Add this

Friday 17 September 2021

OUR HOUSES ARE LIVING ENTITIES TOO - A TALE OF TWO HOUSES

   I have always believed that the houses we build for ourselves have anthropomorphic qualities, that they are as much part of our families as any other member, that they also share our feelings and emotions, that they reflect our own states of mind, that they too have their own destinies just as we do, destinies inextricably linked with ours. They are not mere brick and mortar, they are living, sentient beings like us, they go through good times and bad, and like us they also mature , age and die. And as time marches on inexorably, I am only getting more confirmed in my belief.

  Houses, dwellings, homes are an extension of their creators and of those who dwell- or dwelt- in them. Over time they absorb the vibrations- both positive and negative- that their owners radiate and in turn reflect them back. You must surely have noticed that there are happy houses and sad houses, houses that spontaneously give off cheer and well being while there are others that diffuse sorrow and misery. Ponder a bit more, and you will also notice - you cannot fail to- that these effusions invariably reflect the state of mind and emotional condition of the people who live in them. (They are very similar to our pets, dogs especially, who also reflect the personalities of their owners. Show me a dog and I'll be able to tell you what kind of person his master is ! ) To adapt Tolstoy's famous observation- all happy houses are happy in the same way, but all unhappy houses are unhappy in their own, different ways.

  I have observed this phenomenon playing out in my own extended family. Both my grandfathers built fine mansions in the prime of their lives. My paternal grandfather, Pandit Kalicharan Shukla who had a flourishing chain of bookshops in Calcutta, built a massive haveli in his village Husainganj in U.P. sometime in the early 1930's. In 1939 my maternal grandfather, Shri Roopnarain Shukla, a leading advocate of his time, built a mansion in Kanpur, U.P. Both the buildings are now nearing centurion status, but their destinies have been different, like that of two individuals, and it shows in their visage and condition.

  For its first forty years or so the Husainganj haveli was a cheerful beehive of activity. Its thirty odd rooms were always occupied by hordes of Shuklas- my grandfather's extended family, his five children and their progeny. The kitchen worked almost 24x7, especially when we as kids and teens landed up there for our holidays, and halwais were called in to make sweets, Akhand Ramayan and other religious " paths" were organised frequently. Neighbours, panchayat members, village officials were always dropping in to have a " darshan" of Pandit Kalicharan. There was no electricity those days but at nights the haveli glowed with a hundred lamps and sounds of laughter and music wafted through the air, almost as if the haveli itself was giving voice to its delight at playing host to so many of its family.

  Things started changing rapidly in the 60's and 70's. Both my grandfather and grandmother died in quick succession, their children retired to different towns, and my generation scattered all over the globe, busy with their own families. No one had the time or perhaps even the inclination to go back to a village with no power, piped water, flush toilets or cable TV. Holidays were now spent in hill stations, Goa or London. The haveli was locked up and more or less abandoned; with a joint family now running into dozens, everyone's responsibility became no one's responsibility. All of Pandit Kalicharan's children are also now gone; the haveli is a multiple orphan, crumbling and dilapidated, both its body and its heart broken by the inexorable passage of time.

                           

             

                             The desolate Husainganj haveli today

It's a ruin now, an old man who has lost the will to live, forsaken by those who once played in its lap, waiting for death, its denuded doors and windows like empty eye sockets, looking upon a world without hope. Once a happy home, it's now a hollow shell. Not unlike a lot of old men living alone in empty flats in uncaring cities, hoping against hope that their children will visit them someday, waiting for their destiny to play itself out.

 My maternal grandfather's mansion in Civil Lines, Kanpur, has been more fortunate. Although of almost similar vintage, it has aged much better. Roopnarain Shukla also had a large family- six children- all of whom grew up in this house. But, unlike the haveli, this home was never abandoned; my Mama/ Mami and cousins still live there- the fourth generation. And the building shows this- a still graceful 80 year old, full of vitality and activity, glowing in the evenings, rejuvenated from time to time with parties, poojas and " paths". I go there often, but do not have the feeling of sadness and a dull regret ( mixed with guilt) that Husainganj engenders. It's a happy house, looking to the future and not the past , aware that it is still cherished and loved, nurturing its residents, not one which has given up hope and is just waiting to die.

                     

                                     A happier house in Kanpur ( Photo by Dr. Anupam Shukla)

  Both houses mirror the fate that befalls many humans, the different paths that life takes- they are but reflections of the attitudes and emotions of those who live or lived in them. Where there is love and care there is happiness, where there is neglect and unconcern there is despondency. In many ways, our houses reflect the direction our own destinies have taken.

  Which is why I always envy my cousins in Kanpur- you have to be fortunate to have been born and brought up in the same house where your parents and grandparents also lived ( and perhaps bid you farewell), for their memories make it a consecrated and blessed place. Walls not only have ears, they also speak- of your family's past, of events witnessed, of the good times and the bad. They keep us together and remind us of family bonds which can otherwise unravel very quickly in these turbulent times. Families which stay together stick together. And our houses reflect all this, make it possible- their bricks are the DNA, the building blocks of families.

  And I sometimes wonder what fate awaits the house I built in Mashobra in 2007, which Neerja has lovingly named " Shinay" ( a state of quietude, meditation and inner peace.) Since then we have had more than our fair share of adversity and misfortune which kept us in exile in Delhi for a long time. But Shinay has provided us a safe harbour, a place we continue to return to for solace and to heal our souls.


                                                        The author's house, SHINAY.

                                                                                                                                                                   But the march of time will take its toll, and I occasionally wonder: will Shinay, in the years to come, continue to greet the morning sun with the joyous promise of another day, will the birds continue to sing in the trees that surround it, will the flowers still bloom with that little extra tint of colour and whiff of fragrance ? Maybe it's better that I don't know what awaits in the womb of fate. For in time the red brick walls of Shinay will tell their own story, like all houses do.

9 comments:

  1. One can't help but feel melancholic and go back in time ...avay...I think you've managed to touch the hearts of many of us who've felt similar emotions but never voiced them....
    Along with our own ancestral abodes...I've felt this intense longing to visualize the places in their glory when I visit historical buildings and forts..temples etc...you're right...each has a story to tell...
    Beautifully penned down....

    ReplyDelete
  2. Wow. To Vinay Shinay looks like a heavenly abode! Sadly, nothing lasts.

    ReplyDelete
  3. After careful I got reminder about Sonnet 65 -Shakespeare
    Sonnet 65: Since brass, nor stone, nor earth, nor boundless sea

    BY WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

    Since brass, nor stone, nor earth, nor boundless sea

    But sad mortality o’er-sways their power,

    How with this rage shall beauty hold a plea,

    Whose action is no stronger than a flower?

    O, how shall summer’s honey breath hold out

    Against the wrackful siege of batt’ring days,

    When rocks impregnable are not so stout,

    Nor gates of steel so strong, but time decays?

    O fearful meditation! where, alack,

    Shall time’s best jewel from time’s chest lie hid?

    Or what strong hand can hold his swift foot back?

    Or who his spoil of beauty can forbid?

       O, none, unless this miracle have might,

       That in black ink my love may still shine bright.

    Finally everyone n everything has to go but how,why and when shall always haunt us.
    Emotional outpouring in your own creative style. Good read!

    ReplyDelete
  4. A stern older brother's praise, typically telegraphic, eclipses most others. However, 'lasting'is built-in obsolescence, even through the apparent eternity of the boundless Universe. And grief is its pound of flesh.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Having said which, a couple of other things:
    - outwardly, the haveli looks in better shape than many in our older cities.
    - Nothing lasts yes; but longevity depends on what we do - to one another; to homes and schools and colleges and universities and monuments and history.
    - Oxford and Cambridge are eight hundred plus years old. Eton too similarly. And Harrow and Rugby younger, but only by a bit - about 2 centuries. Harvard too is four hundred plus. And even among our own - St. Paul's Darjeeling celebrates two centuries in less than two years from now. Bishop Cotton Shimla, a hundred and sixty two already. Sanawar, La 'Marts'; Tara Hall and the other Loretos, Presidency College now university, and several more, are all snapping at the heels of two centuries. I mention it because they are examples of how nurturing makes a difference. I mention it because there's nothing to stop you and your family from restoring the haveli. Transforming it - as hotel or school or college or Heritage headquarters or something. All it takes is money - for a wonderful and worthy cause. And there might be again, lights and laughter and sound of songs.

    ReplyDelete
  6. My only observation concerns your ability to tell the personality of the dog's owner. My fourteen year old dog is an arthritic fat old fart which I decidedly am not.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hahaha. It's not the physical condition of the master which the dog mirrors but the mental condition and demeanour. It's generally accurate but may not apply to all farts !😁

      Delete
  7. I often cite this as an example of how times have changed: The house in Nagpur, where I was born, had a metal arch across the gate embossed with the words "Sushwagatham", or Welcome, in Hindi..(or was it Marathi?).
    A few years ago, I passed by the place, which has obviously changed a lot over the past half a century. But the arch remains. But the welcome engraved across it has been replaced by three new words: Beware of Dogs.

    ReplyDelete
  8. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete