Have you heard of Santa Cruz? There’s a
Santa Cruz in California, USA, and there is a Santa Cruz in Bombay. It means
“holy cross,” and true to this statement the inhabitants of Santa Cruz, Bombay,
are Catholics. It’s an important suburb because Bombay’s domestic airport is
situated here. It’s a small place accessed by the Western Express Highway,
fronted by the Hotel Centaur. I am travelling to Santa Cruz to board a flight
to Kerala, my home state.
On the way I pass the area of my childhood,
where I grew up, Chembur. Chembur is also a small suburb on the east side of
Bombay, where pollution is high level because of the smoke-belching fertiliser
and petrochemical factories. The place I lived in Chembur is called Tilak
Nagar, and in those days, it was called Township Colony, which was built to
house low-income group migrants who worked mainly in factories in shifts.
Chembur was a violent neighbourhood in
those days and is even now. Boys here banded together into gangs for
protection. The people who gained notoriety were a twinkle-eyed mischievous boy
who grew up to be a super star of the Hindi screen. Another, disreputable boy,
grew up to be called the “don” of the city, the underworld lord. He has
converted the area into high rises that grow dizzyingly like medieval castles in
the sky. It was about these people about whom my mind was occupied with when I
rode the taxi to my destination, as our thoughts generally dwell on those
people who become talked about, or written about.
Among the children of my generation six
have died among which two were suicides. I can’t explain here why pleasant and
fun-filled friends of my youth took their own lives. But, when life deals a
blow, we can’t do anything about it. The less resourceful end their life,
rather than face realities, and make adjustments. The more resourceful – like
me – carry on regardless of all the hurts and humiliations. Sigh!
A profusion of highways, flyovers, special
lanes, later I am at the airport. I say good morning to the hostess at the
airline counter and she smiles back brightly. Done! My day is made! See, after
all, I am a man of simple pleasures, and I have a soft spot for ground/air
hostesses after seeing this
video. (We all want something like that happen to us in real life, don’t
we?) But there is need for caution. There are huge Punjabi hunks in
lehenga-kurtas lumbering around the departure lounge sharpening their
upward-pointed handlebar moustaches. What if they say, “whai didju flirtu with
my Punjabi kudi?” Almost, as if expecting this, I twiddle with my own
upward-pointed handlebar above my upper lip, though I don’t succeed in showing
the malevolence (huh?) of their “Punjab da putr (son of Punjab)” appearance.
Never mind.
At Santa Cruz, note: my downturned mustache! |
I remember a time when there were no
security checks at airports. Can’t believe it? Better believe it. You breezed
in collected your boarding pass and passed straight to the aircraft. The
terminals were big vacuous places where a few chairs were placed, not many, and
after a flight departed there was a gap of a few hours for the next to take
off. Nowadays an airport terminal is frenzied place, there are flights landing
every few minutes, when the other is ready to take off. And there are people of
all types milling around, and, like in a Bombay local train, you consider
yourself lucky if you get a place to sit down.
And almost every second person in the
flight to Chandigarh is a young luscious lass, in tottering high heels, a
curvaceous delight to watch. I know I shouldn’t say this because of the
lumbering Punjabis blocking the exits by their show of macho scratching of
private areas. The girls are all clutching copies of Vogue and Elle which
contain articles such as “20 way to ditch your boyfriend,” “50 ways to remove
blackheads,” and nothing more profound, at the very best, than, “10 ways to
cook tiramisu.” Which is profound indeed at their age. Oh the vanity of it all,
the mundaneness of it all.
Flashy mobile phones, tabs, computers, are
everywhere. One girl sitting opposite me, drop-dead gorgeous, is tapping into
her Apple MacAir laptop and hardly gazing up from it, even to see if her flight
has taken off. It makes me wonder if she likes sitting in airport waiting rooms,
doing this all day. I can’t understand this obsession with being connected,
and, communicating nothing. I maybe in her friend group on Facebook, who knows?
I click a few selfies, though (the wordprocessor suggests “selfish,” which,
incidentally, is what it is.)
At last, my flight arrives and a few
shoulder pushes and elbowing later, I am safely into my seat, a window seat. You
know, we southies are a conservative lot, so no babes holding Vogue and Elle in
our plane, just plain Janes wearing saris and sandalwood paste on their
foreheads. Hm. I watch as the plane taxies and takes off, one of the most
pleasant experiences in my life. The roofs of Bombay are all blue from the
plastic stretched on roofs for protection from rain. Then the clouds take over,
their shapes like rising hills, valleys, umbrellas, sails, whorls, petals, ghost
towns, and stalactites. A sense of déjà vu strikes only then and I lean back
for a short nap till I reach Kochi, my destination.
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