While seminal would be too extreme to
describe the tiny work of a fledgling writer, I will consider this one as the
best poem I have written till date. There is absolutely no hesitation that this
work has been solely inspired by one of the greatest novels written entirely as
Onegin Sonnets – ‘The Golden Gate’ by my favorite poet Vikram Seth. I put
painstaking effort over a month in writing a heavily abridged Onegin poem, and
I realized how tough it would have been for the Mr. Seth to write his magnum
opus. Consisting of 19 sonnets and 266 lines, written in the Iambic Tetrameter
with the rhyme scheme – ABABCCDDEFFEGG, ‘The God Business’ is laced with
attempts to explore various facets of Religion, God and Spirituality which has
been a contentious topic close to my heart for years. For perhaps the only time
till date did I feel a profound sense of pride and achievement of my own
literary output when I finished this poem.
Scarcely knowing where to begin
This writer’s desperate
attempts to avoid
The minutiae
springing forth from the inception of this onegin
May somewhat be
rendered null and void
But he will nevertheless
try to push
Through to the
contents, without beating around the bush
And quickly get
down to brass tacks
By starting to
lay down plain facts
And promote ideas
seemingly tendentious
Bordering on the
lines of blasphemy.
He endangers self
to land in infamy,
However knowingly
employs words ‘licentious’
Wading into
troubled waters, abandoning rectitude
To issue output
with devil-may-care attitude.
One un-fine day,
with heart beset by the weight of its sorrows
Plentiful, heavy,
bedeviled and unable to cope
Any more with the
outrageous hurling of slings and arrows
And convulsed in
the throes awaiting new-born hope,
I decided to
confront the creator once and for all
And release a
fresh tranche of clarion call
Or in softer
terms to seek succour
And exhort divine
intervention into my cri de Coeur.
I also sought the
comfort
Of my wife who was
convinced
And whose voice
and tone evinced,
That the solution
required an effort
To not stop with
just verbiage
But to embark on
a holy pilgrimage
Not entirely
convinced of its purported efficacy
Nonetheless
yielding to glib persuasion,
And in order to
conceal any signs of apostasy
I earmarked a
weekend for the exertion.
On the evening of
Friday, the thirteenth of April
Plucking up
reserves of patience and will,
I departed for
the temple town
By train, shortly
after sundown,
In a compartment pullulated
By rambunctious
devotees
Who ensured not a
moment’s peace
As nook and
corner was populated,
By swarms of
human fervor in locomotion
Putting me
through the sufferance of unabated commotion
After a night of
disturbed sleep
A night that
never seemed to end
Fruitlessly spent
counting sheep
We eventually
arrived at journey’s end.
As the sun arose
from it’s slumber
To herald another
day of a blistering Indian Summer.
I packed bag and
disembarked
And made way to
the autos parked.
The milling
passengers were welcomed by masters of hustle
The obstreperous Autowallahs
and their gheraoing tactics, sans finesse.
As the human
hyenas scented quick business
One chap ensnared
me after a lengthy tussle
And fished me out
of the unruly gaggle
And I was soon
ensconced in the backseat ready for the dreaded haggle.
Commenced the
unpleasant exchange.
“So how much to
hotel Four Seasons?”
“300 sir”. “300!
Shocking! Is that the usual range?”
“Yes sir, it is,
and not without reasons -
This is festival
time, and we shuttle
You back and
forth, without rest” adding a subtle
Bite, before
resuming – “We need to pay bribes
And kickbacks to
the police tribes”
“But, G-map says
it’s just three miles, look I don’t intend to bargain....”
“Sir! I am sorry
to interrupt! - You spend thousands on travel
Poojas and Aarthis.
And on the move, newer expenses unravel
Themselves
costing you a fortune that you never complain
Considering all
that, this amount is pretty smallish
Please don’t be
penny wise pound foolish.”
With energy
levels plummeting,
Signalling, I was
low on carbs
And sensing no
point further fretting
I stopped trading
barbs.
As the auto began
winding its way
I sat back and
tried to survey
The environs of
the famed town,
Cocking a worm’s
eye view of the temple tower, jewel in its crown.
Entry into the
famed town was welcomed by an arched vault
We snaked through
roads that wore a festive look
Grandly bedecked,
offering a promising outlook
And reached
destination, as the chap ground to a halt
“Enjoy sir, hope
you like our town and its culture!”
On this note,
pocketing the money, departed the human vulture.
The next couple
of hours were consumed
Prepping for the
long day ahead.
After a
refreshing bath, traditionally attired and perfumed,
Brunched in the attached
restaurant, feeling well-fed
I tooled off
towards the temple
The routine was
set, plain and simple.
I brushed aside
the hollering autowallahs not to be budged
The full distance
of three miles I trudged
Along drinking in
the city’s traditions and mores
Lively deity
processions middling the road, sided by coloured shops
Snack stalls and
caparisoned pandals supported by props
And devotees
thronging the streets in scores
Squeezing through
humans and bovine
Creatures, psycho-geographing
all the way to the shrine.
After an hour and
two quarters
Having traipsed
under the blazing rays
I finally sighted
the temple at close quarters.
Summoning up
reserves, and quickening my pace
I landed up in
front of the temple, drenched top to toe
And took out a
kerchief to mop the brow.
I made way to the
ticket counter
To witness a
massive queue flounder
At the very end
of the human column
Where the queue
diverged into three.
‘Regular Rs. 50,
Special Rs. 100 and Rs. 250 for VIP Entry’
Blared the
‘Darshan’ rates on a flex board, solemn
Reminder of truth
that even God in his elevated stature
Was rendered a mere
commercial caricature.
As the queue
meandered with the pace of a snail
I spent the
interim contemplating
On the best
option to avail
And made no
concrete decision until the end of waiting.
Caught between
cost and convenience
I tried to draw
from previous experience.
True, Rs. 250 was
mightily exorbitant
But the Darshan
would complete in an instant.
On the other hand
the first choice
Was also
attractive, a pittance
Of an amount, but
entailed bearing the waiting distance.
So I nailed ‘Option
Two, deciding to strike equipoise
Taking the middle
ground, when such dilemmas ensue
Also seems the alternative,
most sound to pursue.
So seizing the
middle ticket
I set foot inside
the temple compound
I thought I was
on a steady wicket
New fixtures
ahead penciled abound
I was dazed at
the architecture magnifique
Wide-eyed, gaping
jaws, welted with mystique
At the Stunning edifices
and statues, sculpted with passionate geometry
And neatly laid pavilions,
flanked by structures in flawless symmetry
I couldn’t help
but marvel
At the greatness
of my ancestry
An age where true
greatness prevailed minus the sophistry
The architectonic
wonder alone was worth the travel
As I peregrinated
the super acres of the courtyard
And sat marveling
on the greensward.
Impelled to the
spot by the piece de resistance
I sat unflappably
ignoring passage of time
What eventually
returned me to my cognizance
Was the temple
tower bell’s plangent chime.
I approached a
man, dark, sweaty and swarthy
“Excuse me sir,
How do I go to the evening Aarthi?”
“Have you bought
the Aarthi token”
Token? Flashing
the ticket, I rebuked, “I thought..”.. I had barely spoken
“For the Aarthi,
you need to obtain
He chipped in – “Another
token to validate
Your entrance
into the main gate
So hurry along
fast only 10 minutes remain”
So I hurried
along quickening my pace
To acquire my
next proof of purchase
Shelling out
another atrocious Two hundred bucks
Again paraded in
the name of the Godhead
I immersed myself
again into the teeming influx
Of devotees,
which began to come to a head
After a good
ninety minutes, I reached the Sanctum Sanctorum
Whose air totally
devoided any decorum
A crowd had
gathered at the center of a kerfuffle
I rubbernecked to
ascertain what caused the scuffle
The arrival of a
priest had caused the clash
Between two queueing
devotees, standing cheek by jowl
One stubbed his
toe against the other, resulting in a howl
In the process of
securing the sacred ash
After quick unruly
exchanges, interest gradually waned
Amongst the heads
that had inquisitively craned.
In a country
which is unwilling to spare
Even smallest
tiffs which snowball into riots
Such temperate
resolutions are refreshingly rare
I silently thanked
my two compatriots
Even if I knew it
was more out of sacrilege
And fear of the
divine, that usage
Of words and
actions more profane
Were retracted in
fear of inviting the bane
I propped up
against the rails of the altar
Once the
adornment of God was complete
With milk, ghee,
honey and bananas replete
I would at last
see God himself without any falter
And hopefully
feel at ease
And my problems
would cease
The next few
tense revolutions
Of the largest
hands in the clock
Saw God’s
children waiting for their absolution.
Rammed to each
other chock-a-block
The prized wait
ended moments later
As God’s
sacerdotal mediator
Threw open the
screen to full vision
And triggered a
human explosion.
The crowd plunged
into pell-mell
To catch fleeting
glimpses of the deity
Oxymoronically
everything in the process amounted to impiety.
Morbid human
masses began to jostle, thwack, and yell
Cannoning onto
each other, bellowing many a foul-mouthed sound-byte
In a primordial
attempt to throw themselves into God’s line of sight.
The penultimate
portion of the process was over
The screen closed
again signaling an intermediary buffer
With messianic
zeal, the mob continued to spill over
The last step
would prove to be even tougher
To my own
surprise, I proved to be no pushover
Despite
completing the divine sighting, I continued to hover
Instead of
beating a hasty retreat
Through the side
exit, I decided to linger in the heat.
In 5 minutes, a
rotund priest lumbered in, all authority
As a posse of security
guards herded the rabid swarm
Of men, to have
one quick tryst, to fob off their charm
To God himself in
close proximity
So, I trundled along
with the rank and file
As we were
shepherded through the turnstile.
If I had thought
I had already seen the worst
Make no mistake,
I was proven wrong
As the simmering
pilgrim bubble yet again burst
And I was
squashed yet again in the throng.
Able-bodied men tried
to bore through
Unsuccessfully,
instead sticking to each other like glue.
As we neared the
idol, almost every member of the wrestling
Gang further hastened
by the guard’s incessant whistling
Caved in before
God in an act of spontaneity.
As the guards
mercilessly pulled and smacked
The recalcitrant
few who refused to exit, were dragged and whacked
Out, as attempts
to secure extra seconds of divine eye contact, the ultimate quest
Made all the
difference in this miserable spiritual contest.
The Sanctum Sanctorum reverberated with holy cries
In praise of the
lord with effusive unction,
While the
security guards under his watchful eyes
Defenestrated us
without compunction.
I staggered out,
my juices sucked out, low and shriveled,
Rattled, shaken and
disheveled
But relieved to
be out of the mess and freed
And not have
succumbed to a stampede.
Without any
further delay
I saluted the
monument and exited.
I didn’t mind if
my visit was unrequited
But I was slowly convinced
I didn’t need a show of parley
With God to prove
my devotion and fealty
My first step
towards understanding the reality.
Cut to 36 hours
later
I was back home, seated
in my Pooja room
In front of the
Supreme Being, my creator
The working week,
about to resume.
There were no
signs of taedium vitae
To the gravest
problems I knew, there was hope, a way
A new power
surged through my veins, the power of life
The power to take
over the reins and overcome any strife.
I still had to
take care of one pending matter
The matter of
God, our business was unfinished
Now was the
moment to seize, before it diminished
The rest could
wait, I could choose not to cater.
I wished to ratiocinate,
totally impervious
To temptations of
visceral bias.
The business of
God abounds with confusion
After
orchestrating one deeply profound introspection
I had formed my
conclusion
After subjecting
God to this imperative vivisection
I needed no chants,
no book, or ritualistic channels,
No pilgrimages, no
sacred ashes or panels
Of priestly
intercessions in commercialized edifices.
I needed only God
(free of cost) his ubiquitous presence alone suffices.
The ultimate
truth which had belied
For years
revealed itself - The place
I had to look for
solace
When needed was
deep down inside
For that is the holiest
abode where God resides
The truest temple is in the heart from where he presides.
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