Pande ji - an exciting life!
‘Doctor Sahab, I really wish I become healthy like you. Just once in my life,’ Pande ji said to Principal Sahab. By healthy, he meant beefy and plump.
‘If I had your built,
I would have bashed anyone, who dared to even look at my direction.’
He was a Mathematics Professor
at a degree college but
other than his boring looks, nothing else seemed to have any association with
his profession. On the contrary, he resembled a farmer more: gaunt
physique, devoid of any form of fat; sunken cheeks; dark complexion; bland
clothes – grey trousers and greyer shirt, Bata sandals in his feet, gamcha on his shoulders and thick brown
spectacles on his eyes.
He always scurried
from one place to another either on foot or on his Atlas Cycle as if already
late for something important.
And, his anxiety about
his finances to pay off his daughters’ dowry was as permanent as a government
job.
‘Maidam (local dialect for Madam), even if I spend 2 lakh per
daughter, then too it will cost me 12 lakhs,’ he confided in Madam Principal, with
an expression similar to an expectant farmer, waiting for the monsoons.
He appeared happy the
other day. Rather, he was bit less anxious. He had found a prospective groom
for her daughter, Shraddha.
But Madam Principal was
aghast.
‘Pande ji, what are
you doing? Shraddha is so well-educated. The boy is unemployed. Why are you
marrying her to such a boy? She can get a much better husband.’
‘Maidam, it is not like this. He is not unemployed. He is studying. One day he will start earning.
If I go for a working boy, they will ask for more dowry. I have five more
daughters to marry off,’ Pande ji had a point to which no one had a counter.
To boost his income,
he tried several strategies.
He reared a cow and
sold milk. Among many of his daily chores was his duty to tether his cow to a
tree for grazing. For some reason, he would do this just before going to the
college, all decked up in his grey safari suit, black sandals and combed hair.
Often, the cow got rowdy and ran helter-skelter, with Pande ji in the pursuit.
The other season, he
joined Life Insurance Corporation, LIC as an agent. Pande ji first went after
the teachers to sell the insurance policies. But most teachers were his own
ilk, which meant they didn’t spend a dime.
So, he moved on to
the students. More than teaching, he told them the importance of life
insurance. The students were impressed at the start, confused in the middle and
entertained at the end.
They never bought a single policy.
Another loss-making
venture didn’t daunt Pande ji from trying his luck further. He bought a
Mahindra Jeep. It ferried from Allahabad to Bharwari, and from Bharwari to Karari.
Everyone would have
sat comfortably on ONE FULL SEAT meant for one person in HIS jeep, but not Pande
ji. He would always sit on the right side of the driver – half the butt on the
driver’s seat, the other half in the air.
Every time Principal Sahab
called Pande ji to sit next to him, he would politely and firmly decline,
‘No Sir, I am
alright. Some other passenger can take that seat, he he he,’ talking like a
true businessman.
The drivers that he
employed – Raja, Mohit, Lucky – were crooks.
Raja sold the
brand-new battery of the jeep to his cousin and installed a 3-year old one in
it instead.
When Mohit was
employed, the jeep started giving the mileage of a train. Further investigation
found that he sold the diesel from the jeep to others.
Lucky, more than
ferrying the passengers, ferried his girl-friend from her place to her college
and back. He is a happily married man now, all thanks to Pande ji and his jeep.
In one of the softer
moments, he confided in
Madam Principal:
‘Maidam, I don’t have any luck line. See!’ showing his hand.
‘When I put in 100, I
get only 5. I tried all the tootkas, kundili, pundits. Nothing worked. I
think I am destined to keep working like a donkey.’
‘Arre Pande ji, don’t lose hope. Things will get fine. Let’s have
some tea.’
No sooner than the
tea was served, the phone rang. It was Mahesh, Pande ji’s elder son.
‘Pappa, Babloo has
banged the jeep into a truck. Babloo ran away. The jeep is standing in the
Police Station. Come quickly.’
And Pande ji
scampered away.
(Pande ji is no more now. Though he didn’t manage to get ‘healthy’, he
did marry his daughters and sons to good families. His finances were strong
when he breathed his last.)
The names have been changed for obvious reasons.
Comments
Very nice
Kitna desi sa swaad hai kahani mein.