It goes without saying that
if you throw a stone in Bangalore, chances are it would hit someone from Kerala
(Mallu). Even then, I hardly had any Malayali friends throughout my school
life, apart from some family friends. I was delighted to
get acquainted with some of them during the course of my
engineering and our friendship grew as the years passed. As is always the case,
during the final year, we have this frenzied urge to fit into as many groups of
friends as possible, spend more time with them and make memories to dote
on. We formed a group on Whatsapp, which had three people initially. The
number slowly rose to five.
I will try to
introduce all of them in a line or two. First and foremost, there is this
person who is the soul of the group, always entertaining everybody with his
stories. Then there is the sweetest person who cannot get angry and is a soft
target for all the jokes. One person who is too amiable and sensible and
another person who is brimming with ideas, feels accountable for mother earth,
made up our group. The group conversations were always fun and I made sure I was
up to date with everything that happened even if I could not participate. It
was our forte to be able to pull each other’s legs, resorting to everything
from movie dialogues to past incidents in our lives. At times, there were some
extensive planning sessions regarding who among us would get married first,
where, who would sponsor the marriage, where would we settle, where would we
meet again after a long time and so on.
Our first jaunt
together was to the Jalahalli Ayyappa temple in Bangalore, situated in a
locality which boasts of more Keralites per unit area than any other place in
Bangalore. After offering our prayers, we spent some time in the
temple premises taking in the tenor and discussing the history of temples in
Kerala as well as various traditions that we follow. We continued our
discussion in a park outside the temple. Horror stories were told, which my
friends claimed to be a part of. We failed to notice an old man sitting nearby
as we made elaborate plans for one of my friends to elope with the love of his
life without their parents’ consent. The stranger was offended and retaliated
soon, asking us if he would tolerate it if his sister did the same thing. This
incident dampened our spirits, at least for a while.
Another get together
and the ethnic day celebration in our college rewarded us with more memories.
On the day of the official farewell for final year students in our college, I
invited all of them home. It was an evening of merry chatter and singing.
Getting drenched in the rain while walking in a pasture close by was a happy
addition to our agenda for the day. Our beloved juniors had also arranged an
informal farewell for us on the next day. We quietly escaped the proceedings to
meet in college and have a ‘wine party’ which was long due. One of us carefully
carried wine in a coke bottle to the college canteen and all of us gulped two
mouthfuls of it. The thought of CCTV cameras and a watchman who asked us our details since
we were on campus on a Sunday, made us slightly anxious. After going back to
the get together, while addressing the gathering, I could sense the
after-effects of the wine. My tongue reluctantly obeyed me and I was getting a
headache.
We seem to have made
the most of our temple visits. We went to the Chakkulathukavu temple in Bangalore
to take part in the ‘Laksharchana’ (Lighting of one lakh lamps) ceremony. My
friend sang an old Malayalam movie song for us and seemed to have achieved what Tansen did by
singing the raag Malhar. The temple and the surroundings were soaked in rain.
We lighted the lamps around the temple to make it a spectacle in the darkness.
Contrary to our own
apprehension that we will not be able to continue our amity even after college
ends, we met a few months later. We put on paper an off-the-record marriage
declaration of one of our friends. It was one of those hysterical exploits that
we would recollect somewhere down the road.

very nicely written
ReplyDeleteThank uuu :)
DeleteNice:)
ReplyDeleteThank you :)
DeleteSo beautifully written. ....
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