The hostel management had the setup
of a manager, a warden and an assistant warden. The warden Mangalamurthy was a
retired teacher. He had secured the prestigious President of India award as a
distinguished teacher. He had been provided quarters near the hostel and lived
with his wife. His two sons, Ayodhyanath and Dwarakanath, had been given free
hostel seats and were studying at Sahyadri
College . He was an able
and upright administrator. A strict disciplinarian, he devoted his entire time
for hostel duties.
The manager Chandrasekhara Sastry
was a teacher in the Government Middle School. He was working part-time as the
hostel manager. He used to work only in the evening at the hostel. He would play
the harmonium during the weekend Bhajan programme at the hostel. He was hard of
hearing and used a hearing aid always. He had some sort of wickedness in him
and was totally disliked by the boys in general. He was partial to students who
were on full payment. He would maltreat the free seat students. I had one such
occasion to face his wickedness. He would invariably be giving some sort of a
speech at the end of weekend Bhajan. He would make it a point to repeatedly
praise the secretary in his speech. The boys had given him a name considering
his hearing aid. They would address him as Goota
behind his back. In Kannada this word represents a small stick inserted in a
hole to plug it. As the hearing aid was plugged into the opening of the ear the
boys selected this name for him as quite appropriate!
There was an assistant warden by
name Sripada Jois. He was working in Karnataka bank and it was a part-time job
for him at the hostel in the evening. He used to write the accounts. He was
comparatively young. He would be friendly with full payment students. However,
he would treat the free students with scant respect. His policy was not to help
anybody. However, given an opportunity, he won’t mind harming them!
During the weekend on Saturday
evenings there used to be regular Bhajans at the hostel. The attendance was
compulsory. The Secretary Avadhani himself would lead us in the Bhajan
programme. He was a great Bhajan singer and would be present without fail on
all Saturdays. The devotion with which he sang the Bhajans was simply
marvelous. One particular Bhajan sang by him reverberates in my ears even to
this day. It was known as Kalabhairavashtakam. It ran something like:
“Devaraja Sevyamana Pavanangri Pankajam
Vyalayajna Sutramindushekaram Krupakaram
Naradadi Yogivrunda Vanditam Digambaram
Kashikapuradhinatha Kalabhairavam Bhaje
Kalabhairavashtakam Patanthiye Manoharam
Jnana Mukthi Sadhanam Vichitrapunyavardhanam
Shoka Moha Dainya Lobha Kopa Tapa Nashanam
Kashikapuradhinatha Kalabhairavam Bhaje”
The Pooja after the Bhajan was
conducted by a second year B.Sc. student by name Shankara Ghanapati. He was
well versed in Pooja manthram and rituals as he hailed from a well-known scholarly
family of Ghanapatis. We used to remove our shirts and banians, cover our chest
with a vastram and participate in the
Bhajans with great devotion. The programme would end with the distribution of
Prasadam. The next day being Sunday our spirits used to be very high.
Avadhani devoted his entire
evening for the hostel administration. Some times the work would extend up to
late night. It was an honorary post and he used to contribute heavily for the
hostel funds. He left no stone unturned for the welfare of the hostel
community. I have seen very few people of his caliber in my whole life so far. Even
though he was super rich, he never exhibited his status symbols. He would never
raise his voice even while he had to talk tough. People would respect him just
by his looks. Such was his commanding personality.
The hostel building was located
in a spacious area. There was lot of open space for the students to play games
like badminton, Kabaddi, etc. We could also play indoor games like carom and
Chess. There were two other indoor games by name traders and spell craft.
I found both of them very interesting. Quite for some time I was crazy to wait
for my turn to play these games. We could go to the open terrace of the hostel
building for our studies. We did so in the morning. We could hold our books and
read them while walking on the terrace. We had another attraction here. We
could watch the various outstation busses moving on the main road. In those
days there used to be so many private transport busses; but there were very few
State-owned busses. My own class mates’ families owned quite a few of these
transport companies. We would be thrilled to see the Government-owned busses
going to Bangalore. We would imagine that one day we may get an opportunity to
travel all the way to Bangalore !
For most of us there was another
attraction. We had already started the count down for our Dasara holidays! We
could watch the busses going towards our places. I would be watching the Udaya
and Shankar Motor busses proceeding to Sringeri daily in front of our hostel
and imagine myself in one of them on the first day of Dasara! I was very much
eager to go home and tell my city life experiences to my waiting beloved
family!
There was a small reading room on
the first floor. One Kannada and one English newspaper were available for our
reading. I started reading the English newspaper regularly. Slowly I began to
appreciate the language and picked up the nuances of English writing. This
hobby was to help me in my later education career to a vast extent. It enhanced
my knowledge level substantially. It also helped me understand the lessons in
the English textbook thoroughly.
We had a non-detail textbook by
name Oliver Twist written by Charles
Dickens, the greatest novelist of the Victorian era. The character of Oliver,
an orphan, had some distant similarity to that of my own as a free seat student
in the hostel. We had an assistant cook by name Gurumurthy who had a
personality almost similar to that of Mr. Bumble in the novel. The following
episode and the picture in the novel had some similarity to the state of affairs
in which I was placed, though only distantly:
Around the
time of the orphan
’s ninth birthday, Mr. Bumble, a parish beadle, removes Oliver from the baby farm and puts him to work
picking oakum
at the main branch-workhouse. Oliver, who toils with very little food, remains in
the workhouse for six months, until the desperately hungry boys decide to draw
lots; the loser must ask for another portion of gruel. The task falls to
Oliver, who at the next meal tremblingly comes forward, bowl in hand, and makes
his famous request: "Please, sir, I want some more."
"Please, sir, I want some more."
Says Oliver to Mr. Bumble.
A great
uproar ensues. The board of well-fed gentlemen, who administer the workhouse,
while eating a meal fit for a king, are outraged by Oliver's 'ingratitude'.
Wanting to be rid of this troublemaker, they offer five guineas
to any person wishing to take on the boy as an apprentice.
This novel and later another novel by the same
author, David Copperfield, which were
taught to us in School, carried the sort of an impression on my mind which has
lasted even to this day. We used to call Gurumurthy Mr. Bumble, considering his
close similarity to that of the character. I used to get dreams wherein I stood
in front of Gurumurthy asking for more!
The hostel was rearing a good number of buffaloes
and was self sufficient in milk. It also had two high breed male-buffaloes
which were generating good income. They were hired out for insemination of female
buffaloes on job work basis!
There was a main cook in addition to the
assistant cook Gurumurthy. He was a senior professional cook and concentrated
on his job. Besides, there was a young man called Devraj who was assigned the
duty of serving the food. He was a good looking smart guy and an expert in
serving the food fast. He used to call me by a pet name Kitten! I liked this young man very much and didn’t mind him
calling me by this pet name. I had a doubt that Devraj used to show me some
favour while serving food unknown to others! Gurumurthy, whom we called Mr.
Bumble, was actually a very good man at heart. We were told that he had a
tragic story behind him. He had earlier worked as warden in our hostel itself
with great respect. He hailed from a rich family but unfortunately lost all his
wealth owing to some unknown reasons. He was in fact close to Avadhani and
could address him in singular. But bad luck had reduced him to work as an
assistant cook. He was not given due respect by the warden and the manager.
There were nearly one hundred students in the
hostel. But within a short time I could recognize all of them by their names
and knew in which class they were studying. Such was the level of inter action
of the hostel students in those days. Not only that, as all the students in my
room were PU students, I could learn the names of important lecturers in Sahyadri College . As most of them had to pass
through in front of the hostel on their way to College, I could even recognize
them. The famous Kannada writer P Lankesh was an English lecturer in the
College at that time. He used to go to the College on his red Lambretta
scooter. The scooter was a novelty vehicle in those days and there were very
few of them in Shimoga. The English
department had a popular Muslim Professor. His lectures on Macbeth and the story Kabuliwala
written by Tagore were greatly appreciated by the students.
There was another famous Physics Professor by
name Kariappa. My roommates encouraged me to attend one of his classes. In
those days the Sahyadri
College had so many
students that the classes used to be always overcrowded. Hence I could easily
pose myself as a college student and attended one of Kariappa’s classes. He
delivered a nice lecture on the subject heat, a form of energy. I had carried a
note book with me and took down his notes meticulously. I could follow his
lecture comfortably. Such was the
clarity in his expressions! This experience added to my confidence levels.
After about one month of my joining the hostel, a
fresh allotment of rooms to the students was announced. The policy was to allot
separate rooms to High School students and College students. In this
reallocation, I was allotted room number ten with five other High School boys.
As I had developed closeness with my earlier roommates I found it difficult to
leave them. All of them treated me like their kid brother and tried their best
to retain me in their room. But it was not to be. I shifted to my new room with
tears in my eyes!
------ (To be continued) ---------
2 comments:
This is perhaps one of the most interesting episodes in this series. Feel like reading it again and again!
Thanks NN.
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