Thursday, May 7, 2015


From death unto life

 
Blazing guns and death sirens were screaming behind me as I ran for a shelter, clutching my 2 year old son. “They have arrived” shrieked an old lady, trying to catch up with the runners. Every Friday “they” came, looted and left. At least this was the norm until 2 months back when they stopped coming completely. Today they came again, and how.

Ours was a village like any other with quaint houses, lush green trees and clean rivers. Every morning cattle danced beatifically in the waters and women sang songs of glorious warriors while going about their daily chores. Our men were mostly farmers except for Jomo Ongayo. Rumor has it that he studied medicine and has become a doctor since, first one from our village if it were indeed true!

I was one among those women, for whom her little boy meant the world. Noah! His laughter filled my heart like an inflated balloon while his tears debilitated my soul into tiny fragments. He was the ‘egusi of my eye’. Egusi was a very important crop in our area, it quenched our thirst and pacified our hunger.

My daily routine was unexceptional except for my son. My husband, Mongoya died a year ago. It was the famine that killed him. A lot of us had reached the brink of death that year, but we were spared, I want to believe for a bigger reason.

Post famine, our village was exposed. Vulnerable men and women grabbed every opportunity to make bread. Little did they know that life as they knew it would be destroyed in the coming days.

The sun had set and the sky had fallen asleep. My little Noah had drifted off to the land of fireflies and rainbows. As I walked along the lawn, a cool breeze lightly brushed my hair. A muffled screaming was consciously growing louder. I walked towards the sound. A pale Narisa, my neighbor was wailing uncontrollably at the body of her dead son. She was surrounded by 3 goons holding swords dripping with blood. And that was the first murder that I witnessed.

This continued for days and weeks. Goons would enter a household, slash the throat of the man in charge and loot the valuables. No one knew who these men were and why they did this. The local authority riveted in fear at the mention of them. They came to be known as “Khoff” (terror). Gradually, we came to realize that this was not going to end, we had to either die at their hands or flee from this horror. Though the former provided instant respite, my resolute to live and love led me to the latter.

We noticed a visible pattern in their atrocities. They came out in gangs and wreaked havoc on Fridays. With the passage of time, the Khoff burned down men, women and children only to scale the heights of monstrosity. Charred remnants of dead carcasses and uprooted vegetation was piling up week after week. Our bucolic village had been transformed into a blood bath.

Fridays did not cause panic anymore. We became inured to murder, blood and hardships. If we were lucky, we survived the week. And then came that fateful night. That was the first Friday in months the Khoff did not come. They did not kill, they did not harm. I slept through the night with my eyes open. When the first rays of the sun hit the earth, it was clear that they did not come. “Have they gone for good? Have they eroded our village of everything that they will not come anymore?”

The coming weeks saw our lives return to normalcy. Men went to the field, women washed in the rivers and children played under the sun. My baby Noah saw his mother smile in a long time. I took him to the river, bathed him in the cool waters and fed him fresh, ripe egusi. My eternally pulsating heartbeats calmed down, mind stopped racing and head called off its throbbing. But gods would not be kind to us for long. Their kindness had an expiry date and that day was the last day I stayed there. The Khoff returned with full might and I decided enough was enough.

Grabbing Noah by his waist, I began to run. I ran for two straight kilometers, till I saw the last field that marked the end of our village. They buried houses, belongings and everything that was once mine. They killed my friends, neighbors and surroundings, but they could not kill my spirit to live. . I was determined to find a way.

Leaving my horrendous life behind me, I walk with my son, my last ray of hope.

---Nimisha E P


Tuesday, April 28, 2015

The day I met...wait for it...MOHANLAL!






May 8th 2013.
It was the kind of day you would wear a loose fitting cotton dress and soak in the summer sun. All that changed after a phone call from a dear friend of mine, my life would change forever. ( the word 'exaggeration' suggests itself right now).

I couldn't  believe my ears! I tried to catch a breath, I yelled into my mobile "Really? You can do that? I can come?". My friend being the angel she was said, "Of course! Otherwise you'd kill me". Come to think of it, I certainly would have, otherwise. After I was reminded my by body that respiration was inevitable to survive, I breathed in an immeasurable amount of air.

Meeting him was not a big league dream, not the one that did not let you sleep. It was what I would like to call a siesta dream, a nice 'if this happened, it'd be cool' kind of a dream. But realization of dreams, however insignificant, can be fulfilling.(Mind you!Not that this was insignificant.)
I have grown up watching him on the big screen. Al Pacino of Malayalam movies is what hardcore fans call him. This man played a huge part in upholding Malayalam movies and  establishing the 'Golden era of Malayalam Cinema'. Naturally, I loved him.

Okay where was I?
The first task at hand was to choose a dress to fit the occasion. Alright I agree that wasn't a big league problem , but I wouldn't want him wondering why I turned up in rags!
So I wore a pleasant looking Salwar kameez and set out on a journey that would be etched in my memory forever( again, exaggeration).

We reached a picturesque farm house where the movie set was made. We walked in anxiously when some guards stopped us. We told the producer's name like we were instructed to, and viola we were in! No actors had arrived at the set so we took a tour of it. It was beautiful, with fancy paintings and furniture. After waiting for a brief 20 minutes I saw a crowd gather at the entrance...'Could this be it?', I thought...

A simple man wearing khaki shorts,a random t shirt and face full deep in beard walked in. The humbleness in his personality struck me.There was the man himself, standing in front of me at arm's length. I wanted to jump and scream but the little sense left in me held me back.

A few minutes passed,I did not approach him. I have to admit the guy was intimidatingly humble(if that makes any sense at all).Words almost failed me but I managed to grab composure and say "I amm a big faan". Damn too cliched..but don't blame my brain, it was a little unnerving. The next thing I said to him was a piece of made up nonsense...I said "My grandmom has sent special regards, she loves you" . But hey,that worked. His face brightened up."Hurrayy!",I thought!
Next thing that I thought was appropriate was to click a picture.Instantly I dug up my cell phone and as if it were cue, the producer offered to click a picture.
Not to mention I fell in love with the picture and it was to stay as my display picture, FOREVERRRRR.

Mohanlal ,the darling of Malayalam cinema was in front of me, I enquired about his current and upcoming projects. He told me that he was in for a shooting for a kannada movie, Mytri (which has released in Bangalore this year). Lovely I thought. After a few minutes of interaction, we reached a deadlock. I had nothing else to ask him, he was shy guy ( Can you believe it? CID Ramdas- a nonchalant, self effacing guy?)  I graciously let the man do his job and walked away. I had a lot of questions to ask..but none of it really materialized. I was so full enthusiasm that I forget all of them.
(And I was aspiring to become a journalist,ha!).

After another hour or so, I waved a goodbye at him, (not that he was looking) and left.
Like I already mentioned, this day would be etched in my memory forever. (unless dementia plays villain)

Lalettan Zindabad. (hashtag malluswag).