Praise for My Books


"Manreet Sodhi Someshwar is a gifted writer of great promise. I have a gut feeling we have a new star rising in Punjab's literary horizon. She has an excellent command of English and a sly sense of humour."
- Khushwant Singh on The Long Walk Home

"An enjoyable tale of a sassy girl's headlong race up the corporate ladder."
- India Today on Earning the Laundry Stripes


Thursday 1 September 2011

Ganpati Bappa Moraya! and the spirit of Bal Gangadhar Tilak


It was in that fount of Indian wisdom, that trove of its myriad myths and mysteries, Amar Chitra Katha, that I first encountered Ganpati Visarjan – the immersion of a Ganpati statue in the waters after the culmination of prayers.

The comic book I was reading was on Bal Gangadhar Tilak, a popular leader of the Indian freedom movement. It was Tilak who transformed the annual household celebration of Ganesh Chaturthi, the birthday of the elephant-headed Ganesh, into a public festival. He saw it as a way to unite Indians and mobilize them with nationalistic fervour needed to counter British rule. Subsequently, Ganpati, a popular pan-Indian deity, was transformed into the lavish spectacle of today: giant statues, massive puja pandals, processions of worshippers, and enthusiastic chants of Ganpati Bappa Moraya!



Much later, when I started work with Hindustan Unilever in Mumbai, I made my first acquaintance with the festival of Ganesh Chaturthi. As the sales manager in-charge of selling my company’s sabun-tel – experiences which subsequently birthed my debut novel, Earning the Laundry Stripes – in the warrens and gullies of Mumbai, it was inevitable that late August I’d find myself in front of Lalbaugcha Raja. My Parel-Lalbaug Distributor was absolutely insistent that we seek the prayers of the “emperor of Lalbaug”.

Having grown up on a healthy diet of Bollywood movies, many of which reveled in the Mafiosi culture of Mumbai and hinted darkly at links between the underworld and various Ganpati pandals, I perspired profusely at the prospect of meeting one such Dark Lord of the netherworld.

Imagine my relief when I found myself at the foot of a gigantic statue, craning my neck at a 12-foot plaster idol of the elephant-headed god, his right arm raised in benediction! Lalbaugcha Raja was apparently one of the oldest and most famous of Ganpati idols, created by the same family of sculptors, who were into their third generation now. When Amitabh Bachchan was ill, my Distributor informed in a convivial whisper, Jaya had come here to worship. He was referring, presumably, to the time when the superstar was seriously injured during the shooting of the film Coolie and hospitalized.

Thereafter, for the eight years I was in Mumbai I heard and read about other celebrities who ended up visiting Lalbaugcha Raja: Sachin Tendulkar, the Bachchans, Nana Patekar, Govinda…   

This year, 2011, too Lalbaugcha Raja is looking superb – I googled the image. Apparently, he is also getting protection and an insurance cover of Rs 14 crore in view of the triple blasts that rocked Mumbai in July 13.



Well, that’s good news, I think. I was in Mumbai during the time of the July blasts, having just left Dadar an hour before an explosion occurred. Anything that keeps people safe … And yet, I can’t deny that niggling sad worm that says that perhaps we also need to remember the spirit in which Tilak first proposed we celebrate Ganesh Chaturthi: the spirit of belonging and togetherness.

Ganpati Bappa Moraya, Moraya Re! That is the chant most heard during this festive time. As my Maharashtrian friends and colleagues taught me, it is an exhortation to the beloved deity, Ganpati, our father, to return speedily next year!

Even as we work towards security, we need to revitalize that spirit of harmony between all of us to ensure that Lalbuagcha Raja, Mumbai and India stay safe, year after year.

And what better time to do that than now when we’ve just celebrated Eid and plunged into Chaturthi! On that note, a very happy Ganesh Chaturthi!




14 comments:

  1. Thanks for sharing your story. Ganpati Bappa Morya. What does it mean ?

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  2. I wanted to write for really long. Accept my congratulations on your book and I wish I can read it. Hope I can get it in my city. And this post is so well written.

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  3. Wonderful post.
    Wish you Happy Ganesh Chatarti.

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  4. Very well presented. You have seamlessly moved from Ganapati Bappa to Eid and universal harmony.

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  5. A good thought on a day that was constituted to build unity and harmony.

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  6. @ rajivahuja: Hmmm...3rd para from bottom

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  7. @ Saru Singhal: Thank you, and my second book will soon be available in e-format. I shall post news on my blog when that happens, so do check back.

    Cheers!

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  8. @ Rajesh: Thank you! and happy Ganesh Chaturthi to you as well.

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  9. Great to know you have written books which have drawn appreciation from Khushwant Singh, no less! congrats. :)

    Ganpati festival long ceased to be what Tilak had envisaged. It is not just a garish vulgar display of wealth and power. Do you think that Lalbagcha Raja won't bless his devotees if he is made of clay and worshipped by the common man and his flowers?

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  10. @ cybernag.in : Thanks!

    Sadly, I have to agree with you. I guess its inevitable as a society gets more first-world, it gets more commercial... But there;ll always be those who'll remember the values and will cherish them, whether in clay or plaster.

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  11. awful piece of information, I had come to know about your blog from my friend vimal, mumbai,i have read atleast 13 posts of yours by now, and let me tell you, your blog gives the best and the most interesting information. This is just the kind of information that i had been looking for, i'm already your rss reader now and i would regularly watch out for the new posts, once again hats off to you! Thanks a million once again, Regards, Bal Gangadhar Tilak Quotes

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