Summer holidays as a young boy in Allahabad , Uttar Pradesh were
fun times.
All schoolchildren awaited them anxiously and they were made
use of, so to say, from the very first day.
I have fond memories of waking very early on day one of the
vacation , making myself a cup of steaming hot tea , picking up the newspapers which had been
deftly thrown into the verandah , taking the transistor out into the compound and
switching on Radio Ceylon .
The next hour from 6 .00 to 7.00 am was then spent listening
to ‘TOP OF THE POPS’ – a well-known and much loved programme . The Radio
Jockeys – I guess they were just known as presenters or announcers way back
then- played the best music the world had to offer and their speaking was kept
to the minimum. I do not remember them giving away freebies or holding radio
competitions either.
For a few years, I also remember going to Asansol to visit relatives
and then on to Calcutta, to visit
cousins who stayed at the Titigarh paper mills a short distance away. However
most summer vacations were spent in Allahabad itself.
As we stayed in the Railway colony, there were plenty of
friends in and around the vicinity and hence we were never short of good
company and things to keep ourselves occupied.
Caroms, Ludo, Snakes and Ladders , Chinese checkers , Chess ,
Monopoly, Marbles, seven tiles and card games took up large portions of the day but cricket , football and ‘Gulli
danda’ took center stage . Evenings
were for Kick the can, Police, and thieves!
Be they the indoor games or the ones on the road outside,
they were fiercely contested and no quarters were asked for or given. If you
were not playing, you were either a vociferous spectator taking sides or a
judge or umpire often being judge and jury.
Learning all about
Team spirit , Team building ,
Leadership, Respect , Standing up for oneself, Rules ,skills and
expertise in games and above all - good health- were what we gained .
Cuts, bruises, sprains and an occasional fractured arm were
all part and parcel of the summer holidays. There were arguments and occasional
fights and adults never entered the picture. No one thought of complaining to
parents and if by chance one did so, they were ostracized and spent a few
lonely days looking on from the sidelines and licking their wounds until such
time all was forgiven – then they joined in even more enthusiastically – a
lesson had been learnt and was seldom repeated.
Rain, hail, storm or sunshine, the fun and frolic continued.
No one had heard of Sunscreen lotion or SPF and being sun tanned or to put it
in simple language getting ‘sun burnt’ was expected. Colds , coughs and
allergies came and went unnoticed and antibiotics were for critical illnesses
only .
Yes, we occasionally suffered from heat exhaustion and a
friend once had heat stroke but he was given umpteen cold baths and ‘mango
panna’ to drink and he lived to tell the tale for the rest of the vacation.
Food was wholesome and fresh air aplenty and everyone looked fresh and happy.
There were also chores to be done like cleaning the house,
running simple errands, cycling to the market to purchase meat or to deliver a
note to an adult. Even then, a few friends would cycle off together and that
too would turn into a mini adventure – buying snacks along the way, breaking
plumbs from some tree on the road or climbing into a compound to steal a few
guavas from someone’s garden. It was all harmless fun and we had a blast.
Coming to think of it, fruit was high on our agenda. We knew
in whose house there were fruit trees and where we could manage to steal some. Mind
you - Mangoes, plumbs and guavas were available in plenty in the market and
were quite affordable but the thrill of stealing them and not being caught was
far too much to resist for a teenager. Being chased by the owner’s dogs,
shouted at by the owner and even called thieves were all worth the effort.
I also remember cycling with a friend to our church at about
two in the afternoon in the hot sun, jumping into the church compound ,
climbing a tree and filling a sack with raw mangoes ,then hauling it over the
wall and cycling off.
Once the man who looked after the field of fruit trees
spotted us and he yelled at us at the top of his voice. We were terrified lest
he report us to the parish priest and we be hauled up the next day but all’s
well that ends well and we escaped unscathed!
Coincidentally all us teens were very active in the church
activities as well and had probably spotted the mangoes few days earlier and
planned the heist methodically and to perfection.
Pocket money, if any, was meagre and was spent on marbles,
paper sweets and a concoction called ‘Churan’.
Those were days of simple pleasures and simple times and I
miss them.
No comments:
Post a Comment