Raagi seeds from the loft
“Where are all the Golu Park dolls?”, I asked my
mom over the quiet lunch. “enda kanna. It
must be on the loft”, she looked at me curiously. Without waiting for my reply
she continued “Do you want me to pack that so you can take it Singapore? “. That
was a lovely gesture I thought. She
understood that I missed Golu and I might be interested to have them. Only she
could understand me without much words. “Nothing ma, just wanted to see them”
( pic courtesy : Google )
After lunch I managed to get on the big stool made
specially to access loft, and like a director of a movie, she guided me to the
location among boxes of stuff. Golu is
a 9-day festival where we adorn the home with beautiful mud idols of god. Park
is basically a miniature village usually set up around Golu on sand. Its
decorated with plastic houses, trees, villages, trains etc. “ Paathu kanna there
is so much dust, why don’t you wear a kerchief mask, you are allergic to dust “
she raised her usual concern.
There it was, my beautiful memories in a dusty
little carton box. I dusted it off and opened it right there sitting on top of
the stool. “Kizhey ukandhu paaka kudaadha, why don’t you come down kanna, you
are sweating so much, fan podatuma?” I replied “hmm” as I opened the box. Like the aroma of freshly brewed coffee, the
nostalgia hit me. I saw all sorts of toys I loved and adored in my Golu Park.
The houses, the vegetable selling lady, the sour grape fox, Palm trees, small
temple which I usually put on a makeshift mount, the trucks, the train, cars
and other toys that are too damaged to make sense of.
When I was a child, Golu was my favorite festival,
I loved it better than Deepavali. I usually make a zoo, and a village around a
train track, one small mount with temple and stairs for village people to
climb, a pond with ducks and fishes and loads of sprouts from raagi seeds. Raagi
plants looks like tender Korean grass, with tinge of yellow on bottom. I would
set up the miniature village nicely, plant seeds and water it overnight. Every
morning when I wake up, I walk right to the Golu park to see how much the seeds
have grown. “You got to wait a day or two for it sprout kanna” my mom would
say. I would pout with pretentious sad face and look at her as if she has to do
something to make them grow immediately. She would smile and say “see you have
to water it regularly kanna, now you go to school and by the evening we would
see, but ne samatha erundha dhaa valarum (be a good boy and it shall grow)”. And when they grew the village would come
alive beautifully. I would literally
jump up in joy, as if my mom and I created a village of our own.
I sat there for good 10 minutes. In the corner of
my eye, I could see my mom, with both hands on the hip with her protective
pose. I put back things carefully as they were and came down. Then we went on
to do packing things as that was my last day of the deepavali trip. “Why don’t you rest for a while, can I cook
your favorite tomato curry and chapathi? You can have it on your way back or
tomorrow for breakfast? “She went on to do the cooking.
“Do you like to have some water? “the flight
attended shook me back to reality “ errr… sorry? “She repeated her question and
I managed to nod. I looked around and saw most passengers dozed off, and except
for the lights from some of the monitors the aircraft was dark. There I was flying thousand miles away from home
to my second home. Far from faded dolls
and my aged mom, both still looked beautiful and deserved more care than they
have now. Perhaps my raagi seeds would
sprout tomorrow and perhaps my mom and I would create a village of our own.
Comments
Thank you for always supporting, I know we have a solidarity when it comes to Golu
@Swaram
Lovely to see your words, :) hope all is well :) always inspired by your posts too
@Myworld
Thanks a lot , yes I do have cousins who celebrate Bommala Koluvu
@Preeti Shenoy
Your book review is pending :) I loved the "Its all in the planets" would write it sometime :)