It had been almost a month since I had visited Babu’s ashram
for the elderly. It had kind of become a weekly ritual to carry food for the
elderly who stayed there. Or rather had
been forced to stay there. My association with the ashram began about a
year ago.
***************************
Mr. and Mrs. Iyer lived in the house across our apartment.
Iyer Uncle, as we called him, was very fond of the flower beds he had planted
himself on the entire periphery of his house. It had become customary to exchange
pleasantries as we went for our morning walk every day. Uncle would be watering
his plants and listening to his booming voice would mark the beginning of our
day.
A year ago his wife passed away leaving uncle all alone in
their sprawling house. As long as she had been there, we would see them sitting
on the veranda, sharing biscuits over a cup of coffee every evening. She had
been a perfectionist, taking caring of all his needs. But with her no longer
around, their three married children had been quite reluctant to look after
their aging father and decided the next best thing would be to put him in an
old age home. When we heard the news, we went to meet uncle. We saw him sitting
on his rocking chair, eyes closed, and cheeks awash with tears. “Will you water
my plants for me when I am gone?” he asked. “I don’t want them to be orphaned
like me.”
That was all he was thinking of now? His plants? It brought
a lump to my throat and I nodded, unable to speak. And then he wept like a
child, his booming voice echoing through the house. It was heart wrenching to
see a 75 year old weep like that before you.
That’s how uncle was unceremoniously bundled of to the
ashram by three well-to-do children whom he had brought up so lovingly. To
watch a movie on this theme or read about it in the papers is different and to
see it actually happening is quite another. No words can describe what it is to
see ungrateful children treating a parent with so much disrespect.
And that’s how our
association with the ashram began. At first it had been to just visit uncle and
keep him company. Later we decide to prepare something every Sunday for all the
35 inmates. We would always be greeted at the gate by Gopi uncle and his flag.
He would salute us and then run around the whole place waving his flag. Most
inmates looked senile and it worried us if Iyer uncle had been put in the right
place. The warden told us that most of them had been fine when they came there
but over a period of time, loneliness and depression at having been forsaken by
their own families had caused senility to set in. We wondered if Iyer uncle
would meet the same fate.
We saw his health deteriorate over the next few months so we
shifted some of his plants and his rocking chair to make him feel at home. But
no amount of cheering seemed to help him. I was going out of town and I told
him that I will see him after a month.
***************************************
I had been readying to go to the ashram after a month of
vacation when I met my neighbor at the gate.
“Going to the ashram?” she asked.
“Yes, I haven’t been there in more than a month now,” I told
her.
“Iyer uncle passed away when you weren’t here” she told me.
I couldn’t believe what she said. I wanted to know more. She
told me how sometime last month, Iyer uncle had run away from the ashram, and
was found by an auto rickshaw driver while trying to jump off a lake. He had
calmed uncle and brought him home. His children were informed and instead of
comforting their father they had screamed at him for running away like that. He
had passed away a couple of days later in sleep, not having eaten anything for
the past two days. We wondered whether he died from hunger of food or love.
I took one last long look at uncle’s house, his plants all
dried out and the house resounding with the emptiness that he had been carrying
for such a long time in his heart. It made me think who really died? And no, it was not just a person.
May he rest in peace.
**************
(Coming after my previous post, it would have been surprising to read two similar stories....but this had been weighing on my heart for quite some time and I think 100 words haven't been sufficient for me to express my anguish. Hence this post.)
(Coming after my previous post, it would have been surprising to read two similar stories....but this had been weighing on my heart for quite some time and I think 100 words haven't been sufficient for me to express my anguish. Hence this post.)
Sad but . . . .
ReplyDeleteThis is extremely sad.Poor Mr. Iyer.In spite of his well to do children he was foced to live a lonely and desolate life.It is heart rending.
ReplyDeletemay he rest in peace...
ReplyDeletepeople often forget that one day, they too will get old like their parents and be treated the same way
This is sad.. not expected from Indian Culture...
ReplyDeleteThis is quite a common event happening every where.Old persons like Mr. Iyer are being abandoned by their children who are well off but, tragically, consider an old soul a pain in their neck. This story touches a chord in my heart.
ReplyDeletedearth of love ... kills all hope and reason to survive .. strange are human emotions ..
ReplyDeleteMay Mr Iyer' soul rest in peace !! May his plants get the love of the rain .. and his abandoned house get some caretaker as well !!
REally sad situation which unfortunately is happening all around us.....Really sad.
ReplyDeleteold people only need a little love and care from their children...have we become so poor that we can't even afford this much?
ReplyDeletesad... :(
Abandoning parents in old age when they need the children and the grandchildren the mostest is so very sad and tragic. But it sure is a reality for so many. :(
ReplyDelete