S K Moorthy: In his late 60s, he is still robust having lost none of his verve. He still
travels from one end of the city to the other on buses without the least
exhaustion. He can be accused of many things by different people but none would
contest that he is a colourful character.
He is still lean, the face is
long and narrow, the eyes still retain that youthful sparkle, a long nose, fair
Brahmin complexion, a graying mustache is the only concession to age. He sports
a cap for some relief from the sun; he is too much an outdoor person and needs
all the extra protection. He talks in a hustling manner racing to listener’s
incomprehension while he would all guffaws at his own spiel. I have always
found talking to him to be a “solo” effort; there is no understanding or
connection being made at the other end. That can be very tiring and disappointing
and leaving the speaker flummoxed about the vocal energy being emptied on sand.
Another thing that used to annoy me was those “missed calls”. He always
expected the others to talk to him and spare him the pennies.
S K Moorthy has an individualistic
streak right from the earliest memory. He insisted on being a bachelor and a
devoted Sabarimalai visitor almost every year. He worked in Engine Valves as a
factory man and that has hardened him to a lot of hard labour and a hopelessly
repetitive mind. He has that SC/ST mind of slow comprehension and restricted to
stereotypes. That he lives in some middle-class comforts can be wholly credited
to his wife, Visalam. She saved the pennies, was instrumental in buying land in
the outskirts of the city near the airport, and bringing their sole daughter to
the shore of middle-class comforts.
He stayed with my parents for
a good 5 years after marriage and those were the days when my mother tried
every trick in the book to make him vacate. He was a freeloader in addition to
his wife and a baby and that can pinch any other person. It was only to shake
him off that my father took a transfer to Hyderabad.
S K Moorty was estranged in
the family and it was 20 years later that we caught up with him. The
intervening years were good for him; his daughter was married to a high level
executive, he had his own brick business that gave him ample money and a car
(car is always a symbol of affluence by my family yardstick) and health-wise,
still as sturdy as a buffalo. But he still retained that rustic and hurried
mumbled speech.
Two years back, he came to my
house at Besantnagar and kept visiting so often that we became friends. I was
hopelessly condemned to solitude and I welcome any human being with open arms.
Though we suffered each other’s monologues, we found some amusement in each
other’s company. I must thank him entirely for the Thiruvannamalai and Yercaud
trips.
S K Moorthy loved those blue
film strips and he would demand to see them during each of this visits. I
cherished this man’s visits but they strangely came to an abrupt end for no conceivable
reason. It is a Bermuda mystery to me as to what caused this man to sail so
apart and all of a sudden.
Despite my unemployment, I
bought him a new handset, gifted Rs.3,000 rupees for his Deepavalli
celebrations. He never went without demanding an Rs.100 or Rs.200 but I was
always there to oblige. For a man who would call 5 times a week to be silent
for months is a mystery I cannot attempt.
Post Script (2017): This is one anecdote difficult to
forget. When his grandson Jaidev won the gold belt at the university on
graduation, he said: I was moved to tears.
Inside three generations we have progressed dramatically – I am no
better than a shepherd, Viji was the first graduate and now my grandson wins a
gold medal and makes a speech before 3000 people. Both his grandchildren are in
the United States!
Verdict: Rajas
Lesson to be learnt: Keep such characters in good humour
that you cannot befriend them. But always allow them to set pace and context.
No comments:
Post a Comment