Add this

Friday, 7 June 2024

LAST RIGHTS

 

LAST RIGHTS


    Notwithstanding the hundreds of babies who die every year in hospitals of the Delhi, Gorakhpur and Farrukhabad variety, rates of both infant and maternal mortality have been consistently declining. One of the main reasons for this happy development is the govt's push for Institutional Deliveries as against the age-old practice of home deliveries, presided over by midwives. The former, by ensuring better hygiene and medical care, has led to improved survival rates for both, mother and child. Strangely, however, the opposite appears to be happening for older people! More people are nowadays dying in hospitals than at home, at least in urban areas. "Institutional deaths" anecdotally outnumber "home deaths". (Try to recollect how many people you know who have died at home in the last few years- I can  think of only one). There are many reasons for this but we will not go into them as that is not the subject of this piece. But what it has done is left me with a insurmountable problem and much to worry about (apart from the fact that I have to file my Income Tax Return soon!)
    At a sprightly 73 I am uncomfortably conscious of the fact that I have crossed the average life expectancy age in India by a margin better than the NDA's majority, and may not live to see either Rahul Gandhi or Arvind Kejriwal become Prime Minister of India. As things stand today that may require the said average to go up to about 90 or perhaps require even a second rebirth. But you can't fight with averages, and since I am  about as average a Joe as any you'll come across in a week of Sundays, its time for me to start thinking about the grand exit and the family pension for the long suffering wife. And that's where the problem arises.
  You see, I don't want to be told Bon Voyage or Happy Landing (or whatever they say in Sanskrit these days) in a hospital, attached to more pipes and tubes than a vat in a distillery, with a ventilator pumping air into me as if I was an old, retreaded tyre with a dozen punctures. It is my fervent wish to board Yamdoot's busy shuttle service (the last mile connectivity) from my home, surrounded by the few family and friends whom I have not yet managed to annoy, gazing wistfully at the " Aam Aadmi" cap I had promised to wear when Mr. Kejriwal became Prime Minister. Since that doesn't appear likely anytime soon, I may as well not hold my breath, if you see what I mean. I have written all this in my living will for my sons to read and carry out. However, since they are products of Bishop Cotton School Shimla, I can't depend on their ability to decipher words with more than two syllables, hence this public statement.
    But I digress, as usual, from the main point, which is this: Who will issue my Death Certificate if I cop it at home? I am told that only a govt. doctor or a hospital can issue a DC. Now, I can hardly hope that a sarkari doctor will deign to come to my house in Puranikoti village when given the good news of my departure, considering that they rarely go to even their places of posting! Please press the Save button on this problem, dear reader, while I move on to the next one.
    The second, even bigger problem for me is this: I am a non-practicing Hindu (i.e. not a gau rakshak or a bhakt) but do not wish to be cremated at Benaras or Haridwar, for the simple reason that I do not want half of my torso floating around in  polka dot Jockeys till I land up at the Ganga barrage in Kanpur- though, I must confess, since I belong to Kanpur this will be my final "ghar wapasi" of sorts. There is also that little problem of getting caught in a ten kilometre traffic jam on the way to Haridwar, or of bumping into a sulking Mr. Modi in Benaras and being mistaken for a potential NDA ally.
    There are other reasons too for avoiding the barbeque and being toasted by my colleagues and neighbours. I don't wish to be converted to CO2 or methane or whatever toxic gas ex-bureaucrats are composed of, and burn another hole in the ozone layer. I'd much rather become top soil and end up as a begonia or a daisy and, if my luck holds out, perhaps be plucked by a pretty young girl some day! My desire, therefore, is to be buried- and that too on my own land in Puranikoti village, and not in a cemetery which is probably an encroachment on forest land. (Having served for almost four years in the Forest department, I certainly cannot become a party to this, you will agree). It took me two years of bending and genuflecting to obtain permission from the govt. to buy this land, and another three years of scraping and begging to build the house on it, so I don't intend giving it up so easily. I fully intend to hang around there- as a daisy, if you will but more likely as a cactus shrub- to further ensure that the Deputy Commissioner Shimla does not resume the land on the grounds that , since I don't have an Aadhar number, I never existed officially. But the problem of that damn Death Certificate remains, now worse confounded. You see, one also needs a certificate from a crematorium or burial ground authority that the body has been properly disposed off ! Without this the police are likely to dig me out again, register an FIR against me and then I'll become case property. And we all know what happens to case property in police stations- it gets buggered-sorry, burgled!
    Maybe I should just convert to Jainism or Buddhism, climb into that hole in the ground I had dug up for a rainwater harvesting tank, and take "samadhi". Or, better still, I can claim that my birth was not biological and that therefore no Death Certificate is needed. After all, we do have a precedent for this at 7, Jan Kalyan Marg, New Delhi, and we all know that obsession is nine tenths of the law, don't we? That should solve all my problems. Or maybe I should just listen to the Beatles and Let It Be. But there's reason to worry here too: what if my sons decide to be like the chap who, having just lost his wife and being asked whether they should bury, cremate or embalm her, shouted: " Don't take any chances- do all three!" That would be too much of a good thing.
     

14 comments:

  1. I've repeatedly petitioned the state and central governments to create secular cemeteries in urban areas where irreligion is on the ascent.

    I live in a uber-hip part of a cosmopolitan city in India where irreligion is high but with no option of getting one's mortal remains interred in a secular burial ground, corpses of this irreverent breed are carted off to traditional burning ghats, electric crematoriums or burial grounds where religion plays the dominant role much to the horror of surviving seculars who attend the last rites knowing how adamantly opposed to religious rituals the person who passed away was and he, she, it - you know these woke pronouns - would be horrified to see what's being done to the cadaver provided consciousness is living stuff that survives the death of the body, and is not merely epiphenomenon nor emergence from insentient materials - both shocking paradoxes pedalled by the testtube, telescope and microscope wielding mobs! - before it enters quiescence, equilibrium, in its sentient spacetime dimension never to regroup into the old personality, or reborn, or punished by fire and scalding water, or have one's incorporeal being gnawed by astral rodents, or rewarded by smiling angels overseeing the gratification of sensual pleasures unfulfilled in earthy life - all guided by mind-matter laws beyond the constricted ken of science.

    Progressive cities around the world notably NY, Tokyo, London etc have carved out secular cemeteries for those wishing to be buried with no questions asked by religious authorities and 0 religious rites and least fanfare.

    Cremation is energy intensive and polluting. The ashes post cremation are toxic. Burial is natural - we come from dust, we return to dust. Natural biodegradation processes reduce the organic remains to the pre-compounded elemental form. Space is a constraint in cities chock with living beings and unbridled urbanisation. In India, where cows, stones smeared with vermillion, godmen, noise pollution from religious shrines, scamsters, voting uncivilized fools into power by equally or more uncivilized fools, lies, brag, delusions and other unworthies are most prized, it's not surprising none in the municipal and ministerial services has taken cognisance of my proposal of setting aside some land for secular cemeteries.

    I think ahead and despite surviving 45 action packed years of existence, not all hunky dory, I've earmarked a private plot in the mofussils for my burial, whenever the time arrives to kick the bucket, with due approval of those around me and hope to acquire the required permissions from the authorities. A cherry blossom tree is the only physical entity to be planted on my grave sans epitaph and other superficial paraphernalia.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ajeya

      There's another subtle aspect to be considered regarding disposal of one's mortal remains which is this - how would the disembodied consciousness, assuming it survives the death of the body, react on seeing its cataleptic physical form gruesomely charred or pecked at by omnivorous vultures since metaphysics avers the causal relationship between body and soul remains unsevered for days? I can imagine the anguish and suffering experienced by the out-of-body spirit on disposing the body to which it was attached to for years by destructive means like cremation or gifting it as a meal to birds of prey aside from the drawbacks of waste of energy in cremation and the toxicity involved during the process and with the residual ashes. So much for the wisdom of the avatars and rishis who were not focussed on the sinister sides of cremation and cannibalization by vultures!

      Burial is a natural law of decomposition that everything biodegradable and nonbiodegradable is subjected to.

      Similar is the case with nuclear power where fissible materials are forcefully split to eject fast moving particles to create electricity. Natural radioactive decay of unstable atoms spread over long periods of time is nature's way not artificial splitting of atoms in reactors and colliders. Plastics are another modern bane littering oceans and land with substances that last thousands of years or more.

      We have strayed far away from the natural order and under the rubric of progress have lost our grip on prudence and wisdom only to pay a heavy price either spiritually by force destruction of the corporeal frame via burning or throwing it to vultures that grieves the soul, or poisonous radiation leaks from nuclear power plants and bereft of safe ways to dispose off radioactive waste we contain them in concrete cylinders and bury them or fly them to other planets to be dumped there, or in the name of durability and convenience we produce tens of millions of meters of synthetics like plastics only to see ecosystems choked and destroyed,.

      Delete
    2. I back Ajeya Shunglu's proposal of setting up "secular cemeteries" free of religious interference in India. Kudos.

      Delete
  2. Avay Shukla, one gathers, is a man meticulously planning his Last Journey, but appears stymied by intrusive legalities that do not permit him to embark upon the resting of his choice. The Hindu method of ashing and urning is an understandable no-no, he being a man whose heart beats - and will stop - for the environment. But to be interred in a designated cemetery, to share space and soul with others of the netherworld when he owns vast burial lodgings, is for him sufficiently outrageous to die of an apoplectic fit. Thankfully, his continued presence and writing underscore his resolve to live and protest this restriction!

    There is, though, a legitimate way out of this quandary. Embracing Zoroastrianism will mean that he can choose to get excarnated the natural way as the birds will come to his aid. After their repast, he could lie forever in his private estate, where the daisies and daffodils will flutter carefree, and fair maidens can take in the sights and fragrances to unstopping merriment. Getting plucked comes with a caveat:
    if she turns into a toad princess, the mortification will be eternal!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Avay, I understand your quandary ... मैं इधर जाऊं या उधर जाऊं। बड़ी मुश्किल में हूँ मैं किधर जाऊं ... I guess Purani koti is the best option. Then, like the spectre of Churdhar, you can eternally hang around the place and watch it going to the dogs unless, of course, some fair maiden takes it into her head to care for the daisies !

    ReplyDelete
  4. @ Ajeya Shunglu

    Yesterday late evening, I referred your novel idea, at least it's new in India, of "secular cemeteries" where religion has no say in the matter of disposing off the dead to some free thinking colleagues working in professional fields and they concurred with the proposal because in this religion-crazed nation where several faiths tussle to decide which bronze age cult wins, secularism aka a complete separation among religion, state and one's personal choices is given short shrift despite the constitution endorsing it (secularism). Ironically, the Indian variant of secularism is not a total separation of state and religion but equal respect accorded to all faiths - what a perversion of the actual definition of secularism! I'm not surprised your proposal has been rebuffed. In India, irreligious folks have no option of getting buried in an eco-friendly manner and in a non-religious space and have to go the way of cremation or burial in a religious qabristan.

    Putting up the idea to Mr Modi of establishing secular cemeteries would be a waste as it would be cast aside with contempt for did not ancient India perform advanced surgery on a god conjoining an elephant's head to his headless torso? Your idea will be laughed out, while the worst superstitions from the dark ages gain stronger footholds in the cutting edge 21st century.

    Why not approach a NGO fighting for secular values, put up the proposal to an industrial house interested in promoting and investing resources in progressive ideas or initiate an online campaign to gain attention compelling the stark ignorant authorities to take note? The masses here need an awakening to the way the vanguard nations are moving out of the rut.

    Regards

    ReplyDelete
  5. Have to hand it to you boss, for single handedly turning this into a UPSC essay competition. Gives one a truly gratifying glimpse of on what capacity has rested the nation's hopes, the publicised all India rankers notwithstanding. At least one might believe that among all those Brilliants there are those who read. Formidable. Great.

    And also, for bringing together erstwhile colleagues - I guess - for who else would presume, freed from the civil bonds of colleaguedom to form feral groups of truffle rooters exercising long withheld dis-grunt to address at will their frustrations with uncalled for abuse and disrespect? I refer of course, to the recently banned band of commentors whose effrontery knew no end.

    And just to keep this short so as to not detract from more erudite comments, in Bongland we believe, many of us, that those with long ears live long. So your intimations of immorality might be a little early in ears. Years I mean.
    But since you've "kabja karoed" your spot in Purani Kothi, visitation rights to government snoopers could be denied by your two BCS boys, who, two syllabic though they may be, are never short of gumption I can assure you. And so your daisies may be safe from any old plucker. Pretty and young or not.

    ReplyDelete
  6. This piece is pure GOLD dust... Speculating on the likely pitfalls one may encounter while prepping for the final 'dust to dust' landing! The artful interweave of likely scenarios had me in such mirthful splits that my husband just came to check if i had hit his well stocked Bar in broad daylight..... The joy of this delightful piece has certainly added few months if not years to my life span! Even the ominous visage of Yamdoot would break into a smile if he had to carry such a traveller who could have such insights!

    ReplyDelete
  7. I am puzzled.

    Why has Mr.Shukla felt the need to organise his Last Trip? If the occupant of 7 Jan Kalyan Marg is going expressly into Amrit Kaal, why does Mr. Shukla change route, one muses. Even the entry to the Renouncement Club - or the Vanaprasthashram - begins from 75. The timing is off it appears.
    Those of us who have read him know that he has eluded the Grim Reaper a.k.a. the Hindu Yamraj when a full grown conifer crashed on him. That incident should suffice as divine writ certifying that he is meant to hang on; not immortally like the Prime Minister, but certainly well ahead to see a change in Prime Ministership.
    In this digital age, acquiring a Death Certificate is the easiest with online services. He could order his and take self delivery with just an OTP to the courier boy. After that, watching the garden grow from underground and pushing the geraniums up will be such pleasure while taking eternal rest. So why make haste.
    For added comfort, the concept of secular cemeteries has been initiated by Visionary Thinkers here, whose stunning revelations indicate that a new pathway to the other side is feasible. All good things take time, and if Mr. Shukla will show patience, these Gifted Ones can help make the transition as smooth as pouring lemonade.

    Stay on Sir.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm not going anywhere soon, Mr Patankar. Just completing the paperwork like a good bureaucrat!

      Delete
  8. It has been wisely said " as soon as a child is born it is is given a name, a family and a religious identity and it spends the rest of its life defending this fictitious identity".
    I was born Hindu due to factors beyond my control, so I place no great merit in it.
    As not only a non practising Hindu but an atheist, I find the idea of a secular grave very exciting. When do the bookings open?

    ReplyDelete
  9. As brilliant as it can be..!!!!! Couldn't help smiling through the entire read...!! Avay...how do you think of these crazy topics ???? And that too with such ease ..👻😎 !!!!
    But truly speaking...I would leave it to the convenience of the ones left behind...and only expect a party while I'm floating around waiting to cross "the" river to the other side...!!!..no prolonged hospitalization.. no prolonged rituals..just one big celebration of the life led...!
    May all of us find peace at our journey's end 🙏





    ReplyDelete