The other day I heard my niece telling us that they are giving three thousand rupees as pocket money to her college going son. When my mouth fell open, she explained that it included his fuel bills and mobile phone bills.
A few years back, I remember my kids getting a hundred rupees each when they went to high school. It was for the purpose of buying birthday greeting cards for their friends and other such petty expenses. This was before the age of mobiles and so we parents did not feel the pinch as do parents of the present generation. Besides the kids didn't have their own vehicles mostly except for bicycles. For filling in air for the wheels they needed only a few coins and the parents usually accompanied them to hand out the charge for 'bigger' expense like a puncture!
This started me thinking about my own school/college days. The notion of pocket money was not even heard of. We were given only bus fare and we used to save ten paise everyday.
Snake Charmer..........
After a period of nearly 27 years today I met my classmate Srininvasan ( well as known as sreeni),He reminded me of an interesting incident,
. Those days it is quite common to find a snake charmer with a keeri( mongoose)
A snake charmer and his assistants (his family most of the time) would start playing an Urumi melam or some such instrument(drum) in a street corner and call out to the passers-by about the impending fight between the snake in his bamboo basket and the mongoose he has at the end of a tether.
When a crowd has been collected he would stand in the middle and would entreat them to wait for the fight as the climax of his program. In the meantime, he would provide some more entertainment for his audience, he would say.
He would make his assistant (usually a small child) lie down in the centre and cover his whole body, including the face, with a blanket. Then he would start asking him some questions about the people around him.
"Boy, what is the colour of that gentleman's shirt who stands at the eastern side of our show?", he would ask and the boy would reply with the right answer! The mostly gullible audience would be amazed how the blindfolded boy could answer all the questions correctly, but for the blessing of the divine mother-goddess Kali or Angalaparameswari whose disciple the snake charmer proclaims himself to be! Suitably impressed with the question and answer session, the audience would be ready to accept the fortune-telling session that follows and would part with the few coins that was the fees.
if the business was dull and no coins were forthcoming, the man would start frightening the more gullible section of the audience with dire predictions which would always end, "You would die a horrible death vomitting blood, if you don't part with the money which I can see with my third eye, hidden in your pocket!"
A few illiterate villagers and small children would fall prey to such admonitions and would part with their money, having become wiser enough not to stand as part of the audience the next time around!
Of course the snake and mongoose would never fight as the man would wind up everything when he had collected some money! He would mumble something about the snake being hungry or tired or sleepy, to the few brave souls who asked him about it!
I remember how my friend and myself, both nine years old at that time, stood at the edge of the crowd in such a show. It was during our lunch break from the small town school in which we were studying. The fact was that we had a Twenty Five paise coin in our possession (1/4 of a rupee). The teacher had given it to us asking us to get her some coffee from the nearby teashop as he had a terrible headache Attracted by the drum beats we were tempted to watch the show and at the end of it, we were shocked to hear the terrible fate awaiting us if we did not part with the money! We managed to discuss the issue between us and convince ourselves that the coin was the teacher's and in no way would it provoke the curse. But we had quite a few nightmares that week!
INDIA: VADINAGAR: VILLAGE HOME TO SNAKE CHARMERS FOR GENERATIONS
Think of India and inevitably you think of snake charmers. It is an image inextricably tied up with the exotic country - but maybe not for much longer. The ancient art of snake charming is being spurned by many young people in villages where once it was an important source of income. Vadinagar village in the western Indian state of Gujarat - a snake charmer practices his art to the hypnotic sounds of pipe-playing. This tiny community has been home to snake charmers for generations. Residents have been earning their living by catching snakes and training them to dance to the pipe, known as a "Been", for as long as anyone can remember. The skill is handed on from old to young and demands alertness, training and sustained practice.
Click here to watch this video
http://www.nidokidos.org/threads/246224
Posted by: Lakshminarayanan <adayaranumon@gmail.com>
Reply via web post | • | Reply to sender | • | Reply to group | • | Start a New Topic | • | Messages in this topic (1) |
NidokidoS Group for best of forwarded mails
To join us , send an email to
nidokidos-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Be the part of Nidokidos , Join our Forum
http://www.nidokidos.org
to share your emails with us, send them at
nidokidos@yahoogroups.com
===================================================
No comments:
Post a Comment