I have just about surfaced from the feeling of abject misery
that one wallows in after returning from an amazing holiday. This feeling of
abject misery permeates ones entire soul at the start of one’s return flight
and continues to grow in intensity in inverse proportion to the distance from
one’s hometown. It hits a peak when one is standing in the long queue in front
of the immigration counter, staring with blank eyes at the surly looking Govt.
official who makes it a point to sneer at you after he looks insultingly in
turn at your well rounded figure and the passport photo taken when you were ten
years younger and about a dozen kilos lighter. The misery is compounded by the
family of 8 who has callously wriggled into the queue ahead of you after
planting an advance guard of one aggressive young woman who was doubtlessly an
Asian Games sprinter and who has established territorial rights over the entire
1st to 8th position in the queue for her family by being
the first one to reach, much as Chris Columbus did. The misery somewhat abates
after the immigration ordeal, but again peaks when one has to wait endlessly
for one’s baggage with a heart full of dark thoughts about the airport, the
airlines, the ministry of civil aviation, Manmohan Singh, Mahender Singh Dhoni
(because the schmuck lost yet another test that very morning), the man standing
in-front of you scratching his butt and humanity as a whole. This overall pall
of misery abates only slowly over the next entire day, assisted somewhat by
being able to curl up in your own bed, watch your favorite programs on TV and
eat Rasam and rice.
Now this time, the misery was dark as dark could be, because
the holiday was great as great could be. It was in Bali, it was with amazing
friends and we were staying in an awesome resort. Bali is so similar in natural
beauty to my home, Kerala, that I couldn’t but wonder why Kerala does not
exhilarate me as much as Bali did. Don’t mistake me, Kerala is a great place
for a holiday, really ‘gods own country’. But I have had the ‘experience’ of a
lifetime spending couple of years of my adult life in Kerala. In terms of
excitement, that experience falls somewhere between being bludgeoned
continuously every 30 seconds with a blunt object and having 220 volts of
electricity being applied intermittently to your backside every five minutes.
Massive ups and downs if you get my drift. I often ask myself why this is so.
The answer always comes back to ‘The Fundamental Rights of a Malayali’.
To understand the ‘Fundamental Rights of a Malayali’, one
has to first understand the psyche of a Malayali. The Mallu is one incredibly
sensitive being. I have long pondered on why the good lord made Mallus so fair
minded, yet so darned bristly at the same time. Finally, in a moment of
inspired insight, the answer came to me. Unlike the rest of humanity, who
evolved from mere monkeys, the Mallu has evolved from porcupines. This simple
fact, so well hidden from Darwin (possibly because his limited experience never
encompassed extreme cases such as meeting a Mallu), explained the bristling
behavior of the Mallu. Having laid the foundation, I have taken great pains to
put down a comprehensive list of the ‘Fundamental Rights of a Malayali’, a
compendium of guiding principles which govern a Mallu’s life, his interaction
with other Mallus and with other lower level mortals and why his ‘each
particular hair stands on end like the quills upon the fretful porpentine’ (as
you can see, Bill Shakespeare on the other hand, has certainly experienced a
Mallu to have written these lines so appropriately) when he is affronted (as is
his usual wont).
The ‘FRoaM’ reads as
follows…
Right to equality – Every Mallu is born a communist unless
otherwise specified by his/her parents. They shall continuously strive to
create a society of equals by uplifting themselves as much as humanly possible
and after that by subtly taking potshots at others who are more equal.
Right to Samaram(strike) – Every Mallu at birth is
inculcated with vast knowledge of Satyagraha, which he/she hones by continuous
practice of striking at least once every month from grade 1 to the age of 77. During
months in which holidays are limited, he/she strikes several times extra to get
his/her rightful number of off days.
Right to Flag Hoisting – Every Mallu male is entitled to
hoisting his Mundu or his Lungi several inches above his knees and to showing off his
hairy legs while pretending to be Silk
Smitha.
Right to Freedom of Spirit – Every Mallu must at all points
in time be pickled liberally and should strive for this exalted spiritual state
by imbibing from early morning. Even if he has to queue up in front of the Kallu
Shaap before it opens at the ridiculously late hour of 8AM.
A
corollary to this is Right to Brandy – A true blue Mallu shall only drink
Brandy, since he is able to assuage his guilt by pretending that the good spirit is exactly what the doctor ordered.
Right to Red rice & Fish curry – A Mallu may consume fish curry and red rice any
time of the day starting 6AM.
A
corollary to this is right to Beef fry and Porotta, right to Appam and
Muttakkari and right to Tapioca and Fish curry. (except that Appam and
Muttakkri may start at 5 AM.)
Right to Consider Sreesanth as the God of Cricket – The Mallu
does not believe in RamG’s epic story on the 10th Avatar of Vishnu
being Sachin Tendulkar as given in Oh God!!. In his mind, Sreesanth is the only god of
cricket and has been unfairly treated by Krishnamachari Srikanth, a mere jealous Paandi.
Right to Murder English Pronunciation- This is a very
Fundamental and inalienable right of a Mallu. Specifically, he may murder all
words having an ‘O’ in them or may 'simbly' substitute a ‘B’ for a ‘P’ every time
it dares to make an appearance after an ‘M’. The same may be said of a ‘K’ or a
hard ‘C’ if they so much as try to jump in ahead of an ‘L’ as any of my ‘Ungles’
may agree.
Right to Amazing Names – A Mallu may be named by clubbing together any
set of right sounding syllables as in the case of Jiju, Joji, Shiny,
Shiji, Shiju… etc. Siblings may adopt rhyming agglomeration of syllables as in
the case of Jincy and Lincy or even Tiju, Liju and Biju.
Right to scoff at
Tamilians – A Mallu may at all times treat the Tamilian as an inferior being
(Having actually drawn a substantial part of their cultural heritage from Tamil
Nadu) and may call them Paandis.
A
corollary is that the Mallu has the right to be offended if the Tamilian
retailiates by calling him a ‘Malayali Gentleman’ in a sneering fashion. For
more on this, you may read up my treatise on the subject as given in 'The Amazing Adventures of a Tamil Brahmin' aka 'How to tame a tame father in law’
Finally, and most importantly, the Mallu has a Right to
Bristle at all insults, real, imagined or not yet imagined. He has to uphold the traditions of his ancestor,
the fretful porpentine. A very very important corollary to this is that all
male Mallus must sport some of the quills inherited from their ancestors on
their face- namely on their upper lip. This helps them bristle.
That, my friend, completes my well researched document on the
Fundamental Rights of a Malayali. Now let me warn you, we Mallus are actually
amazing. We have religious harmony, communal harmony, sex ratio, development
index, literacy rate, female infant mortality, all to prove that we are a great
breed. And we even have the ability to laugh at ourselves. But if you, who is
evolved from a mere ape and not an exalted porcupine even so much as dare
chuckle at this article, we shall all bristle in indignation, and poke your
sorry backside with so many quills that you will never be able to sit again to
have your Masal Dosas and your Tandoori Chickens.
7 comments:
A very fun article to read. But the porpentine quote is no more Wodehouse's than it is Jeeves's. It is from Hamlet, by Sheshappa Iyer, a Tamil upstart.
I once tried to explain to someone who sneered about Malayalam accent about single intervocalic unvoiced plosive consonants becoming voiced in Malayalam, but he couldn't figure out what I meant. Probably a northie.
Hi I have given all credits to Sheshappa Iyer. May the Tam upstarts prosper.
As for your unvoiced plosives, may I suggest this Mallu is as clueless as your Northie friend?
Oh, for some reason I thought you had attributed it to PGW.
To know what a plosive is, look it up in Wikipedia.
Basically, k, ch, t, p become g, j, d, b when between vowels, including the vowel 'am' :-)
You pseudo-Malayali you!
Osum :)
This requires a sequel about Palghat Brahmins who share their lineage with both Mallus and Tambrams.
Very nicely poked, as I am a true blue Malayali. Thanks to you....enjoying Gurgle and was searching for the next book. When is it coming out?
Hi Ranjini,
Thanks a ton. how did you hear about the book? The next book is being edited - it is called Oops and the Planet of the Apps.
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