This article has been first posted at Feministaa.
Last
time it was dry flowers and sea shells, and this time it is leftover pieces of
ribbons, pista shells and round beads. The collections have been going steady
over the past few days at our own little corner of the world. That time is
here…
The
Rakhi making project at my daughter’s school makes me more envious than
nostalgic, though I must at the same breath say that the sentiments around Rakhi
does make me very nostalgic and also that is not so much about missing my
sibling and cousin brothers. Well you see, you have “Bhai Duj” for all that
mush.
Rakhi…
well, if you ask me, Rakhi was more of a weapon for us, an instrument, back in
school. Rakhi meant skipping school if you’re a boy and really intimidated that
that girl would use this day’s opportunity to shed you off. And if you’re a girl, Rakhi meant your yearly chance to
reclaim that spotlessness of your ‘character’ by shaking off the alleged
pairing up your friends have been upto (unless, well, you’re not so sure of how
you feel yourself). Either way, Rakhi was nevertheless a day to remember of all
days, during those long few years of a lifetime called adolescence.
But
this post is not about that “rakhi”.
This post, also, is not about that “rakhi” that they say brought Rakhi into its
being in our regular Bengali customs – the flashback on how Tagore had gone out
to the roads to tie Rakhi to the Islamic counterparts of the society. It is -
sorry to disappoint - also not about myths and stories around that evergreen
couple who dated on the banks of the Yamuna. Nope! This Rakhi is about… what to do with this rakhi!
“Okay,
so what to do with this rakhi?” – I ask her, intently watching her oozing out
dollops of Fevicol from the tube on to the piece of paper that intends to serve
as some kind of a base but falls flat at it, leading the drops of the white
adhesive to find their puddle pool on the mosaic floor. She is too busy to meet
the means to bother worrying about its ends. Well, literally!
And
so I ask again: Darling, what to do with this rakhi?
“I’ll
tie it, maybe,” She replies tentatively.
“Tie
it on, whom?”
“I
need to find a brother.”
“Okay”…
as I prepare to use the opportune moment to floodgate my dose of daily wisdom,
she pre-empts my chance by putting forward a rather timely request.
“I
told you, Mum, make me a brother. Look now…”
Now,
we don’t even want to go there, do we? But then, she’s incorrigible.
“Do
you think you can try to make one before this Rakhi day, if you try hard?”
“No.
dear!” - I assure her, and myself.
“Then
I have to find some other boy,” she heaves a dramatically deep sigh and goes
back to task.
“That
is what I want to ask, dear. Why do you think you need a boy for Rakhi?” - I trail behind her.
“Because…
Come on, Mum! Rakhis are tied on
boys!” – She dismisses me. But I’m incorrigible. Well, almost like her.
“Who
says?”
“Well,
that’s a rule!”
Eureka!
If now is not a chance to make a difference, when will be? I grab it!
“Listen,
this rakhi, let us try breaking a few rules, shall we?”
Now,
talking to a five year old about breaking rules is your sure shot way to grab
their attention. It almost never fails!
“Break
rules, like?” – She holds up her gaze at me curiously, and with it her hands
too. I watch the stream of white liquid flow down her arms, gather at the tip
of her elbow, and form drops at the end of her sleeves. Of the new T-shirt,
that costs… forget it! Priorities… I remind myself, as I pull off my eyes from
the distraction of the transforming sleeves, and then I continue anyway:
“Look,
this time, let’s do things differently - different in 3 ways. Shall we?”
“How?”
– She asks me, suspicious and skeptical.
“First, we’ll
tie rakhi on girls this time around, shall we?”
“And
why?” – She’s clearly not convinced!
“You
know what rakhi stands for, right? It stands for a promise to protect each
other. And this time, we’ll promise that to a girlfriend, so that they won’t
need to wait for a boy to come and save them.”
“Like
Snow White?”
“Actually,
unlike Snow White!”
“Okay…”
“Second,
we’ll not look for returns.”
“What’s
that?”
“Well,
returns mean… how do I say it? Say, you tie one rakhi to someone and she does
not tie a rakhi back on you. What will you be?”
“Sad!”
– She states without a flinch, much as a matter of fact.
“And
why so?’
“Because,
if she doesn’t protect me, I will not want to protect her too.”
“Right!
Now, the second rule we’ll break is this. We’ll tie rakhi without bothering
about who that other person ties a rakhi on. Because, no matter what one does,
you must always want to protect them. alright?”
“Okay…
and number three?”
“Let
me see how many rakhis are you making?”
“Five!”
She proudly displays to me the thin ends of wet ribbons that should eventually
look like rakhi bands if the stars put in all their forces together do their
jobs well. But never mind!
“Well,
can you please make some extra few of them?”
“Sure.”
“Very
well!”
“But…”
“So,
here’s the third rule. From this year, we’ll go out in the road and tie rakhi to
unknown people.”
“Why?”
“So
that, well, we protect each other. Those people on the road, and us!”
“But
I won’t know them the next time we meet.”
“Right,
that’s the point. So what we’ll do is, to keep the Rakhi promise, we’ll instead
protect everyone we meet on the road. And slowly, they’ll also start feeling
the same way and then they’ll also stand up for us. And then a day will come
when instead of honking on the road and overtaking each other, we’ll all change
to protecting each other on the road.”
She
gleefully goes back to task, excited to have been given some extra
responsibilities.
Well,
you see… this is quite some extra responsibility, even if she’s too small to
know exactly what they mean. But, you know what? We can take these little extra
responsibilities up this time, perhaps - to protect our sisters, to protect
unconditionally, and to protect even if you do not know them. Especially in
such times, when we all need that extra bit of protection, that extra new
promise, that extra little care…
Can
we not, if we try? If I try, and if you try too…?
Done,
then!
Let’s twist the knots this Rakhi!
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