Hansmukh Hansraj

May 21 2006  | Views 1689 |  Comments  (14)
Short Story: Nitin remembers his ever smiling classmate Hansraj and also the small town in Rajasthan where he spent a few months of his childhood. ... Expand

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  Dev Kumar Vasudevan posted 2 yrs ago

Hi Sucheta. Thanks for sharing your thoughts. Do work on them. We can have a good blog entry here.
Lemme share a few thoughts with you:
In this 'story' I have made the protagonist the son of  a bank officer who has to suddenly leave town. But it is based on my experiences as an army brat who would get 'involved' with a town and its people. Then after  three or four years Dad would tell my mom and the three kids (self included) that we will now be going to another corner of India. As children we were  totally helpless. These moves were not planned by us. We were never asked or consulted. But we had optimism. That the new town would also have good people. That there would be experiences good and bad.  That we would see another corner of India. It is this optimism that kept us going. But by the time one reached one's twenties one had so many disjointed experiences that it was painful to accept that one was very different from the the average guy for whom life had continuity...... Guess I'll stop now..lest you accuse me of curing your insomnia...I think there is more work I can do on this....



  Sucheta Dasgupta posted 2 yrs ago

it takes courage to be a leader because it is the leader that faces the criticism. that is why, most leaders are pro-establishment. just to balance their leanings, see! :))

ok... before i am shooed out your column, ta ta



  Sucheta Dasgupta posted 2 yrs ago

back again to bother with my theory on love. :)

just thought that children have the advantage over parents in this respect because they are the party that is supposed to fly first even by parental approval. so they are the winners and the parents are the losers. still people have children and love them and the children, even after they have left and set up families of their own even in faraway places, still, love their parents. so whoever runs first in a relationship may still love the other party and being dumped does not equal being unloved, hey! now thats a nice thought.

again, people who have repute as leaders are the ones sought after are the ones that are good runners. they also have reputations as good friends which, perhaps, they are since they are the ones that are sought after and it is the others that are dependent on them.

keep spinning more stories and have a good day!



  Sucheta Dasgupta posted 2 yrs ago

dear writer, may i share an insight. it is a recent insight of mine that my incompetent self has reached after three ripe decades and more of living and learning. you see, in friendship, as well as in other relationships, the winner is the one that "flies" or disengages first, whether it be in the guise of hurt sentiments or by use of ruse or excuse or even otherwise with rudeness, politics, social manipulation or frozen shoulder. at least it was the first in the case described in your piece and not the last that forms a regular basis of office behaviour. heck, that is where women have scored over the menfolk over the ages and over other, stupider women... because people need people for emotional support, mental stimulation and investment of aspirations if nothing else and, like australian author katharine susannah prichard says ("don't sacrifice your life to work and ideals. the most important things in life are human relations. i found that out too late"), are somewhat important to one another. with due respect and more to your friend(s) and mine, my diagnosis points at the same. i personally wish i were as smart and fast as the many people i have liked and doggedly followed. thank you for sharing your story.



  Antonio posted 2 yrs ago

Pata hai yaar!!!....Main kaunsa Army main hun

...but in my dictionary...both of us are FauG's by virtue of our Dads being in Fauj...



  Dev Kumar Vasudevan posted 2 yrs ago

Well Antonio... the protagonist here  is an army officer whose Dad was a civilian. In my case it is ulta. My Dad is a retired army officer and I am a 'bloody civilian'



  Antonio posted 2 yrs ago

Saala har fauG ki yahi kahaaani hai...All nostalgia....I remember I used to have tears in my eyes whenever I used to leave a place...Leh, Jhansi, Guwahati, Pune....one kind of gets attached to it.....the feeling is indescribable when you visit the house and the school you stayed and studied 10 years ago...I experienced that feeling this Jan when I came to Pune to join my new company...

Good one Dev...Are yu still serving? Where are you based?



  Dev Kumar Vasudevan posted 2 yrs ago

Thanks Shiahs. But I must also complain. This comment of yours is fit to be expanded into a blog entry.  May we have one please?



  shiahs b posted 2 yrs ago

A very beautiful story indeed.  I liked it more so because it made me deeply nostalgic.  I have unfortunately, only ever lived in a city but my house was in a colony with vast patches of green and any number of trees, fruit bearing and otherwise.   All the houses in the colony were on one side and there was several acres of almost rural landscape.  Once you entered the walled colony you would almost forget you were in a city, it was so quite and so detached from the hustle and bustle of the city. 

I can remember the summers I have spent loitering among the trees, climbing them, bringing down fruit from the trees with the help of gulels, catching butterflies, spotting birds, catching bugs, burning wood fires and roasting potatoes and tomatoes on them.   My friends and I would crawl under the bushes to discover tunnel like spaces.  This tunnels always became the property of which ever group of children discovered it.  We would clean it and then use it for spending our summer afternoons. 

At least two day a week we would get our moms to pack our lunch boxes so that we could have our lunch together under the trees. 

Reading your blog I just realised that I enjoyed atleast some advantage of a rural life even though I lived all my life in the city.



  Dev Kumar Vasudevan posted 2 yrs ago

This story is based on my memories of the three and a half years I spent in a small town in Rajasthan from 1972 to 1975. There is no single Hansraj. There were many. Some were from army families (like me) and some must have left due to education and jobs. But I am sure that there must be many who are still there....





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