Sleeping Beauty

I wrote this entry on "Creative Call", the official learning platform for MBITEC's Creative Young Minds. And after getting positive reviews from many, I thought I ought to share this with a larger audience. So here it goes...


On 13th of this month, I visited “Manjusa”- The West Bengal State Emporium in Connaught Place as part of a college activity. The traditional richness of the fascinating culture of the state came out in the form of the innumerable traditional handicrafts, sculpture and clothing. I, not being one who has ever been interested in this ‘cultural’ stuff, preferred to roam about the area a bit. As soon as I moved out of the building to the State emporium’s filthy pavements, the down-side of life in a metro which had just hosted the 70k rupees CWG was not going to be unnoticed. 

Children, who I don’t think would be more than 8-10 years of age, in tattered clothes were ‘begging’ for money to have a square meal for lunch. Being considerate to them is something I have never felt since the time I saw Madhur Bhandarkar’s “Traffic Signal” some two years back. But then, I saw a scene which I don’t know why moved me so much. A person, I guess she was a middle-age lady (I am not sure), in a badly worn out salwar suit, was ‘resting’ on the pavement near a wall that connected the emporiums of two states, with a tattered piece of dupatta covering her battered face. I guess there is nothing new for something like this being spotted in India- they are found in every other railway station. But the thing that left blood in my heart rushing was the fact that hundreds of ‘house-flies’ had also found a nice, cosy place to rest on the whole body of the ‘sleeping beauty’ and our hostess didn’t even mind to shoo away these little guests! She slept coolly, unmindful of what was going around her.

For a few minutes, I was surely left bewildered and I noticed that only when a friend enquired why I had grown so silent and was not talking. I had no answer to his question, but surely somewhere this visual had made a deep impact on me, otherwise I don’t think I would have ever thought of making a blog entry of this kind on such an un-noticed topic!

Do leave your comments and let me know what you think about this…

Comments

  1. Life springs many surprises. I am really happy that the scene moved your heart. Life is not always a bed of roses and time is probably the most unpredictable dimension of life. Nobody knows what tomorrow will be like. Better to live today with a sympathetic attitude towards all and sundry. Help needy people to the extent you can. It is more important to be "good" human being than anything else.

    ReplyDelete
  2. sleeping beauty is a innovative headline...

    ReplyDelete
  3. I completely agree with Mr Pramod's comment... :) There are times in life when these scene helps us to realize the importance of what we have... but still we desire for more...

    ReplyDelete
  4. exactly i do agree with Shikha ma`m and Mr Pramod`s comment..
    we should be happy with what we have..
    help people to the extent you can..

    ReplyDelete
  5. Itz true dat such incidents despite being many n being seen by many more only move few hearts n inspire those hearts 2 change lives.

    Similarly, we at NITR have a Club named AASRA n njoy being able 2 do sumthng 4 d lower strata f d society. Our website, whch z newly launched n undergoing modification n hence, may nt gv a proper insight z www.aasranitr.org . Plz visit it atleast once.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

All spam comments with backlinks from bots/individuals will be deleted. So please don't waste your time by posting spam.