Monday, August 15, 2011

Raksha Ban-dhan


Since the time I can remember, this day was not just about siblings and their banter. It was about an entire family coming together and celebrating togetherness. Different it may be, but in India, on any given occasion, togetherness is celebrated and a reason is assigned to it. There is a long standing belief, a lyrical story weaved around it, flowers, sweets, lights, vows, chants et all. To me, this was one more.

As per tradition, as the name suggests, the brother would vow to protect and take care of his sister. This was “Raksha”. But then, there were also times, when, simply, the elder would protect junior. Gender didn’t matter. In a lot of ways and many a times, in my case, my sister was my savior. Just by observing her, I learnt a lot. Interestingly, not only did I learn what to do, but also what not to do in life! If asked to rank, one thing I learnt not to do in life from her, I would shout – she taught me, never to under estimate oneself.

Anyhow, back to the nomenclature. To receive proper “Raksha”, i.e. protection, caring and security, one had to “compensate” the other party. In India, compensation has many ways to enter pockets – salary, bribe, gifts et all. This ceremony involved gifts. Indians are very kind souls, by nature. Hence, “gifts in kind” is a preferred mode. The brightest saree, ear-rings, necklace for sisters was the prime and kindest way to show affection. Sisters would shower their kindness by way of new formal shirts, flowery kurtas, colorful tees and sometimes lucky ones would get watches. With time, gifts did not remain kind anymore. They became smarter – smart comments on tees, smart watches and smart phones started ruling.

Hindu mythology has documented that body, soul and money (tann, mann aur dhan) makes or breaks – even the protector. Varying combination of these three aspects in our lives can change our life. Our life can go in either direction, as we want it to. With our tann (body, its strength and uses) we can earn more dhan. With our mann, we can influence our brain (tann) and perform to take balanced decisions. With more dhan coming in, we can care for our tann and keep our mann content. Or, as I said, it could go either way. With a strong tann, we can bully the weaker sections of the society. With more dhan we buy influences in our favor. With our narrow mann, we change the entire thought process of the world.

On this Raksha Bandhan too, a brother came visiting his sister in a big black shining sedan. The entire family celebrated togetherness. Protection vows were taken, expensive gifts were exchanged, sweets shared and laughter spread. On the way out from the housing society where the sister lives, the security guard who would probably be one of the first people to come forward to protect and safe guard the sister, in the unfortunate incident that something happens to her, was abused, physically assaulted and threatened by the brother. The brother, who stays atleast a couple of hours off and who a couple of hours back would have vowed to protect his sister, did not only jeopardize any future attempts by this security guard to shelter his sister. He probably misbehaved with a poor brother who could not visit his sister on this day. The guard was working on Raksha Bandhan to earn some extra money for his family, which may have a sister. His fault, he was trying to perform his duties well – he asked the brother to make an entry in the visitor’s register.

Not sure, if it was the tann, mann or the dhan talking. But security of the security guard was compromised. If he is not safe, is the sister safe? Who vowed, who actioned and who will suffer?



Cheers

K


14 comments:

Abhineet said...

Nicely put up.

Anonymous said...

It's about ones morals, intentions and insight. Very nice.

Jayanti

AT said...

Which sister would want an expensive gift, if the brother thinks of her in such a wonderful maner on Raksh Bandhan !

Such a beautiful article, brought a smile to my face..and thought to my head :-)

Anuradha

K said...

@ Abhineet: Thank you for your comments

@ DD: Good to see you back. Thx!!

@ AT: Thx mate!!

abhi said...

Kanishko!!!

Sure, ur sister would do ur RAKSHA, even without reading this BLOG.

Do u still go to ur sister and get the RAKSHA-BAN-DHAN done?? Coz, ur MANN has anyways done the ritual of protecting ur sis.

Happy to see yet another CLOSE Sis-bro.

Thanks for penning down ur thoughts.

Abhi

Shilpi said...

wonderfully expressed.... kudos K

Anonymous said...

love u K...watching this space for more interesting stuff...

K said...

I really hate Anonymous admirers!!???!!

cheers
K

Anonymous said...

but i love u...and love this cockiness of yours even more...

K said...

Hmmmm.. now that you have confessed your love for me twice over, i may not hate you... but I still dont love you

Anonymous said...

that breaks my heart...all i can say is honey, u aint seen enough of me...wait out and u'll be all over me...

K said...

I am not sure about "all over" part... but surely have not seen enough of you to save your heart from breaking

Anonymous said...

u broke my heart all over again...sigh

K said...

Since you confessed twice over, I had to respond likewise. An "all over me" had to have an "all over again" effect