All photos in this post are with my relatives and friends clicked during my 2017 visit to Bombay

In 2017, I went to India for the third time since I immigrated to Canada. Unlike the previous occasions, when Mahrukh and Che accompanied me, I was alone. Durga joined me a little later because she wasn’t sure her 55-year-old son could take care of himself.
I've lived a lifetime in Bombay - 46 years to be precise -
and I thought I've had enough when I decided to abandon it for Toronto in 2008.
I've yearned for it almost constantly during the last decade that I've made
Toronto my home. Every time I've returned for a brief visit, I've felt
besieged, assaulted by the unending chaos that the city has always been. But
I've always wanted to return, and have been sad that I couldn't return sooner
and more frequently.
In 2017, for the first time, as I bid farewell to my home
and return to another home, I felt relieved, happy to be back with Mahrukh and
Che. In the last nine years, Bombay had changed, and so had I. My city and its
people, while familiar, were less relevant to my life. To my friends, I was a
person from their past. They had to extract time from their present to
reacquaint themselves with their past.
That didn’t just require an adjustment
of their calendar, it required a mental adjustment that wasn’t always easy.


On every trip that I have made to Bombay, I remember Salman
Rushdie’s essay Imaginary Homelands (in Imaginary homelands, Essays and
Criticism 1981-1991, published in 1992). Although he is describing the angst of
a writer, its every Indian in the diaspora’s emotion when returning home.
Rushdie observes, “Writers in my position, exiles or
emigrants or expatriates are haunted by some sense of loss, some urge to reclaim,
to look back, even at the risk of being mutated into pillars of salt. But if we
do look back, we must also do so in the knowledge – which gives rise to
profound uncertainties – that our physical alienation from India almost
inevitably means that we will not be capable of reclaiming precisely the thing
that was lost; that we will, in short, create fictions, not actual cities or
villages, but invisible ones, imaginary homelands, Indias of the mind.”
O—O—O—O—O—O—O—O
Creativity is subjective and it constantly changes. In 2017,
I was fortunate to see creativity at its peak in diverse fields – theatre,
arts, cinema, literature. In retrospect, I realise that 2017 was the last year
when I was able to actively take part (always as a member of the audience) in such
creative endeavours. My kidney disorder began to impede in my desire to be
everywhere. Although there were no physical manifestations of my illness; it
sure was mentally debilitating.
One the most awe-inspiring art performances was ‘Breaking
the Waves’ by Daisuke Takeya, the -Canadian artist of Japanese descent that my
friend Yoko Morgenstern introduced me on one of her visits to Toronto. I
interviewed Daisuke on my show on TAG TV (it was one of the last interviews
that I did).

To read about Daisuke’s exhibition, click here: Breaking
the Waves.


Shakespeare in the Park began in New York more than six
decades ago. Since we came to Toronto and I learnt that Toronto had its own
version of community theatre experience, I was keen to experience it firsthand.
However, circumstances prioritize life, and we couldn’t find time to go to Toronto’s
High Park to see a Shakespeare play. Finally, after determination and planning,
I managed to reserve tickets for King Lear (actually, Queen Lear; read about it
here: Shakespeare
in the Park). I was pleasantly surprised to see my friend Joyce Wayne’s
daughter Hannah was enacting the role of one of the daughters – Regan.


O—O—O—O—O—O—O—O

No comments:
Post a Comment