Wednesday 21 September 2011

Remembering Those Who Cannot Remember


Remembering Those Who Cannot Remember



The beautifully scattered hues of the evening sun made the verdant valley more appealing. The crows were busy making their way back home.

Ammini seemed a bit impatient. She was waiting for Safiyumma to take her back home. She began to low at once she saw Safiyumma coming towards her. ..

Safiyumma, dressed in a checked lungi with a blouse and thorth, appeared a typical village Muslim woman. “Varunnedi mole ithiri thamasichu poyi,” she said, and patted Ammini’s dewlap affectionately. Safiyumma unfastened the tether and took her to home. For Safiyumma, life was incomplete without the ‘moo-moos’. She was a courageous and energetic rural woman, who had always indulged herself in nurturing the cows or directing the ploughing fields. None could see her chatting with her neighbours or napping lazily for hours. On the other hand, Safiyumma was busy nagging her husband and sons with her sharp tongue, for not doing any ‘fruitful’ things.

She used soft words only for her grandchildren whom she loved the most. Her happiness was in  plucking and ripening the mangoes, guavas and jackfruits for her grandchildren.  It was a frequent scene of Safiyumma cursing the squirrels and birds for biting and pecking the fruits she was bringing up cautiously for her kids.                                 
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 Safiyumma is not hearing the rumbling of the heavy rain or the lowing of  her cows. She is sitting in a chair at  the varandha. Her eyes, lacking the glint of life, seem rather impassive. She does not see or hear anything until someone makes her to do so. Safiyumma is left alone in  home as her son and family went outside to attend a marriage. The cows are tethered outside. They are lowing helplessly as it rains in buckets. But the ‘moo-moos’ don’t wake her up!

“Umma, ithungalude vili kelkkunnille? Entha azhichu erithilil kettanjathu?” Her son asks her as he came back. She smiles naively. That is her answer.

Safiyumma’s mind is more like a blank paper, nothing to reflect and nothing to read out. She hardly remembers the names of her sons and even her bustling grandchildren cannot refresh her memory.

This is the story of Safiyumma.

She was an energetic and sharp-tongued woman until she was under the grip of Alzheimer’s, a disease of memory loss and lethargy, which has turned her life into a pathetic and helpless one.

 Safiyumma’s life has been having a chronicle of changes ever since she was diagnosed as an Alzheimer’s patient. Her loss of memory was gradual. In the early stages she used to fumble when asked about her sons’ names, but as years passed, their faces also became vague in her memory. The numbness she has towards her cows is another awful part of her illness.

She forgets to have food and hesitates to have a bath.

The Alzheimer’s disease is one of the most challenging diseases the modern medical science faces today. The Alzheimer’s disease which is almost incurable was first described by a German psychiatrist and neuropathologist Alois Alzheimer in 1906 and is named after him. It commonly affects middle-aged people though there are exceptions. During the early stages, the symptoms may be misunderstood as the age-related concerns. When the disease gets advanced, the symptoms include confusion, mood-swings, language break-down and long-term memory loss. As years pass, the body functions of the patient worsen and finally end in death.

 On September 21, the Alzheimer’s day, let’s remember those who live without memory and  emotions. Caring…that’s all  they want, to live on. So let’s give them a little care with a touch of love.

With lifeless eyes, Safiyumma stares at the darkness through the window. No shards of hope shimmering  in the darkness. Yet, she smiles looking at the night…a smile of innocence.


Wednesday 6 July 2011

No More Paper Storks to Scatter…


No More Paper Storks to Scatter…

She knew, perhaps, the paper storks she was making would end up in vain.

Yet, she continued, till she died.

She was Sadako, a victim of the nuclear explosion on Hiroshima.
In Japan, storks were considered sacred birds. They had a belief that those who made thousand paper storks would live long. So Sadako went on making the storks even in her death bed. But neither the belief nor the paper storks could save her. Sadako was only two years when Hiroshima was gulped by the atomic flames. Her house was only a few kilometers away from the place where the atomic bomb was dropped. Though she could survive, she was diagnosed as a blood cancer patient years later and died in 1955. A monument for peace was built in her name by her school mates after three years of her death.

It was on 6 August in 1945 that the United State s dropped the first atomic bomb, named ‘Little Boy’ on Hiroshima killing about 70000 people within seconds. Thousands were deadly burned. Most of the survivors also died later due to the radiation.

 It took years to realise the fatal consequences of the atomic bomb. The emission of the Alfa, Beta and Gama rays during the explosion affected badly even the next generation of the Hiroshima people. Mental retardation, genetic disorders and fatal diseases like cancer were among the outcome of the calamity. After 66 years of the nuclear attack, the people of Hiroshima still suffer the effect of the nuclear bombing.

By this time Hiroshima might have had many Sadakos and thousands of paper storks scattered around them.

Let’s only hope that there will not be any Hiroshimas or little Sadakos to mould the paper storks anymore…