Presenting a new section to the readers : CalcuttaScape. It would be a guest column on One and a Half Minutes, in which published authors will write about their experiences on visits to Calcutta. I will be approaching non-resident authors who have visited for a vacation or stayed in Calcutta for a short while.
I know, dear readers, the first question cropping on your mind would be, why Calcutta? I’m not sure if I have a satisfactory answer for this one. It is my city, at times it has been my muse, it has been a companion in my early adult years, it has been a witness to a major part of my life. This is probably my way of paying a tribute to Calcutta, by bringing to you words flown from famous authors, on a city that never ceases to amaze.
The first one in this column is from an American author, Timothy Jay Smith (winner of the Paris Prize for Fiction 2008) reminiscing two of his visits to Calcutta in 1978 and 1990s.
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Enduring Calcutta
I boarded the train at a way station north of Madras; and it was still called Madras then, not Chennai. I had managed to avoid buying anything resembling a Madras shirt—those myriad colors swirling in soft fabric worn so ubiquitously by the Sixties flower children. Perhaps now they are called Chennai shirts, but I hope they’ve retained the name Madras. The word defines an era well beyond a fashion statement.
Traveling third class, I stepped over dozens of feet—in sandals, sneakers, one foot bloated with Elephantitis—and found a spot on the wooden bench. I stowed my backpack under it and sat down. Across from me was the strangest man I had ever seen: stick skinny, smeared with green paint, naked except for a revealing loincloth, and fingernails so long that they had looped back on themselves. By contrast, I could not have been more ‘normal-looking’ in my jeans and button-down blue Oxford shirt.
And everybody on the train was looking at me.
The day passed into night and back into day before we arrived at Calcutta’s main station. The platform teemed with travelers, vendors and beggars, and inside the hall whole families had camped out. It was an obstacle course to escape to the outside.
The morning sun reflected on the broad river. I shaded my eyes to observe the bathers spilling water over their heads. Women wore saris, while men slapped their loincloths on the water’s slow-moving surface. A boat slipped by, its captain squatting splay footed on the deck. Incense insinuated itself in the muggy air. No moment could have been more quintessentially India.
But then, I hadn’t experienced Calcutta yet.
I wandered ceaselessly in that city. It was intoxicating. It accosted my senses. I couldn’t get enough of the sights, smells and sounds of too many people living so close together. Every moment seemed more exotic, more colorful, more extraordinary than the last. I took nonstop snapshots with my mind’s eye:
Ash-covered sadhus chanting on the steps of marble temples.
Snap!
A girl in shiny satin pants walking on a tightrope stretched above market stalls.
Snap!
Beggars at the gates to palaces.
Snap! Snap!
A whole block of condom shops advertising their singular ware on big yellow placards with how-to-use sketches.
Snap! Snap! Snap!
I rented a room for a week, payment demanded upfront for a flea-ridden cot with only partitions for walls and a feverish, bawling baby next door. It cried all night, so I’d leave and continue my wandering. Confronted with an energy crisis, Calcutta timed its brownouts for the hours between dusk and dawn. No one’s fan worked, and many had no water because the pumps had stopped. Everyone poured into the streets. They chattered noisily until their heads grew heavy on their tired shoulders. Some went back inside to brave stifling rooms, but many stretched out where they were, eventually spreading into the road and exiling traffic. The stubborn rickshaw drivers finally gave up when the bodies became too many to maneuver around.
A week later, I returned to the train station, by then a veteran of Calcutta, inured to its intensity. A banner hung over the entrance. ‘Work More Talk Less’ it read, but when I returned to Calcutta twenty years later, I didn’t notice any less talking. More cars, yes; and ticker tapes on airport TVs.
No two-dollars-a-night cot on that trip; instead a room in the city’s grandest hotel. As soon as I checked in, I was back to my old habit of wandering with no greater aim than to revisit as much of Calcutta as I could. Its name had been changed to Kolkata, but not much else was different. The old Calcutta had endured with its energy and holiness, and of course its crushing poverty. It would always be quintessential India, only exponentially so.
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Photo Courtesy: Michael Honegger and Rajdeep Mukherjee
About the Author:
Raised crisscrossing America pulling a small green trailer behind the family car, Timothy Jay Smith developed a ceaseless wanderlust that has taken him around the world many times. En route, he’s found the characters that people his work. Polish cops and Greek fishermen, mercenaries and arms dealers, child prostitutes and wannabe terrorists: he’s hung with them all in an unparalleled international career that’s seen him smuggle banned plays from behind the Iron Curtain, maneuver through war zones and Occupied Territories, represent the U.S. at the highest levels of foreign governments, and stowaway aboard a ‘devil’s barge’ for a three-days crossing from Cape Verde that landed him in an African jail.
Tim brings the same energy to his writing that he brought to a distinguished career, and as a result, he’s won top honors for his screenplays, stage plays and novels in numerous prestigious competitions; among them, contests sponsored by the American Screenwriters Association, WriteMovies, Houston WorldFest, Rhode Island International Film Festival, and the Hollywood Screenwriting Institute. He won the 2008 Paris Prize for Fiction for his novel, A Vision of Angels; and Kirkus Reviews called a second novel, Coopers Promise, “literary dynamite” and selected it as one of the Best Books of 2012. His first stageplay, which went on to a successful NYC production, won the very prestigious Stanley Drama Award. Tim is the founder of the Smith Prize for political theatre, which is a commission to encourage young playwrights to dramatize the pressing issues of our times.
Tim has lived in Paris, France for the last eight years, but plans to move to Nice next month. He spends two months every year in Greece, where he had his first job after university, and is currently working on a novel set there. More information on Tim and his work can be found on his web page: www.timothyjaysmith.com
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Review of ‘A Vision of Angels’ coming soon!
This is a wonderful initiative. I love to read almost anything about Kolkata. Always feels very warm and heartfelt.
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