BONDS WITH KODUNGALLORE
Having spent all my childhood and most part of teenage / adult life in Bombay, one generally is not expected to have very close bonding or understanding of one’s native place. In my case, Kerala and more specifically, the historic coastal town of Kodungallore, in Trichur district. On the banks of river Periyar, this town, off the Malabar coast, was also an ancient port. Legend has it that this is where the Apostle St Thomas first landed in 100 CE, in India, and then went onwards to Goa to spread Christianity.
As per Muslims, the oldest Mosque (still seen)
was built here around 600 CE with direct connections to Mecca! The town was, at
various times, in the hands of Portuguese and the Dutch and later, off course,
part of British colonial India, and the port handled extensive trade with the
Mediterranean nations and the Roman empires, in addition to Indian west coast.
Currently, in my era, it is the famous Kodungallore
Bhagavati (Mahakali or Durga) temple that the town is famous for. Also,
for the Temple’s Bharani festival.
Now, as was the tradition
with most Malayali and Tamil families who lived in Bombay, there is this annual
or bi annual visit to the native place or rather to grandparents’ home. This
was an event one waited and longed for. The long train ride of almost three days,
in the sixties or early seventies, was filled with fun, reading, eating and alighting
at stations. The sounds and smells of the railways and its stations and the
constant sound of vendors are all etched in memory. By the time we reached, we looked likes miners form a
coal mine, as those days the engines used coal as fuel.
My mom, sister and me would have done this
about 3 to 4 times during school days. And those visits established strong bonds
with relatives including cousins’ brothers and sisters and Kodungallore. My mom
had 10 siblings, so a total of 11 of them. Grandmother was the head and lived
alone but with a housemaid, in the Tharavad house in Kodungallore. Being part of a
matriarchal society, we had closer affinity to moms’ parents, cousins, and
relatives than that of dads. My father’s home town was also the same and paternal
grandmother and a sister lived in their tharavad house. Inside this compound of
land and house was also was a Shiva temple.
Hanse we were vegetarians and part of my first
name comes from the deity there.
During these visits some of some of my aunts
and uncles with their families would also join at grandma’s house. Hanse there
would be at least about 3 to 4 other cousins to play with.
The days spent there was
filled with joy. Lots to eat, though simple food, lots of places to play. Lots
of trees of coconut, mangoes, jackfruit, cashew, custard apple, Guava, papaya,
and off course banana along with some veggies, curry leaves, beetle leaves
etc. On several days it rained cats and dogs which kept us indoors but the
charm of the rain, the poodles, the green rich vegetation compensated.
We had the swings tied to
the tree branches, the climbing of the trees, the plucking of mangoes, various
improvised outdoor games that kept us busy. Cricket too was played. A coconut
tree part that is at the top with the
leaves and fruit, often dries and falls. This had a curvature both laterally
and across but was manageable to be converted in to a bat with handle. A rubber
ball was managed and sticks served as stumps. Its was mostly underhand bowing.
It was fun. Indoors games like cards, carrom and ludo kept us kids occupied
during rains or late evenings.
Occasional loss of power or
very low voltage in the late evenings, particularly during rains, added to
awesome experience
We all slept on the beds
laid out on the floor in the vast central living room. Occasionally we were
allowed to sleep in one of the bed rooms. Early morning rituals included using
a stick with paste or charcoal powder to clean the teeth which is done at the
rear courtyard. Tongue cleaned using the coconut leaf rib. All bio friendly. The challenge was
management of nature’s call. Number one was manageable, behind tress anywhere
but number two was an ask! The toilet was located several meters away, in one
of the corners of the land. No piped water so you carry a lota. Urgency meant
that the lots is absent and the you run after finishing all the way to the well
or pond. Imagine doing this at night with no light nearby!! I recall the numerous
ghosts and demons who chased me there on my return! Maybe it made me get rid of
the fear of darkness.
There was a bath room next to a well from
which water had to be drawn. Another option was to go the pond at one end, swim
and have a dip in it along with water splashing et all. Normally with an adult or two being present.
This ritual was repeated in the evening before 6 pm. After the evening bath we
all will assemble in the prayer area(with photos of gods and goddesses and a
large brass lamp). Granny will light the lamp and we all would recite prayers.
Often, we would visit the centre
of the town, a 15-minute walk from the Tharavad house. This is where the temple
is also located. The temple complex called Kavu has the main
structure of traditional Kerala temple architecture, build mainly
of wood tiled roof and stone floor, is at the centre of a vast expense of sandy
land and scattered with banyan trees. A beautiful place to pray and relax. Inside
the temple and near the goodness its serene and awesome. One does feel closer
to god. I have often gone there over the years and loved every visit. One of
the offerings the devotees make, apart from the several pujas, is the Vedi
vazyvadu, which is a bomb / explosion, mostly sound, and controlled within a
small cast iron cylinder, filled with needed chemicals, and set off by the guy
who mans it. He sets off as many vedis as you have offered. The bang could be
heard regularly near the temple. For kids that was a curious and exciting
event. Then for us kids the high point was the prasadam, a mixture of puffed
rice, coconut shavings, jaggery, edible flower petals and slices of banana all
served on a small banana leaf after puja. Occasionally, one of the uncles or
aunts would take us kids to the shops adjoining the temple.
Memories of some people also
comes to mind. The peanut wala for one, who used to come in the evening and if
one of the uncle or aunts or granny was a little indulgent, we would get a cone
of the peanut. Then the Vaidya who would come if one us fell sick. The yard cleaning
lady and general help Paru whose toothless smile lingers. The general store
owner, I think his name was Ousep. Either he was the main one a little walk
from the gate of the house or the smaller one who set shop next to rear end of
our land from whom emergency supplies could be had by shouting across the kuccha
fence. The human scavenger guy was nicknamed Pata karan Vatru! Then the guy who
comes to de husk the coconut after plucking. The watering guy with his motor
pump and equipment to water all the plants, not daily but, I think once in few months
when there is no rain. He would dig temporary canales that magically turned,
twisted. opened and closed under his skilful management to let water flow
adequately to each plant and tree.
Then there were the cows, goats,
hens. Occasional sightings of a snake and the mating calls of frogs during
rains. We thus had nature in all its glory and magic.
Breakfast lunch and dinner
was in the dining area next to the kitchen. The kitchen used firewood those
days and earthen pots occasionally. That made the food more delicious. The dining
area had a long wooden dining table with benches for seating. All us kids and the
elder uncles if any would have the meal first. Lovingly served by the house
keeper. If we had Kanji for dinner then we used Jackfruit leaf deftly made into
a cone and used as a spoon.
Some of us would be taken to
visit relatives. My father’s house (remember staying there too for a day or so
with equally loving people and similar experiences), Granny sisters and
brothers house are the ones that come to mind. On few occasions we had to cross
the river Perirar on a barge.
The last few days was often
filled with sadness and the final goodbye reducing us to tears.
These visits became the
glue, the bond with loved ones (and believe me the whole Anat family was close
knit and full of love and fun) and nature a world far removed from Bombay. Had visited
the town few times during my mid-life, the temple, and relatives. The tharavad
house was long gone. But these we nowhere as fulfilling as the childhood
visits.
Very nostalgic. Took a trip to the memory lane... with very similar childhood memories . Keep writing..
ReplyDeletethanks
ReplyDeleteA perfect story teller. I love to read the way you narate it. Looking forward for more.
ReplyDeleteGreat Prasad.Paru , Ouseph &Pattakkaran Vatru. Karoor Shiva shrine. Redolent memories.
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