grandmother was approaching. Her face looked almost ghostly,

horrible, at one glance. It needed a look of love, a look laced with

love, to know what was hidden behind that ghostly face. It was a

sorrow, a kind of sorrow that was forgiven by the person who

contained it, and thus, transformed painfully, but successfully

into love, utter love. Manu was a sensitive boy, but being utterly

immature, he couldn’t comprehend his grandmother and was

afraid of her. Now, there was no place to escape for Manu. By the

time he could think of something, her grandmother, Lachmi, had

grabbed his arm by her nails. It was like a witch’s grip;
which Manu couldn’t escape. Manu was dragged downstairs, and

afterwards, the whole day, Manu made faces at her grandmother.


There was a reason for his grandmother, Lachmi, doing this. She

was afraid, in her soul, that Manu might get lost. Manu was the

child of ‘Lala’, her youngest child. Manu was dear to Lachmi,

more than any of her grandchildren. On Manu’s birth, she had

danced and sang, while beating the spoon frantically on a silver

plate. It was as if, when Manu was born, all her wishes had been

fulfilled, it felt like to her, that she had saved life from the

clutches of death, had been at last victorious against death. Oh! I

may now have to enter her soul to write further. My hands are

trembling, my soul is shedding tears in love, for a fever of love is

gripping me – the kind of fever that had gripped the soul of

Lachmi, for the larger part of her life. She had lost 9 of her

children at birth, by some unknown disease. Some were born,

and some equally loved, didn’t survive. One of the children died

between ‘Lala’ and ‘Munna’. It was like she was hoping that her

child will survive every time, and again it went out like a puff in

the air. From this, she came to know, imperceptibly, not in words,

but in her innermost core, the nature of love, the nature of hope,

the nature of madness, the nature of God. And thus, sung her

songs for the unseen one, that penetrated in every cell of her

body. Her capacity to love was ultimate. For she put her sorrow

into the colorful cloth parrots that she made for a living, and with

her art, magically, she reaped love from her sorrow.


Manu’s grandmother died when he was in 5th grade. He had cried

when they took her body to the cremation ground. Manu is now

28 years old. He has seen a lot of the so-called love of this world

– the sweet and selfish love. None of it is like the ocean of love

that was contained, in that grip, in that uneasy, witch’s grip.


© Manan sheel.