Goanet Reader: We Are Mightier Than Death (By Ravindra Kelekar, translated
by Augusto Pinto)

On Monday 24 th September 2007 Augusto Pinto had posted this beautiful
translation. It is most appropriate as state of Goa is mourning Kelekar's
death...thanks Augustobab

I take liberty to post it again considering the fact that Ravindrabab is no
moreā€¦it sums up "TATO's philosophy and his stoic, sthithpradnya attitude
towards life, death,  everything....


We Are Mightier Than Death

By Ravindra Kelekar



I need a siesta of at least half an hour every day, for when

I get up I'm so completely refreshed, that I can attack the

evening with as much enthusiasm as I did the morning. Yes, I

feel it's a new day altogether.



Yesterday was Sunday. There were quite a number of guests,

and so I missed my afternoon nap. By evening I was dog-tired

and so I went to bed at nine -- pretty early for me. As a

result I woke up at 4.30 in the morning. I had a wash, and

then I thought I'd read, but then I realized that I'd have to

put on the lights and wake everyone up, so I went out and sat

in our razangovn, which is what we call the quadrangle of our

house in Konkani.



I said to myself -- let me watch the sun rise.



There was dead silence everywhere, a silence which the

occasional screechy chirp of an insect or two made more

eerie. Slowly the eeriness began to assume a character of its

own. I glanced upwards and recognized quite a few

constellations and stars. As I gazed at them, I don't know

when, but I dozed off to sleep.



When I woke up again it was a little later in the morning but

still dark. The clock in the sitting room went tick tick tick

tick. I've no idea why this sound gripped my attention but I

began to feel that this tick tick tick tick was being

deliberately directed at me. I shuddered. Somehow a feeling

began to creep over me that this sound was the sound of

Death, striding purposefully towards me, and every-time I

heard it go tick tick tick tick, I felt it had moved that

many steps closer to me.



I got a start and said, is He coming so soon? Damn it, I've

so many tasks left incomplete, I must get them done and owe

(over) with or else they'll be left unfinished.



I got up and went inside to work.



I am quite like anybody else. I know I've got to die some day

and I also know that no one but no one can escape death. That

even the very greatest have had to suffer this fate -- that

too I know but somehow I've always lived my life without ever

feeling that I was going to die. Death was what happened to

other people. I would accompany them to the crematorium as

part of the funeral processions. But I'd never really

believed deep down in there that one day I would be the

corpse. Even at my advanced age.



So many of my companions have gone: some in the prime of

their lives. In that sense death has been my constant

companion. Still, I can't quite fathom that death will get me

one day. The knowledge that everybody dies is one thing, to

actually have death knocking at your door -- that's the kind

of intimate experience that's quite something else

altogether.



At one point of time, a sadhvi named Rehana Tyabjee figured

in my life. One day she told me, "My brother, there's

absolutely no doubt He'll come. Don't waste your time waiting

for him. Just think He's already here, right in front of your

face and He's going to take you away today itself. Fix this

notion in your head, and then go about settling your

accounts. Whatever you'd planned for today, do now itself.

And, if you can, finish what you'd intended to do tomorrow.

Only then shall you learn to live life as it should be lived,

not simply pass through it. Unless one lives with the

consciousness that Death is going to take you away any

moment, life will never have any depth. Life has some value

if it has depth; not length in years."



The words of Sister Rehana reverberated in my ears.



I'd sat down to work, but these musings over Death seemed

doggedly determined not let go of me. All of a sudden it

struck me, "Do I not have to die too one day? Of course I

have to. Then why not die today itself? Today, this very

moment let me die and be done with it. If Death came what

could he take away from me? Nothing. Nothing but my worries,

right? Well, why shouldn't I, of my own free will, give them

away on my own? Look, they won't be coming along with me when

I go, and after I'm gone, they're not going to stay behind to

trouble anyone. The second I'm gone they'll vanish too. So

why not get rid of them right now itself?"



          For a moment or two this thought gripped my mind my

          mind and I felt a whole load of worries vanish in a

          flash. I suddenly felt weightless! And I began to

          swim in an ecstasy of blissful liberation.



Over the last quite a few years, there've been quite a few

things I've voluntarily given up. I've stopped taking quite a

few responsibilities. And there've been quite a few positions

I've resigned from. I've stopped paying much attention to

anything much nowadays. I could say I've freed myself from

all sorts of bondages.



I've no ambitions left. When I was young I did have some

goals in life; now I feel I've achieved whatever I set out to

achieve. Of course others too were involved in some of the

same movements as I, but I can confidently say that I've done

my bit in achieving some of those successes.... And now if I

don't do a thing more, nobody's going to complain. Nobody has

anything to lose if I go. If Death comes at this very moment,

there's absolutely nothing of any value that He'll be able to

grab except this mortal coil. And a pretty worn out one it is

too. If he wants it, He can be my guest.



For a moment I felt that I'd triumphed over Death.



Some say, a man should take up such tasks which he knows

he'll never complete by himself; and others say he should

choose those that cannot be accomplished in one lifetime. And

he should put all his heart into doing it. When Death comes

to take such a one away, he'll not be able to touch his

creativity. Death can take away a man's body, not his works.

So what if a man goes as long as his works remain? Let him go!



A man's creativity manifests itself sometimes in the form of

memories, sometimes in the form of inspiration. Great

painters and sculptors have passed through this world; great

singers, great litterateurs too. Death took them all away.

But not their paintings, their sculptures, their songs and

their books. Buddha, Socrates, Jesus, Marx, Gandhi have been

taken away by Death. But where their inspiration is

concerned, He could not do a thing. Each one of these great

souls triumphed over death. He was helpless before them.



Suddenly a verse of Rabindranath Tagore comes to my lips:



          Howsoever mighty you may be, can you claim to be

          more powerful than Death?



But we writers can say thus: We are greater than Death. And

that's all I need to say, before I leave.



-----------------------------------------------------------

[First published in Zaag in November 1995 and reprinted in

Aaghal Paaghal. Translated by Augusto Pinto

[EMAIL PROTECTED], with help from Suresh Amonkar.

Posted on Goa Net Reader By Augusto Pinto on Mon, 24 Sep 2007 09:22:37
-0700)




-- 
Dr. Nandkumar Kamat, GOA
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Goa-launch of the well-received *Into The Diaspora
Wilderness* by Selma Carvalho on Aug 29, 2010 (Sunday) at 11
am at Ravindra Bhavan, Margao. Meet the author, buy a signed
copy (only Rs 295 in Goa till stock lasts).
http://selmacarvalho.squarespace.com/

Reply via email to