Wednesday, February 7, 2018

some more poems from 'Empathy As Life'

DISCOVERY

Man lives for   a century
spews out endless  hatred
Revenge, death and destruction
Animals live for a short span
And kill only for survival  
If   the poet   seeks loneliness
From nasty and brutish  world
It’s not misanthropy 
It’s to de-stress from other humans
When  he  finds  his  meditation
Disturbed by canine love
 He  also discovers divine love.
***





Tears of Valmiki

The First poet
Wrote tears
Of a bird killed
 And cursed the hunter
Forgetting briefly
The pangs of hunger
Of the hunter
What people agree to 
A poet asks, “what if.. ?”





Word is courage

Write for   truth
 Of merit mangled
The thumb of Ekalavya  demanded
By  a teacher who never taught him
The head of Sambuka  rolled
By the Lord
For   an  ancient varnashrama  dharma
  Devouring     justice
 Today also artists  are punished
For questioning the questionable
They are expected  to  protect  
 peace
Of the burial ground.
---



Silence is..
Not partial agreement
But full concord
To perpetuate the evil
To propitiate the devil
If you talk of injustice
You are marked as an ultra
If you write of injustice
You are irresponsible
If you hurt their sentiment
You are sure to regret
If you get killed
It’s what you asked for! 
---



Healing

Life is a conflict
Between itself and death
War  a wound
Made by  the trade and ambition
Love  a balm
Prescribed by the pious and prophets
 To save the soul of  life     
Does anyone  kiss the edge of the blade
In lieu of  darling’s  lips ?
How long   peace  a   daydream of the brave
Or  a  nightmare of the Knave ?



In Memory of Tony

When it was alive and  accosting me
I escaped it slyly
Out of probable embarrassment
And professional inconvenience
When it was gone
I wanted it to follow me
My heart looked at empty space
Where it could have been awaiting  
My heart felt twisted 
To find its invisible form
Such a gentle soul
Despite its ferocious face
I long to see it again
When form disappears
What remains?
A memory tender
A   tear dry.


                                
                                                  
                                   
                                   Teacher of empathy 

Learn from dog
Love absolute
For a few morsels or biscuits
It sees you as a demigod
It tells of its hunger
By catching your hand
In  a way gentle and  unique
It knocks the door
Like a friend
Like a  child
Like a guest
Like a man
Who  needs  a lesson
From faith incarnate.
        ***




VIRTUE OF IDEALISM

Many dismiss souls
Except for humans
For convenience sake  
I think  otherwise
Since I don’t justify
Hierarchy of life
I believe not in  ghosts but  in  value of life
Which evolves painfully   
When energy forms vanish
 Memories engulf us  
Make us  thoughtful
Dreaming of divinity 
We grow imperceptibly
Tears nurture 
A sapling of insight    
  Often scorned  as sentiment.
***






Monday, February 5, 2018

Memories of Life at Silver jubilee Govt. College


                                                           
After I came  out of Sagar college, I went back to my village  and suffered from extreme isolation. I felt dejected and continued in  that state for quite some time. I began writing letters to some of my friends  and their reply letters did something to assuage my loneliness.   Meanwhile the entrance examination for Silver jubilee college was announced. I applied for the entrance test which I wrote in Guntur and there I could meet some of my Sagar friends . After we had taken our examination, we went to hotel ‘Sankar  Vilas’ and took our lunch. At that time’ janata’ meal for two rupees had been introduced. But the general impression was that the hoteliers would sprinkle lime water to prevent  the customers from eating their bellyful.  Then my classmate Murali Krishna, other friends    and myself went to Police guest house in which Murali had been staying . After resting there fro awhile we went back to our respective places.
After getting  qualified  in the entrance examination my pedananna and I went to  Kurnool in a bus. We went to the Silver jubille college hostel  and there to Hari babu ’s room. After admission process was over,  my  Pedananna went back. Ragging was common in those days and it was not as serious except occasionally  as in the present days. It went on for a while and once the fresher’s day had been over, both the seniors and juniors  mingled with one another freely in a friendly manner. While in Sagar there had not been much interaction been seniors and juniors, it was different in Kurnool.       
There the academic ambiance was bright and students vied with  one another to excel in academics.  For a few days after joining the college my class mates and myself  ,missed our lunch in the hostel and went outside  to escape the rigours of ragging. But this was for a period only and later on everything went well and we pursued academics seriously.
In silver jubilee college, the students  experienced  relatively better freedom. There the  students were in impressionable age and meritorious  teachers recruited from various parts of the state imparted education in a committed manner.  Though I joined in bachelor of   commerce e  course there, the impact of language lecturers shad been more on me. Somehow I developed aversion to commerce and in face I originally applied for  joining B.A. Course.  Before applying I had to choose in my mind my future profession and I compared IAS and  Chartered accountancy  course and wrote examination for Commerce. After my first semester in which I came first, I lost my academic interest in commerce and became disturbed. But my interest in languages somehow  exercised benevolent influence on my mind and somehow I persisted with commerce till I took final examination in the final year of graduation. The library there also made my stay endurable and I developed a sound interest in reading books which persisted   with me throughout my life. This had also made me  rather  impractical in my real life about which I nurtured  a few regrets occasionally. But on the whole it can be said , I lived as I wanted with the help of books and I owe to them a lot in terms of spending my time vocationally and  as an avocation.



                                                            ***
Although  I started reading avidly in the college some influential books , the teachers also influenced me a lot. Some of the books which impressed me deeply were Bertrand Russell’s  The conquest of Happiness ,Sri  Sri ‘s collected works , Jack London’ s  Iron Heel ,  Gorky’s  Mother , Dostoevsky's Brothers Karamazov,  John Red’s Ten Days  That  Shook the World , Mulk Raj Anand’s Untouchable  and  many others . By the time I finished my graduation, I had read sixty books in English and many more  in Telugu. While I was awaiting to meet an ophthalmologist, I recollected all these books and felt happy. But still I couldn’t free myself from some sense of inadequacy either then or  even now. This sense of incompleteness drove me hard to read more and more.
 At Kurnool , my friends and I used to go to the temple called Birla Mandir occasionally. But gradually my visits became leas and less under the impact of Russell and also troubled feelings , I was bereft of goals and lived  with abstract thoughts in my mind. I floated on the ideas and  felt disconnected with practical life. I had also premonition that I would one day become revolutionary and live alone in a poor hut. Later when I had actually pursued revolutionary politics , I had some vague guess that  I would become a lecturer some day in future  and teach well with my knowledge and experience. This vague visualization had been there and it surprised me  when at last I passed through turbulent period and eventually ended up as  a lecturer.  I didn’t have any clue how it would happen  but it happened  at last and with much anguish, uncertainty and  trials and tribulations. I now feel that I should claim no credit for this but some benign force guided my life without  damaging me irreparably. It could have turned out quite differently but some how I trudged along my path with self-searing doubts and self-searching nights and days.
In Silver jubilee college  our English Head of the department  Sri  Rama Sharma used to offer rationality,   Sri Bhasha’s critical exposition , Sri Dowla’ sincerity, Sri  Subramaynam’s   beautiful rendering of poetry, Sri MK Ramakrishnan’s eloquent and enthralling   lectures on Shakespeare profoundly turned my mind away from commerce once and  for all. They developed our critical thinking and literary sensibility a great deal.
In Telugu Sri Appajodu and Sachidanad were our teachers and they taught language in a  committed and powerful way.  In those times Teachers were proficient in both Telugu and English. I also remember that in the mock parliament Sri Appajodu spoke in a stentorian voice in English.
When it came to commerce, Sri Ramamurthy who taught us Mercantile Law, Prayaga Rao who taught us accountancy , Sri Viswanadham who taught commercial geography , Sri  Krishnaiah  who talked harshly outside  but kind inside and many other teachers moulded the personality of the students.
We also used to go to a lending library in the B camp and every evening and borrowed novels of Ravi Sastry, Ranganayakamma, Yendamuri  at the rate of fifty paise per day. The same culture of lending library also nourished me a lot in Rajahmundry after my graduation and before I joined post graduation..  


                                                            ***
While in Kurnool I remember my slow transformation into a person with leanings towards Socialism. There a few strikes also took place as a result of students’ demands for increase of stipend and removal of semester system which put high pressure on students leaving little room for preparation for competitive examinations. The cramming dented students’ creativity and memory played a big role in getting marks.  As a result students went on strike and fast. This caused some anguish to lecturers and the principal who suspended  a few students. After initial fear on the part of the students, the situation deteriorated and led to another strike which saw the revoking of the rustication of the students. One negative result of the change into year end pattern of exam became visible with some students dropping year end examinations and scoring less marks than earlier. Later one of my juniors whom happened to meet me while was doing MA in university found fault with us for depriving them of marks. I replied that had been done to give more time to prepare for competitive examinations and read general books. I saw two strikes in Sagar and two in Kurnool and these could also be attribiuted to the general tendency of the students of my generation who rebelled against what thee saw as real or imaginary problems.  There were also some petty quarrels among students which spread negative air and polluted academic ambiance to an extent. 
We also started a manuscript magazine called ‘young intellectual’  and a group of twenty students actively participated in contributing to it regularly and helping in various ways. In this I should mention Krishna Rao, Patnaik, Venkateswarlu, Lakshmi Kanta Reddy, Dasari, Davuluri, Haq and many others who came together due to their like-mindedness and zeal for doing something new. The annual Magazine got appreciation from Sri Ramakrishnan who by that time, I remember, became commissioner of     Higher education.
There once we also saw  Smt. Indira Gandhi passing by our hostel during her election campaign. On another occasion we went to the town to see the stalwarts of  the Janata Party who came for a meeting. Somehow I felt myself favourable to the  Janata party  and developed dislike or dynastic politics of Mrs. Gandhi. Our principal Ramakrishnan was an Anglophile and  declared holiday  at the death of  Mountbatten rather than  that of Jaya Prakash Narayan which surprised us. One tragic fact of his life was that he had a child who was mentally challenged and we always cherish Sri Rama Krishnan's  memory   as one who spoke excellently and didn’t mind coming to functions in his Tennis attire. Time and tide wait for none and on the last day of taking my TC on the last day of my examination, I felt a bit dejected and disturbed while coming back to hostel after giving send off to some of my friends.

                                                                      ***
Silver jubilee college was established to promote academic excellence in  1972 to commemorate twenty fifth anniversary of Indian independence. Although students excelled in academics career  counseling  was weak and as a consequence, many meritorious students also remained in the backwaters.  There  is also the other side of the coin. Being competitive many entered civil service and made their mark in their respective fields. Sri IV Krishna Rao, the former chief  secretary of Andhra,  Venkateswara Rao joined civil service.  I didn’t know much about first  person individually although his two brothers Srikar and Jayakar were our playmates and their family lived for a while in  a street called Mayabazar in  Kandukur, Prakasam district . About Venkateswara Rao I came to know in newspapers that he  died in Afghanistan in the car bomb blast  by the terrorists . Sri  Venkateswara Rao had been my junior and nurtured the goal of becoming  an IAS officer from  his first year of graduation. Notwithstanding the  ridicule by others, he worked hard and realized his cherished  goal by joining the  IFS and his sudden death came as a shock when I read about in a newspaper. We also were members of a team which won the second prize in a quiz competition held in the college. It’s really painful when we think of sudden exit of those promising  people who  would have done much more service to the nation.   As a Telugu proverb goes, “No one knows the arrival of rains or  loss  of life.”
 Once I had a dream in which I found myself walking on a lonely road in the night  and I couldn’t identify the  place. Later I realized that it was a road leading to my hostel and the subconscious impression came forth after decades. After this dream, it so happened that I could visit Kurnool at the invitation of my friend Sarat Babu as an alumnus of the college and a member of Board of Studies.
A second time also the same thing happened and I went to visit Sarat who met with a serious accident and was recuperating  and I could visit my alma mater second time. The dreams still haunt me and even in dreams I struggle hard to identify the corridors or hostels in which I  spent the most in impressionable years of my life. I write all these things to derive home my point that the memories of Silver Jubilee college are permanently etched on the minds of it students. I earnestly wish that it would revive its glory in future in spite of globalization and the consequent negligence of the government colleges  by the government.  I believe it still attracts the meritorious students who are without means but full of energy to excel in their studies. It remains a vague dream  but like a russet sky on an evening when one of my seniors asked me to utter a poem and I couldn’t do so to my satisfaction. It was also the place where I watched Sri Sri giving a wonderful speech for forty five minutes enthralling the entire student community.

                                                              ***
People all over the world   celebrate the arrival of new year in an exuberant mood. Do they also celebrate their memories of the yester years? We are often  partial towards our future and experience a sort of fatigue when we commemorate the bygone years.
When Sri Sri spoke in our college, singing in his own voice in celebration of revolutionaries  and exhorted the youth not to accept a ban on a film ‘Red jasmine’ ( Erra Malleleu) his words struck a chord in my heart.  I believe that  all the other students might also have been  exhilarated to an extent or other by watching him in person and listening to his inspiring words.
 I also met one short story writer and translator Ramachandra Murthy at the behest of  my friend Sarat babu and another poet  Pemmaraju who came to our hostel and talked about poetry and introduced Gaddar’s song to some of us. Now I can appreciate some   of these people who took pains to come to our hostel all the way with a genuine interest  in discussing  literature and introduced new names and opened new vistas.  
We also had such a good library there in Silver jubilee college  where we were allowed free access to books  arranged on racks carefully  and  the bookcases were lined up suggesting abundance for students starving for reading material. Many students used to take enormous pleasure in reading fiction and nonfiction, Writers like Huxley, Russell, Irving Wallace.  Mulk Raj Anand, Narayan,  Freud, Erik Berne and many others were  read with passion by students who   brought equal passion to bear on  languages and  core subjects.
There used to be journals like CSR, Times , Newsweek, India Today which helped  quench the thirst for the awareness of the current affairs and broaden mental horizons of the students. Cricket was also another passion as it is now and a game in which people of all sporting  calibers indulged in. Annual and sports  functions were held and used to generate a  lot of enthusiasm. On the hostel day, while all the students were feasting,   some destitute children with unkempt hair, and black bodies used to wait the  gates of the hostel. We were unmindful of their but now the very image  comes   to  me vividly causing some pain and shame--   how we could go on with revelry while they  had  probably been  starving and awaiting to be given some food.
Another image that comes to my mind was that one day I was coming back to hostel after watching a film in a theatre. At that time Ramizabi case in which a woman had been raped by the police and her husband died due to police beatings in the custody in Hyderabad   hit the headlines.  While I had been returning a I saw a woman in rickshaw and  two policemen inquiring the rickshaw puller and her harshly and asking them to come to the police  station. Soon a crowd gathered and one or two young men began questioning the motives of the police who had to retreat in the end muttering some curses under their breath. This image made me realize the vulnerability of woman and some negativity towards the police.

                                                             ***
We used to have one lecturer with phenomenal memory  who taught us mercantile law. He used to give lengthy sentences in legal parlance and on seeing students’ faces, “Didn’t understand? Emappa” and repeated  all sentences with  an equal gusto.
Another teacher Prayaga Rao who taught us accountancy was very cordial and polite with the students. Every day he used to solve two problems on the board. Though we learnt practically, we couldn’t get hold of fundamentals. But still we liked his teaching.
Viswnatham who taught us Commercial geography was a bit nervous but he taught seriously and sincerely in spite of some of our friend’s playing pranks with him. One day we had a discussion regarding   number of our assignments and grumbled among themselves.  When Viswanadham Sir  came into the  class room, seeking  an opportunity I rose and expressed how ‘herculean’  to  do so many assignments.  He didn’t agree with us but more surprising thing had been that no friend of mine supported what I said. I felt that  I shouldn’t have spoken out.
It’s difficult to understand how teachers make or unmake our educational development and career and the very trajectory our lives  follow.  You have the good fortune  of having  been a taught  by a teacher who inspires you through their lectures, personality and  individual concern.
If I haven’t been good at maths, the credit goes to my  maths teacher at school who taught us at school. Perhaps I was also  not cut out for learning  mathematics. The same weakness continued with regard to accountancy course which I had to take while in Intermediate  and later in my  degree course.
In Silver  Jubilee  Govt. college the majority of teachers had been very much committed to their profession. The really gave their best  in developing the thinking skills of the students, thanks to the then principal Rama Krishnan. One day he brought to our class three lecturers from political Science   department-Sri Seshagiri Rao , Sri  Rahman, and  a lecturer history Sri koti Reddy. who gave us a bird eye view of The history of the world since the first world war to the  present. Ina span of sixty minutes they gave us an impressive panorama of world history. This simple gesture gave us a historical perspective which put us in touch with complex world.  I express my  thanks to Sri Ramakrishnan for introducing and developing our interest in Shakespeare  whose plays  Julius Caesar and Othello  made  long lasting impression on our minds. Later on I went on reading many plays of Shakespeare not withstanding turning away from him  during the phase of political impact on my mind. 
Seshagiri rao once spoke on the emergence and role  of the UNO and in that contest he said, “it is not the failure of the League  of the nations but nations of the League” and the language impressed me a lot and remained unforgettable. Sri Koti Reddy had also been a colleague of my father earlier and in my third year I spoke very angrily on the occasion of hostel day criticizing the  then  principal’s action partially out of genuine anger and partially encouraged by the claps by the students among the audience  who appreciated my boldness. Immediately after the meeting Koti Reddy came and said , “ I know your father. He was very soft . How could you speak so  angrily?” I think I had not said anything  in reply.
In another incident I remember that Sri Appajodu Venkata Subbaiah, another colleague of my father   invited me for lunch as a strike by students had been going on and the mess remained closed. He also encouraged me a lot by publishing one of my poems in the college  magazine which my boosted my confidence. Small gestures, but great turning points invisibly but surely.






Leaves of Memory from life at APRJC, Sagar


                                                                                  
After  I finished my tenth class I joined intermediate in   degrees college in Pedanandiadu. I didn’t stay long  in that village  and fortunately got a seat in Sagar. There I went and joined in CEC in Telugu medium   at the advice of  some person there.   Though I faced no problem academically , the first few days seemed new away from my village and familiar people. All the meritorious students from various places came there together. That experience really lifted me out of my  ‘frog in the well’ mentality and the tough competition raised my energies and raised my spirits. I began studying there and soon adjusted to the new surroundings. For all students who  studied there it was an unforgettable experience.
There I came into touch with literature and some good friends who helped me. One of my friends was one Satya  Venkata Rao with whom I studied right and ninth class in Pedanandipadu. Later on we also studied degree course   in Silver jubilee government degree college.  I also should acknowledge the help of my senior Haribabu whose help was important in joining in Sagar and later  at Kurnool. The model question papers which he sent prior to exam helped me crack the entrance tests conducted statewide. He, being a person who knew me from my childhood  always had remained my well wisher and used to advise me which I disregarded at that time. 
   In  Sagar we used to read a lot, talk a lot and did our best in excelling in our studies. It made a strong impression upon my mind and some of the people with who I came into contact  there remained my life long friends. Although many were friendly, I could not keep up my relation with them due to many reasons such as my political activity in later life, a sort of self-isolation and pursuing my own goals or deviating from them.  Sagar made me identify my linguistic skills and hone them to an extent. The strong foundation by teachers helped me remain good both in Telugu and English.
Sagar  remains  the first and the best impression upon my mindscape. I still remember certain people like Timma Reddy , Krishna Reddy, Venkata Rao, Nagachary, Murali Krishna and many others. We also promised  to meet one another after ten years in the same place . but I could not go there due to my political activity at that time but I happened to see it again during one trip I made as part of the movement against nuclear power reactor which was  supposed to have come up near Sagar. Later on the plan was dropped for some or other reason.
There we used to   visit the school attached to a church on the annual day of the particular school. We were cut off from our parents and native villages and towns but studied well. There were petty jealousies but strong loyalties created an inseparable bond among all the students .
Only one thing that shattered me at the end  that  I scored the least mark in civics in annual examination although I used to top earlier.  When I went to get my TC, some how I felt wretched. Later on I slowly recovered but not completely from that academic disappointment for a long time.


                                                                               
 While I was staying at Sagar, we depended completely on cards and inland letters which is now called ‘snail mail’ to correspond with my family. Once I posted an inland  letter  without writing an address  and waited for money order. After a week one of my batch mates came and handed over that letter to me. When writing about the past, it is difficult to select incidents because one doesn’t understand their  proper significance. Some incidents which seemed   significant at that time now appear trivial whereas so called trifles appear important by hindsight.
 We had taken a photograph of our group at that time. The faces there look innocent and  now after four decades   if I remember it I find  mixed feelings. I came to know that some of my batch mates  such  Gupta, Ramalingeswara Rao  and Chenna Reddy died young  due to ill-health or psychological depression. It is extremely unfortunate that they had gone so early  without realizing promises they and their parents had nurtured for them.
While recapitulating some of the things, it becomes hazy. The universe then seemed closed and compact and we were immune to the turbulence of the external  world. The lack of  adequate communication facilities made us focus only on studies  and remain free from distractions.
Sagar really made me stronger academically, live on my own and certainly moulded my personality to an extent in positive as well as negative  aspects. My reserved nature some times appeared pride to others and caused some strained relations with some of my classmates occasionally. But in general I must give credit to Sagar friend that their treatment had been  cordial and after all we were struggling to gaze into future or at the stars  at that time, hence some jostling was unavoidable.
It has been a truism that students of Sagar always nurture a sort of amity and unity although later life obviously created some inevitable divergence depending on concrete  conditions of their lives and the twists and turns their specific lives have taken. We were like atoms which travelled into the vast universe and   I met some of them later and some never.              
 There also I saw  Divakar who became a revolutionary singer and later died for the cause he believed in. The small world of  residential college  at Sagar produced many people who became academicians, doctors, engineers, bureaucrats , police  officers, writers and even revolutionaries. I do remember many of them only at that age. “Bliss was  in that dawn to be alive/ To be young was very heaven. “