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Mirage (standard:romance, 3827 words) | |||
Author: Shamoil Ahmad | Added: Feb 06 2012 | Views/Reads: 3128/1943 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
This is story of cultural gap...gap between Lungi [ a strip of cloth tucked round the waist ] and Cheroot . | |||
Mirage Shamoil Ahmad Badruddin Jilani was sad after he returned from the burial of Lady Atafa Hussain. Suddenly, it occurred to him that death was the eternal truth. His contemporaries were leaving one by one. First, it was Justice Imam Asar who died, then Ahmad Ali and now it was the turn of Lady Atafa Hussain to break the shackles of this mundane world to proceed on. Jilani was worried—did not know when his own soul would start out on a new journey? He did not want to die in the colony. He wanted his death to come when he was in the peaceful backyard of his own birth place. But roads leading to that were hazy. With the passage of time thorny bushes had sprung up on its way. Jilani was a retired IAS officer. He had retired almost a year ago from the post of Commissioner. He was keen to spend the rest of his life at his birth place, but to Madam Jilani the place was steeped in conservatism. As a matter of fact, his father was a school teacher and Madam came from IAS background. She wanted to have her house built only in the IAS Colony. Jilani always found the colony inhospitable. Everybody seemed closeted in his own hamlet. He was particularly peeved at the requirement of having to contact over phone if ever one wanted to meet someone. No one interacted freely. That openness of the home town was simply missing here. It was not possible to just slam a fist on someone and say,” “You buddy....? Have been looking for you since morning....?” “Oh hell Jilani...? When the hell did you come...?” Who was there in the colony who could have addressed him thus and Jilani could have slammed him on his back...? People would shake their hands, not their heart. One never felt the feelings of neighbourliness here, no sense of camaraderie that one felt in a well-knit locality...that willingness to share the grief and happiness of one another...this sentiment was simply missing in the colony. He felt people here were leading the life of alien settlers. To him the ladies of the colony too appeared to be identical in many ways. They all seemed to have got that conical, rotund faces and egg-like lips...the whole day they would keep knitting sweater and talk sex. Jilani felt greatly incensed at their futile attempts to speak in English. While pronouncing English words their lips would acquire circular shape. In human relations hierarchy is unquestionably settled. The most potent member of this hierarchy is the father. The role of father is at times villainous too. When Jilani qualified for IAS, there was much excitement and buzz in the community. Father's status rose skyward. My son is an IAS...my son...! His ego, his position in the hierarchy went up by several notches. But there was another son Iftikhar Jilani. Father never alluded to him in his conversations. Naming him bruised his ego. Iftikhar could not pursue his studies. He ran a ration shop and to add to father's embarrassment he married the daughter of an Ansari. There was much hue and cry and chest beating in the family circles. Sayyad's son entangled with Ansari's daughter! Hearts shrank. The only consolation was that a girl was brought in from the Ansaris, not given from the Sayyads. But the stigma stood and such things did not wash even though Jilani provided some balm. He secured special position in all examinations. When he qualified in the IAS, his father seemed to have gone air-borne. The teacher father had put in his own efforts along with the efforts of the disciple son. He had seen the spark in the eyes of the boy. He only needed to get necessary fillip. He gave maximum time to him, telling him to read this, read that...especially the editorial columns of newspapers...must read them, son....gain mastery over ‘current affairs'...mug up the definitions, learn the word-usages. Jilani was obedient to the last syllable of the word. He always complied with orders, even then there was no sparing of rods for him from Master Khalil the teacher tough. His cane was famous. One wrong pronunciation, cane ready to fly like a whip...stupid, nincompoop, bloody ass...can't pronounce properly. One who survived this ordeal came out glittering like gold. The dung-headed Iftikhar could not take it. He would doze off while at it and if the cane did its work, he would shriek and shout. Even when it came to getting into the trap of love, he had to end up in the family of an Ansari. Fathers usually forget that sons have a heart too and fathers' ego would like to keep it under their own control. Jilani too had a heart. When he had just cleared his 10th class, his heart had begun to throb at the sight of Husnabano. Red hot lips...rosy face...downcast eyes. Jilani would secretly watch this girl from Ustani household. Hayat has espied him doing this. Hayat was the son of Kallo Maulvi. He gave him some hints on how to meet. “Meet her on Id.” “On Id?” “Yes! And demand a kerchief.” Husnabano gave him a kerchief soaked in essence. In the corner of the kerchief two letters of his name were embroidered. They were B and J...and when he observed minutely, he found H...meaning Click here to read the rest of this story (252 more lines)
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