Showing posts with label Cazador. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cazador. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Rickshaw Number 885


Some of us like to read biographies. Here’s one.

Young Ali was a bright student at school in a sleepy town near Salem. Always among the top three of his class, his favourite subject was Science. His father was a labourer at Salem and he lived in a small house with his mother, three brothers and five sisters. Life was not easy, but he rather enjoyed school.

When he reached ninth grade, his father commanded him to back out of school and begin to earn. Ali was extremely put out, but did as he was bidden to. He joined a mechanic’s shop as an apprentice and began to learn how to fix cars. The owner shortly had a nasty run-in with the police, and Ali got frustrated with the whole set-up. He ran away to Salem and from then on to a place called Byculla in Bombay, the City of Dreams. It was 1971.

Bombay was large beyond his dreams. For nearly ten days he roamed hungry in the by-lanes of Byculla, until he was picked up by the police. He spent the next one month in the lock-up, not daring to believe his luck that he would actually get a meal every day in there. He preferred this life to life out on the streets. Soon, he was called up to the bada sahib, for questioning. When it was learnt that he was merely a runaway from Salem, the sahib released him from prison with a warning to not get involved in illegal activities in Bombay.

Hungry and alone again, Ali made his slow way north and reached a place called Mulund. A cycle-repair shop took him in to fill tires with air for a meager sum of eight annas a day. It was enough to buy him a vada pao and tea. He was bright, worked hard and was talkative and polite to customers. Within three days, his seth raised his salary to two rupees a day. Ali continued with his old diet of a vada pao and tea every day. Saving became a habit by default. By the end of the month, he was earning a princely sum of fifteen rupees a day. He worked at the cycle shop until 1987, and then flew to Saudi Arabia in search of a job. In the meantime, he had got married to an orphan girl in Mulund. He worked in Saudi for five years as head mechanic in a factory, returning home once every year during the holy month of Ramzan.

Tiring of life away from his now-growing children, Ali returned to Bombay and started driving an auto-rickshaw for a living. He carried on until 1997 and his thirst for adventure was rekindled. He made his way to Rome and from there to Egypt, all the while working as a mechanic. From Egypt, he went to Libya. He was an efficient and hard worker and Libya treated him very well. In 2002, he got home-sick and decided to visit India once again. He missed his flight back to Bombay, and was told that his visa had expired and was not renewable since he was over fifty years of age. Ultimately, he managed to make his way back to Bombay, but now he was tired. He brought out the old rickshaw again and has been riding ever since.

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The man is Mohammad Ali Shaikh, the 61-year old driver of auto-rickshaw number 885 from Mulund (as he made me note, for future reference). This was his story, which he narrated over a journey from Powai to Mulund one rainy afternoon last week.

His oldest son completed his MCA last year. He works for a monthly salary of 40,000 rupees in an Indian firm in Andheri. His youngest son, Mohammad Idris (named after the King of Libya, Gaddafi’s predecessor), is now in the ninth grade. Idris is a bright student, scoring “ninety-five-ninety-eight” marks in mathematics and science. Here is one ninth grader who is going to continue his education for sure.

Ali is a born story-teller, with expressions and voice modulation to suit (with a very faint Tamil overtone to his pucca Bombay accent, interspersed with chaste English). Yet his eyes remained on the road and his rear-view mirror (Mumbaikars will appreciate how rare this is), as he explains at the Powai signal, that he didn’t switch lanes then, because the traffic police would have booked him for what he called a “blind cut”. In one breath, he expresses bitterness that he couldn’t study enough and then proceeds to explain that he had been to Libya (“L-I-B-Y-A”, he spells out. “No, no… not in Africa. Africa is a continent. That’s different.”). He points out that he is older than he looks (“I have dyed my hair black, you know!”) and still going strong as a man ten years younger because he has lived an honest, hard-working life.

In another four months, Ali will retire from driving the auto-rickshaw and return to his home-town near Salem. Life will come full circle for him.

He explains that honesty and hard work are important.
Stay away from addictions, he advises.
Above all, he says, education is most important. Don’t ever forget that, he says. Study well, he says.

Monday, April 1, 2013

Feel Aa Gayi Yaar! - My learnings from creating music


Jamming, (amateur) composing, music arrangement and band management… The past few months of my life have probably been the most music-packed ever.
I got involved in various musical activities: my home-band at IITB - The Falling Bass, Hostel 10’s immensely talented all-girl bands Udaan and Ten on Ten, the Surbahaar team, Thane's Sanskriti Academy’s annual programme Aarohan and numerous jams with enthusiastic musical friends.

Making music has become such an important part of life that I can’t remember a single day in the last six months when I haven’t sat down with some musical instrument and played something, alone or with someone else. As a result, I have gained new comfort levels with not just the guitar, but also the bass guitar, keys, congas, drums and even (just a little bit) the flute.

Growing musically is one thing. Apart from just that, I've changed as a person, built beautiful new friendships, enhanced old friendships and learnt a lot about people. Most of all, I've learnt about myself.

In general, here are some thoughts and learnings:
  • Two’s company, three’s a crowd, four’s the way to go! (Somehow four is an optimal number of people to jam at the same time in terms of enjoyment and creative license. I've also done ten to thirty musicians at once. More often than not, it ends up as not music but cacophony. My personal favourite is two though… just another musician and I. It’s the easiest way to build a friendship that you will never forget).
  • It's impossible to completely understand a musical instrument. Every time you think you've got it nailed, it reveals a new exciting capability to voice your music. Physics at work!
  • Awesome equipment is different from awesome music.
  • Drummers get bored and ignored all the while. Poor souls.
  • Bassists are the most understated members of a band.
  • Bass solos sound great!
  • Most musicians need to learn to keep time; in their songs and in their punctuality.
  • It’s important to learn to be a performer, not just a musician.
  • Practise alone as often as you can. It’s the fastest way to improve upon yourself.
  • Open your mind while you jam. You’ll learn lots about people.
  • Preach music. Really, it should be made a religion.
  • Don’t forget your teacher/mentor/guru! No matter how much you believe you might have accomplished musically, your teacher will always show you how much further you still have to go.
  • The three F’s of creating music – Fun, Friendship and Feel. Drop any one of the three, and the whole point of creating music is lost.

My musical (and non-musical) readers... Any more thoughts and observations?

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

The Wake-up Call



The story of every morning...

Is it time to wake up already?
Was that the alarm ringing?

Or am I dreaming that it is ringing?
Maybe... Should I put it into snooze mode yet again?

How many more seconds of sleep can I steal?
How much more can I put off the inevitable day?

So many thoughts, so little consciousness, even lesser time till the next snooze alarm.

The alarm to write is ringing.

Is it too late?
Thank goodness for blogs.

(This post is loosely based on a nagging itch to write that I developed recently. Hopefully this blog won't be all that silent any more...)

Monday, February 25, 2008

El Buscador to Earth : Beginning Transmission...

To use, a done-to-death cliche, Welcome to my blog peeps.

After ages of lazy contemplation and eons of putting-off, interspersed with exam-interference and bouts of writer's block, that exalted day of release of my blog has come. Finally.

For those curious about the name and rightly so, El Buscador quite literally means " The Seeker" or "The Searcher" or "The Search Engine" or whatever you may... Basically personifies my character - always seeking something, be it a higher meaning to life, a new scientific concept, the truth about Atif, a name for this blog, my favourite pair of fuzzy socks, a long-lost interest in Math, that evasive scrap of memory of where i stowed my reminder list for tomorrow, need I continue?
Just for the record, this blog might have just as easily been called El Cazador which is the Spanish title for my best pal Orion the Hunter, but that would've sounded too Amazon Warrior-esque. Had even considered No Hay Igual, literally meaning "There is no equal", wrenched from one of the paciest and raciest (सलाम to those who thought I was talking of the Apartheid there) Spanish songs I've heard, by Nelly Furtado.
And of course all this stems from my new latest fixation with Spanish lingo and everything allied.

To tell you the truth, unfortunate reader of all this zilch, I don't get the point of writing and maintaining a blog as everybody else sees it. As in, why in the wide wide world, would YOU want to know what's going on in my mind and brain. It is, after all, to be rather blunt, none of your effing business (cheers to Ronald Weasley for having taught me this unique way of replacing bleeps). Well, why then, have I so enthusiastically taken up this project? Hmm... Good question. The thing is, I'm like one of those gems that has myriad faces (faces, spelt without an 'e'). And the face of that gem which calls itself a writer has threatened to sue if I ever let it rot like I was forced to in the name of the academic rat race all these years.

Anyway, here I am, boring you, boring the world in general, creating large amounts of entropy in the Universe (all hail Stephen Hawking).

So I think I'll stop for now, this is El Buscador signing off. Check back soon.

P.S. Pretty good start, dontcha think? It's ok, you don't need to give me a standing ovation...