Sunday, February 14, 2021

 

mother & Cricket in times of Pongal

Before cricket became business and is now played year round, till about 80s Test matches  used to be played between countries once in four or five years. Test matches were always a five day affair.Foreign teams came to India, usually just after the monsoon as it was not conducive for white skin to tolerate summer or so it was thought. 

For Madras generally during Pongal holidays the cricket Test took place. In 1966-67 West Indies cricket team came visiting India under the captaincy of Sir Garfield Sobers one of the greatest all rounders the cricket world had ever produced. India was captained by the stylish Nawab of Pataudi. The Madras Test match was played full five days ending in a draw.

 

It was a big surprise when my father got me and my brother Rs.15 season gallery ticket. What was more exciting to a teenager than watching the match on all days from stands with screaming fans. I don’t remember having slept all those days. Both of us used to get up by 4 in the morning and get ready by 5 am and pick up the lunch bag and start running for about 3 kms from our home to the T.Nagar bus terminus. A bus no.13 packed to the brim will start by 6 am and reach the venue in an hour with the whole lot of people in the bus discussing various finer aspects of the game. After a few hours wait at the gates in a serpentine restless crowd the gates will be opened by 9 and then it was utter chaos. The crowd a few thousands will start running towards the stands to get the best view. Once you climb and sit on those dangerous tilted planks tied to casuarina poles there was no way you could get down till the end of the day. It was estimated that about 50 thousands are so nonstop screaming spectators were present on all days. We used to have separate score cards and note down carefully every run scored and ball bowled. I can’t even believe for the life of me as to how I had so much patience and interest. I used to memorise the batsmen line up on both sides and their previous innings at Madras and so on. That time, I vividly remember India winning the toss n batting with opener Farooq Engineer n Dileep Sardesai. The former was electric scoring almost every ball esp his dancing down the wicket strokes sth like 93 or so before lunch while the latter with just 13 was holding fort at the other end. The fearsome Wess Hall n Griffith were sending down bouncers n beamers to dislodge the intemperate batsmen with spinner Gibbs doing all his best to tease the dead pitch to life. 

It was Bishen Bedi's debut n  perhaps Chandu Borde's last series. Borde scored a beautiful century.

For the Windies it was the batting of stylish short Rohan Khannaiah's 61 r so in the first innings who always fell down while hitting a pull shot. The icing was Sobers hitting outstanding strokes all round the wicket at will. He scored 95 in the first innings and in his second  innings along with Griffith he stood like a colossus between India and victory, scoring 70 odd runs. Ajit Wadeker probably his first series scored an attractive 60 or so in the second innings.

 

Of course there were other interesting sidelights. There was lots of gossip floating around, some of them turned out to be true. For instance about the actress Sharmila Tagore and the Nawab which did later result in the marriage. But there was also gossip in the stands and shouting about a certain actress linked to the famous West Indian all rounder. In fact on the very first day a certain newspaper carried a big ad of a particular brand of soap with the particular actress, very suggestively. The spectators had brought the paper and kept shouting at the cricketer on the ground showing the ad. It was so embarrassing after some time the man changed his fielding position and never fielded on our side of the ground!

 

However I almost missed another hero behind the scene. Every day when I and my brother had to leave by the first bus @six o'clock to the stadium my mother, god alone knows when she used to get up, cooked and prepared rice three varieties n packed in leaves separately for both so we don't fight about it. As it was festival she did not want us to miss the good food. She did not once complain about it. Wasn’t she tired over worked and wanted us to be more responsible. Nothing entered our heads except our own world and interests which we spun around ourselves like a cocoon and lived in it. It took me years( as a parent naturally) to suddenly realise how much she gave(up) for her kids and how much we took mother for granted. Probably it was the story of every parent who raised a family with untold sacrifices without any expectation. I often narrate these episodes to my two kids to make them understand and so that they would be sensitive to people around them and not take them for granted. But they too are in their own cocoons. Perhaps much later they will also repeat a similar episode to their kids or better still, blog about it!

 

Friday, February 12, 2021

 

*A brief history of balm oil*

Balm oil the ultimate oil of all citizens of Bharat more so of Tamil Nadu in the last four decades has phenomenal history of rise to dizzying heights and no fall. So it's important for us to examine it's genesis n it's historic march across the length n breath of the sub continent.

In the early 80s due to sudden shortage of cooking oil in India, not that it was aplenty earlier but the govt babus finally woke up to the fact of it's shortage and more due to the potential gold mine this would provide decided to import Palm oil from Malaysia that was producing it in excess n had not much use of it.

Now when ship loads of P oil landed the entire well oiled  supply chain went gung ho and as expected contributed its own versions to the mother oil so as to make it probably more agreeable to the desi palate. So when the desi customers finally consumed it there was not much palm in it as the oil was made indigenous to their satisfaction. To elaborate further if a consumer bought 1 litre of P oil and sent it to a good lab for test it probably will have a variety of desi oils so as to make it more agreeable to the local consumer. Now this edible swadeshi concoction having undergone a thorough makeover after its arrival at Bharat naturally acquired a more agreeable desi name ie. Balm oil, the oil for all seasons.

 

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

under the circumstances...........


There are cases and cases- some of them  are reported  in journals and some are not. Of these, some do trouble the mind even if as a professionals we tend to read reports  mechanically and with an academically eye, to assess their value as precedents. Here is one such case that drew our attention. It is very troublesome for many reasons as we try and discuss the facts and then their implications.
The case unfolds in a very gruesome fashion. [(2019) 2 SCC (Cri) 300: (2019) 4 SCC 522 Digamber Vaishnav  & anr Vs State of Chattisgarh] Five women lie dead in their home in different rooms around 4 am, one morning.  It seems to be a very clear case of homicide as there are injury marks on many parts of the bodies.  The police are informed and investigation takes place the same day with the usual process of collecting evidence begun.  The police find some strands of hair clutched in the hands of one of the deceased; a blood stained shirt later said to belong to one of the accused; some clods of soil, blood stained  and plain and a woolen shawl. They arrest the accused after collecting and correlating the evidence. They find on the accused, some suspicious cash, a shirt worn by one of the accused that had two buttons missing, corresponding to those  that have been recovered from the place of occurrence.  Later,  finger prints of one of the accused corresponds to those found on a bottle of liquor found at the scene of the crime. The trial court after elaborate trial convicted and sentenced the accused to death under S. 302, 394 & 34 IPC. The High Court confirmed the same.
The Supreme Court, however, after going through the entire evidence finds many flaws, one of which is that the only witness was a child, whose statement was not corroborated. They find that it was not safe to rely upon this witness’s evidence as there were several inconsistencies in her statement.  As the case solely rested on circumstantial evidence it was held necessary that the evidence should be cogent and an unbreakable chain of events leading to the guilt of the accused should be established.  Unfortunately, it was found that the human hair was not a match with that of the accused; similarly the shirt was not identified properly to be that of the accused; the motor cycle seized did not match that of the accused. Many such inconsistencies including non examination of a crucial witness create a doubt in the mind of the court that the prosecution had not proved the case beyond reasonable doubt. Last but not the least , it is found that the last seen theory advanced by the prosecution, i.e. the accused were last seen with the the deceased is also held to be insufficiently proved. Hence the Court acquitted the accused.
Now aside from  all the technical niceties and the lack of proof beyond reasonable doubt one aspect of the case is highly disturbing: the manner in which many serious crimes are investigated by the investigating agencies.  Many a case falls because of poor investigation and insufficient evidence, more than the effort of the defense to effectively attack the prosecution case.  Now here is a case where five people have been murdered in a gruesome manner inside their home. Who committed the crime? The question remains open and the fact that such ruthless murderers are still walking free in society to people’s utter terror.  
So shouldn’t the Court direct the investigation agency to investigate such cases afresh and find out the murderers instead of mechanically acquitting them and closing the case? It is not something new, as  if we remember right, in one case the Madras High Court has done so, ordering further investigation on acquittal of the accused.

Friday, May 18, 2012


All’s fair in Cosm(et)ic world!
When I saw my daughter rubbing some solution on her hands  as she was leaving for her college I asked her out of curiosity as to what it was. She looked a bit annoyed and replied that it was a ‘hand’ cream.  This is one of the numerous applications I find in my daughters dressing table. I just happen to think about nearly half a century back when I grew with a fare share of sisters and brothers. We shared a small glass bottle of coconut oil rationed between us by the eldest sister for application to the head every day after bath.  The weekly luxury or torture whichever way you put it was the oil bath which most of the south Indian households will be familiar with. Come Sunday we would apply gingerly oil all over the body. Thereafter the hair was washed with a concoction of soap nut mixed  with other natural ingredients that gave your hair and skin a lovely sheen. People bought these ingredients from the provision stores and took the effort to mix them and keep them for weekly use. Of course soap nut powder irritated the eyes to no end thus causing redness but that was considered to be the hall mark of a good product and a good bath! On that day the entire house smelt of these natural products.
Then perhaps in 1960s if I remember right came smelly hair oils in different colours and aromas. Lavender, jasmine, etc. that spread a heady scent when people applied it and walked around.  For women there was just a snow called ‘Afgan’ for whatever reason that was applied to the face  & Remy talc. Then a sort of ad revolution started with one Mr. Farookh Engineer and who claimed to apply certain hair cream, which perhaps didn’t turn a single hair on his head as he faced the fearsome Wes Hall and Charlie Griffith  and nonchalantly dispatched their bouncers and beamers  to the ropes sending us in the galleries to a frenzy! This gentleman soon picked a beautiful bride perhaps due to the enduring  cream and settled down in the Down under.  
 Naturally we were dying to buy the stuff not just to improve our cricketing skills but more to attract a pretty lass. But due to the creams prohibitive cost only my eldest sibling bought it with his first salary. I secretly tried it for getting the ‘engineer’ effect and got belted instead by my   brother.  That was the last I had anything to do with dreams of creams & brunettes! 
                    



Then in late 70s came hand me downs in the form of shampoos and sprays that declared to the world that you had NRI siblings! In the 80s there was a shampoo revolution that ushered in one rupee sachets that promised to turn your hair into pure velvet!  The Rs.1 sachette completely killed the hand made  soap nut powder  and other local stuff. In one stroke it brought about a social revolution which none of the government programmes could do in 67 years. The slum dwellers and the 
rich and famous were using the same product  to enhance their hair into pure velvet . The manufacturer who toiled for this social service became a multi millionaire and toast of the town. Of course the water bodies and land have been so ‘shampooed’ that perhaps it will take another millennium to clean it up, if one is serious about it..
Came marriage. Me and my better half, as we were avowed critics of consumerism took a vow not to use artificial and smelly cosmetics. Then came two cute daughters.                                              

As they grew up in the 90s so did electronic and cosmetic business .  One company claimed, that their application made you turn like snow white of seven dwarfs fame! Their biggest market was perhaps Tamilnadu. Thus a subtle racist message that white is the only acceptable colour which was subtle earlier, is now become more sophisticated and deeply embedded into the psyche of entire South Indian men & women.  People here seriously believe that a few months of application of these ghastly cosmetics would turn them into Cinderellas!  Women of better complexion command better matrimonial market and that means fewer dowries! Soon other companies picked up the cue and improved their strategy and slogan. ‘Lovely’ became ‘glow’ then to ‘healthy’ finally it became ‘herbal’. Soaps were replaced by ‘wash’. Hand wash, face wash, hair wash then room & car fresheners and so on. It is no more just a shampoo for your hair. You are advised to use hair thinners that made your hair hang like straws from a scarecrow. It is not enough if you brush your teeth with mere paste but should rinse it in a solution. The process promised to turn your teeth into a torch light when you smiled! Now the clever of market gurus have made these lotions smell like lime, orange, vanilla, etc. so much so when I enter the wash room I feel as if I have entered a juice shop or ice cream parlour!



                          
I was thinking that the ad tsars could think more novel ways to better their already sky rocketing sales capitalizing on already insecure consumers. They should perhaps tap the region specific biases by introducing region specific  aroma sprays  Which would have the best endorsements. For eg. In the South, curd rice, masal dosa, bisibela, biryani, sprays  that the Dravidian parties would themselves endorse; in the North , malai kofta, panneer butter masala , dhal makhni , tandoori chicken sprays that the Badals & Yadavs would swear by; in the East sandesh, mishti dahi, fish perfumes that didi herself would use and In the west dhoklas, vadapav perfumes  which Thackerys  would embrace, and so on and so forth. Then the manufacturers  can claim that their intentions are not selfish but purely patriotic!