Wednesday, 10 February 2016

The Orphaned Wheel and Other Memoirs

Introduction
Holidays are always special and special are those that include your near and dear ones. Even more special are the holidays you take with your near and dear ones at your ancestral village, where you grew up in a rustic lifestyle decades ago. Today I live quite a modern life in Thimphu working as a management consultant enjoying comforts unthinkable to a six year old orphan in Neoly Bhutan four decades ago. Given these backgrounds and the emotional attachment people have with their birthplaces and hometowns, my recent holiday was bound to be special.

I bear my ancestral roots at Neoly in what is known today as Pemathang, a block of villages in Samdrup Jongkhar eastern Bhutan. Ever since my eldest sister decided to resign from managing my landed property that she had been managing since 1991, I make it a point to travel to Neoly once a year. It serves many objectives – collect my share of crops that Timsina Saila gives me by way of ‘kooth’ (a sharecropping system whereby a tenant gives the land owner a pre-agreed quantity of crops), negotiate a deal for the following year, clear out ‘hisaab kitaab’ (monetary settlements) with Baidar kaka who is my local guardian, visit and catch up with my numerous relatives and friends and quite importantly introduce my boys to our relatives and the ways of their father’s childhood.  

Planning and coordination
My annual holiday was fixed the day my boys finished their annual school examinations 2015. Last year I couldn’t make it to Neoly for I took my family to Bangkok with the small savings I had from my four years at Druk Holding & Investments. ‘This year, we must go’, reminded my wife of 20 years. Normally, when we go to Neoly in winter, we also get to attend a marriage, a bartaman (a Hindu ceremony prominent among Bahuns and Chhteris, whereby a male child 8 years or older is given the sacred thread) or a puran (a religious ceremony that involves the recitation of the Hindu religious scriptures). This year we received an advanced invitation from Baidar kaka to attend his youngest daughter’s wedding. Yamuna, all of 21 years was to be given away to a much older cardamom growing farmer from Denchuka, Samtse. It was fortuitous!   

Travelling to Neoly is tiring, comes with a fair bit of risk (thanks to frequent mugging and robbing of Bhutanese vehicles and passengers at the Alipurduar   jungles) and adventurous. So, we always look for company – more the merrier. I applied for my annual leave and waited for the rest of the Neoly troupe to finalise their plans. Rabilal Pokhrel, my sadu daju (sadu = male relative married to your wife’s sister), but whom I address as kaka following our pre-marriage relationship, responded quickly. ‘We are also going’, he spoke in the plural implying that didi and Bindhya were joining too. Two is company, as they say!

Not long after, Kailo Chitra also joined the group – his Jethan (wife’s elder brother) was getting married and he was going. Ever since we finalised our plan, Rabilal kaka and I were keen to rope in two people – Dr. Daju and Bhawani Daju – both hard nuts to crack! We tempted Dr. Daju with the option of taking a ride with us if he didn’t want to take his car. He said he would think about it. Then one-day when we had gone to visit Bhim Dhungyel’s newly constructed house at Ngabiphu and Bhauju (Dr. Daju’s wife) was in my car, I asked her if they were going to Neoly. ‘It depends on daju; he has to manage his leave from the hospital’, Bhauju responded. I was delighted, as I had thought so far that Bhauju, perhaps, was not keen to go.

With Chitra at Dolly Didi's Place (Picture courtesy: Dr. Daju)
We failed with Bhawani daju. ‘I have just started my assignment and I won’t be able to join you guys’, he apologized. Kaka and I gave up; we were going to miss one of the most interesting members of our family for the holidays. Then Kumar Bhai happened in the last minute. He is based in Neoly, where he is a teacher at Pemathang (erstwhile Dalim) School, but had come to visit his in-laws at Thinleygang, near Lobesa. His would be the fifth car in our convoy. In this case even five would not be a crowd!

I could barely sleep the night before departure. It had been two years since I had last been to Neoly and I became a bit emotional. In the bargain, I even composed an impromptu poem in Nepali on the theme जननी जन्मभूमिश्च स्वर्गादपि गरीयसी  ‘Mother and Motherland are next to heaven’. Readers may read the poem in blog.

In this post, I recount our two days onward journey to Neoly.

Day 1: Saturday, January 23, 2016: Thimphu to Phuentsholing. We started at 8:30 am gathering at Thimphu Gate to ensure that everyone was there. Kaka, daju and I were breaking off at Gedu to attend a marriage reception of my niece at Upper Saureni, Tala. Pabi, my maili jethi sasu’s (Jethi sasu = wife’s elder sister) eldest daughter had got married last February, but her in laws at Tala had not found time to organise a reception so far. After a two-hour halt at Tala, we reached Phuentsholing around five in the evening and headed straight to Jaigaon. We had to buy several small gifts for selected relatives at Neoly. ‘A sari for maiju, boottey majetro for the several didis, loongi with saya for ama, a shirt for bhinaju and mantarey kaka’, my wife finalised the list. I agreed and funded the purchases.  After a dinner at a Phuentsholing restaurant, where we landed up paying much less than what we had eaten due to an accounting error made by the restaurant manager, we rested for the night at my maila sadu daju Bhawani Giri’s place.

Day 2: Sunday, January 24, 2016: Phuentsholing to Neoly via Samdrup Jongkhar. We had planned our holiday such that we travel through India on a Sunday. The neighbouring Indian states of West Bengal and Assam are fraught with strikes and ‘hartaals’, which usually do not take place on Sundays.  Assam especially is a big headache! Travelling to Samdrup Jongkhar from Phuentsholing one has to drive more than six hours though various districts of Assam, most of them hotbeds of extremists fighting for an autonomous Bodoland. 

The Bhutan Gate at Phuentsholing opens at 5:30 AM and kaka and I were there about fifteen minutes before time. We were among the first five cars queuing up to start the long journey. Daju, Chitra and Kumar were a bit behind in the queue. As soon as the gate was flung open by visibly tired sentries, cars of many types rushed towards Jaigaon. I also applied speed and headed into the pre-dawn dark. My wife started her role as my assistant driver – telling me when not to speed, when to honk and pointing at oncoming vehicles rushing towards us as if to finish us off and generally irritating me and keeping me focussed on the road. Now and then when the going was smooth, I chided her for acting over smart, but would soon remind myself that all wives are said to be like that!

The previous day, we had agreed to regroup at the Hasimara Junction before proceeding. A wrong turn at the junction would land us up at Siliguri after three hours – a totally opposite direction! As agreed, kaka and I stopped at the junction and waited for the rest to arrive. Daju arrived ten minutes later. We waited for another half an hour or so, but Chitra and Kumar wouldn’t turn up. It was still dark and Bhutanese vehicles of all sorts were flying past us. After a while we decided that Chitra and Kumar had gone ahead of us and continued.

The highway from Hasimara to the Bengal-Assam border of Srirampur is a driver’s delight. It is in good condition and very soon we caught the first stretch of the ‘Asian Highway’, which is good befitting its moniker. Between Barobisa and Srirampur, we stopped by a roadside Dhaba for breakfast. I ordered Puri Sabji for others and Chapatti Sabji for me. My elder son Prateek complained that the place reeked of Indian pee and refused to eat, whereas hunger got the better of the rest of us. After breakfast, we decided to wait for Kumar and Chitra, while Daju found time to aim his camera at the plentiful photogenic people, objects and surrounding.

Kumar and Chitra were lost and we continued with our journey after a half hour halt. It was agreed that besides stoppages for nature call, our next big halt would be at Samdrup Jongkhar. Kaka, purportedly the most knowledgeable about the Assam-Bengal roads led the trio of us. With his better car and longer driving experience (although he can be a bit rash at times) he would run out of sight now and then even in the ruler like straight National Highway 31. I was in the middle with the arduous task of keeping my front eye on kaka and my back one on daju. I needed to be careful not to lose kaka so that I could guide daju and myself to the right direction.  Perhaps the distance that kaka was trying to maintain was purposeful as he might have been reminded of the 2007 trip when we were driving so close to each other that at one point when daju had to brake to avoid hitting an oncoming bullock cart, kaka had hit daju on his number plate. Hema Juwain had then famously commented that ‘your brothers are driving as if they are pulled by a long rope’, referring to the close tailgating at that time. 

After Bongaigaon, the Bijni Junction, which has proved to be a nightmare for many Bhutanese drivers emerged. It is a mega junction with equally broad roads running in three directions. As I crossed Bijni, I slowed down; in the distance ahead I could see that kaka was also slowing down. Before long, daju caught up and we continued. After Bijni, several bustling Indian towns fall by the highway and most of them feed and lead to various places in Bhutan.

Barpeta Road is the first to come; it leads to the famous Manas Games Sanctuary that sprawls across Indian and Bhutanese territories.  After Barpeta, we reached Pathsala, literally meaning ‘school’ or ‘centre of learning’. I am much used to this place thanks to my frequent trips to Nganglam on DCCL assignments. A few years ago, some of my relatives were not so fortunate. They were travelling to Samdrup Jongkhar and when they reached Pathsala, they thought they had reached Rangia, from where one turns left to complete the 50 kms to Daranga/Samdrup Jongkhar. They had asked an Indian sepoy ‘which side is Bhutan?’ They had asked the wrong question! The only Bhutan the semi-literate Indian cops knew was Nganglam and so they directed the stray Bhutanese to the left towards Nganglam. Later, they had recounted to us how they had lost a good hour in the confusion. So, one has to be careful at Pathsala.

Lesson: Be precise – while at Pathsala and confused ask which way is Samdrup Jongkhar or the Indian connection points of Rangia or Daranga. As they say, the answer you get is always as good as your question!

Pathsala leads to Nalbari. And I knew that I had to be careful here based on a previous experience. During the 2007 trip, we were travelling in a convoy but got dissipated by the time we reached Nalbari.  I had gotten a bit panicky and had desperately looked for the silver coloured Alto of my brother. Just at that moment, I had seen an Alto on the other side of the highway enter a side road and thought that it was my brother’s. I had waved at the car and someone from the car waved back. That’s it, I thought, and followed the Alto only to find that I had entered the Nalbari Bazaar, instead of heading straight to Rangia. Of course the Alto was not my brothers and I was lost for a while.

Lesson: Don’t wave at anyone when you are lost on an Indian highway. Rather enquire around and bide your time.

Next was Rangia. This cracker or rather bomb of a town is so chaotic that anyone who can drive through the very narrow and crowded lanes of Rangia can easily win a Formula One race. My younger son’s observations and complaints about Indian driving reached a crescendo when we passed the British era railway crossing and entered Rangia town. As soon as we had entered Jaigaon the previous day, Buku had very rightly observed that ‘Indians honk and horn for nothing …’. ‘Why do they honk when they know that the car in front in stuck because of another car legitimately crossing the road?’ he had asked me. I had no answer. I thought of my many honourable Indian friends spread across the world. ‘Are Indians unnecessarily loud, honky and aggressive?’ I wondered even as I collected all my wit, energy and motor skills to avoid hitting the rickshaws, knocking pedestrians down or simply entering a roadside shop with my car! All of us had to be careful for it was in Rangia during our famous 2007 trip that daju had unwittingly ripped a rickshaw of one of its wheels. The orphaned wheel had followed us for about 50 metres, before we crossed Rangia and fled away.

This time Rangia was uneventful. Besides pacifying my son that ‘Indians were like that’ I kept maneuvering through, under and between people, cars, cows, shit, beggars and dogs. Soon Tulsibari came into sight reminding us of the infamous escort days, when Bhutanese vehicles travelling to Samdrup Jongkhar from different parts of Bhutan had to wait at Tulsibari for the Indian Army to escort them to Daranga. At the time Assamese separatist extremists were supposed to pose a threat to Bhutanese cars and people as Bhutan had flushed out militants from their hideouts in our jungles and villages in a famous operation led by His Majesty, the fourth king.   

Tamulpur reminded me of my school days in the 1980s when we used to take the Samdrup-Guwahati bus up to Tamulpur when we returned home for vacation from Pema Gatshel. The big tree lying at the base of the junction and the old teashops lining the right flank seemed to beckon me. From Tamulpur we used to hop into tinny Indian buses up to Nagarjuli and walked all the way to Dalim – more than 15 kilometers. Those were the days!  

After Tamulpur, Kamarikata and Menuka Tea Estate lead to the famous Mela Bazaar. There was a time when Mela Bazaar served many important purposes. Besides being a bustling Indian bazaar popular among Bhutanese, it also had a shady underside, which fulfilled the libido of all ilks of men including students. It was about one in the afternoon when we reached Samdrup Jongkhar. We had a vegetarian lunch at Hotel Sambhala before starting the last leg of our journey – Samdrup Jongkhar to Deothang to Kawaipani to Dumpha to Beldara. Up to Deothang, the road is good having recently been widened and resurfaced; after that the road is good, ok and not very good in patches.   However, vehicular traffic is very light and the thought of reaching home after two and half hour keeps the spirit going.

Kawaipani looks dead as ever. On the basis of prior information, we take the Samdrupcholing-Samrang highway up to Dumpha and then snake up to Kharbandi through what was once ‘Dumpha ko ukalo’. The Samrang highway constructed and completed recently by CDCL under ADB assistance is good but is yet to be blacktopped. As we drove through, I showed my wife and boys ‘that is where maili didi’s house used to be’, ‘that below the khamari tree is where ‘saila kaka used to live’.  Before long I could see a big orchard of areca nut and an expanse of dry and wetland – the land I have inherited from my late parents in Dumpha. Just before reaching my land, the Samrang highway gives birth to a smaller road – Pemathang Geog Road; we left the highway and trudged up to Kharbandi.


Tika and Bhauju amusing their Amaju (Thul Didi) (Pic courtesy: Dr. Daju)
What a pleasure it was to drive a motorcar across the village that I grew up in decades ago. Amber Pokhrel, Acharja saila, Bhujel, Pitaram Timsina, Dukka Bau, Khatiwoda Maila, Mantarey kaka, Pumfa, Harka Bahadur Mama, Dhan Bahadur Daju, Moktanni Amoi, Hamro Ghar appeared on the sides of the dusty road in quick succession. By the time we crossed DC Daju’s house, we left the geog road and took a right turn towards ex-gup Parsuram Dhungyel’s house. Beyond Balkrishna Dhungyel’s house, the road is merely a furrow along paddy fields and through arecanut trees. The daylight was fading as we crossed Ganesh Khatiwoda’s house and entered didi’s estate. Didi and Bhena were waiting to receive us. We had reached home by the time the cows came home and the birds had nestled for the night.


Our holiday had begun!

Thursday, 21 January 2016

जननी जन्मभूमिश्च स्वर्गादपि गरीयसी

मलाई रहर लाग्यो
मलाई कर लाग्यो
मैले सपना देखें
मेरो गाउको याद आयो
मैले बिपनामा सोंचे!

त्यो धुले बाटो
त्यो सर्पे गोरेटो
ति खेतका गरा र आलीहरु
छन् के त् ति खोल्सा र नालाहरु?
















मेरो मुटु दुख्यो
मेरो छाती भकान्यो
ति सानाका गोठाले साथीहरु
कति स्वर्ग लागे, कति बसै गए
छ के त् कोइ मलाई चिन्ने?

मार्बल र फिन्श्यो को खोपी
मालिंगा को मुरली
गैरीटiर र वारांगमा
जानी नजानी नारायण गोपाल गाउने
छन् के त् मेरा साथी हरु?

मेरो जिज्ञासा बढ्यो
मेरो भावना खेल्यो
पिता मरेका टुहुरालाई
आमा खसेको बालकलाई
माया र सानुभुती दिने
कस्ती भैन मेरी दिदि र माइजुहरु?

मेरो भक्कानो छुट्यो
मेरा आँखा रोए
मेरी स्वास्नीले भनिन
प्रिये भोलि बिहानै
हामी गाउँ जौ!

Thursday, 31 December 2015

Between the Old and the New - Life Continues!

 1.      Introduction: It is same, same, and yet new!
Time doesn’t pause, it continues to tick and move forward. Time and tide wait for none is merely a cliché, now that we know what it means. The round IKEA clock clinging like a koala on a eucalyptus tree on the wall of my living room continues to chime. Nothing has changed between yesterday and today. We continue to follow the same routine, at least I do.

January 1st is not a public holiday in Bhutan. I will drive to work tomorrow in my mid-age i20 like I have been doing for the past many years, probably wearing a gho I bought five years ago. At work, the same Kamali Maya will hand over a cup of pale hot water with some small twigs afloat. Kamali calls it green tea I call it inefficiency! For someone who makes so much fuss about a perfect brew at home, it is a big sacrifice to have to settle for a much lesser drink at work. The same tall and heavy boss cum supervisor of mine will saunter into his chamber as he has been doing for the last near five years. The same shared facilities, the same everything, yet today is old, tomorrow will be new.


Happy New Year sir, Jigme, my subordinate colleague bowed in traditional sincerity as he peeped through the goray (traditional Bhutanese door curtain) today. Half a dozen calls, scores of Facebook messages and several short messages on my mobile continue to remind me that New Year is here.  Happy New Year, I respond to everyone, taking an hour of office time to reciprocate and send out the three words around the world.

2.     Purpose
As a budding blogger with a small, yet keen followership, I wanted to write and post something on New Year’s Eve. This essay is intended to wish all my friends and relatives a very happy and successful new year as well as to keep my blogging spirit alive!

This essay is divided into six sections: 1) introduction, 2) Purpose, 3) Villains of 2015, 4) Heroes of 2015, 5) Prayers for 2016 and 6) Afterword. It is written without malice or favour towards anyone.

3.     Villains of 2015
In this section, I have written about a couple of issues bothering the conscience of people like me during the last 365 days.

a.     The neighbourhood builder
During the last four years, a huge five-storied building has been constructed brick by brick and truck by truck in front of my current residence in Changzamtog. The building is nearing completion with over zealous tenants occupying half-completed flats since October 2015.

Even as the owner built the building block by block, he destroyed the neighbourhood drain-by-drain, road-by-road and dirt-by-dirt. As he nears the completion of his mammoth RCC structure, the landlord has ensured that the neighbourhood is in ruins. Thanks to his careless and carefree attitude, his success has meant that the neighbourhood drain has disappeared below a pile of construction debris and the road has transformed into slushy pools.

Meanwhile, apparently our Thromde (Municipality) has no clue about what goes on within its jurisdiction. Elections for the next Thrompoen (Mayor) have been announced for the 3rd week of January 2016. How I wish that the mayor would come around to identify problems to be addressed.  However, he has no motivation and reason to go house-by-house and understand problems and possible solutions. As per the Election Act of the Kingdom of Bhutan 2008, only a Bhutanese whose census is registered within a municipality is eligible to vote for a mayor of that municipality. Sounds fair enough, but consider this: more than ninety percent of Thimphu’s population consists of individuals and households whose censuses are registered in other districts.

As per Kuensel dated Dec 29, 2015, Thimphu municipality has only 7,275 eligible voters, whereas the total population of Thimphu is estimated at more than 100,000 in 2015. The majority consists of civil servants, corporate employees, private sector employees, businessmen, entrepreneurs and their extra baggage of relatives and dependents. As I am not a registered resident of Thimphu but a mere employed and salaried dweller, I have no voting rights in Thimphu! When a tiny minority (7%) decides for a whopping majority, prospective as well as real mayors are less inclined and motivated to listen to the masses.

Alas! This neither is the democracy that the ancient Greeks designed nor the one our kings wished.  How one wishes that Bhutan’s Election Commission would enfranchise all residents to vote for municipal elections. If that was the case, perhaps the Thrompoen might be more representative and responsible!

b.    Terrorism and waning tolerance worldwide
By recent world standards it may, perhaps, be wrong to say that violence and terrorism were new activities in 2015. Unfortunately, violence, terrorism and killing of innocent civilians have been going on for decades. 2015 was no better and terrorism and intolerance continued to rear their ugly heads.

Between Charlie Hebdo, the Bataclan, the Erawan Shrine in Bangkok, several shootings in the USA and the continuous carnage in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan violence was the new order in 2015.  The instances of mindless violence against the weak and vulnerable were too many to recount here.

Muslim Rohingyas continued to be persecuted in predominantly Buddhist Myanmar in 2015. In September, a mob of Hindu fanatics attacked a Muslim family in Uttar Pradesh state of India lynching a 52-year-old man and seriously injuring his son. Why? Because the Muslim family was suspected of storing and eating beef, which is against the religious belief of the Hindus. Also in September, Israeli soldiers shot a Palestinian child in the face as she played on the balcony of her family home in the West Bank.  During the year, America, which prides itself to be the beacon of freedom and fairness, saw several cases of white police officers shooting and killing black men for insubstantial reasons. Between Ferguson, Baltimore and Chicago, the USA continued to burn in white fires of racial discrimination.

The case of the Clock Boy, Ahmed Mohamed, in the USA, perhaps, underscores the increasing racial profiling the world has seen in recent times. Indeed, stereotyping and racial profiling is so intense in several countries that Sikhs have been regularly attacked mistaken as Muslims. This is not to say that Muslims must be attacked!

During private moments as well as social mulling, an increasing number of people around the world must be wondering if everything is right with Islam. We tend to wear our judgmental hats and declare that Muslims are violent.   Then I remember the few Muslims whom I have met in my life – classmates at my MBA in the Netherlands- and immediately decide that they were as humane as anyone else.

A few days ago Iranian President Hasan Rouhani vindicated the feeling among a certain section of the societies around the world when he said that ‘most violence, terror and massacres, unfortunately, take place in the Islamic world’. Addressing many leaders from around the Islamic world gathered at the 29th International Islamic Unity Conference in Tehran, President Hasan said that Islamic extremist groups were creating a militant picture of Islam and urged Muslim countries to strive to improve the world's opinion of Islam. However, several incidences that took place around the world (as summarised above) in 2015 indicate that every major country, community and religion is involved and needs to improve the world’s opinion of it.  It is not just Islam!

At a time when the world is becoming a global village, racial profiling is increasing in the west. The old adage of not talking about religion and politics at the dinner table to avoid quarrel has never been truer as it is today. Religion is something people generally take so seriously that they have fought and died in the name of a particular belief system since the dawn of mankind.

When moral and cultural issues and etiquettes are decided by the majority and enforced on the minority, it is hard to expect societal cohesion and peace. Resistance and resistance leading to violence are, unfortunately, simple corollaries! Even as millions around the world fight economic poverty, the world is also stricken by moral and cultural poverty. Thinking right and finding lasting peaceful solutions to problems are in serious short supply.

Today, violence is so pervasive that most countries around the world seem to accept a certain level of violence. In other words, it is difficult to take peace for granted. Peace is relative and is enjoyed in varying degree by countries around the world. I am fortunate to live in a country, which enjoys a very high level of peace and tranquility by any standard. By the standards of many countries and societies that are at the epicentre of the current turmoil, Bhutan today is indeed a Shangrila. 

4.     Heroes of 2015
In this section, I have shared my thoughts about a few relatives – mostly nephews and nieces – with an intention to encourage and motivate them to keep going as well as to serve as model stories for other young relatives to follow.

Relatives and friends who have not been included here should not feel left out or disowned. I love each one of you the same and wish you all a very happy new year. The narration is done in reverse alphabetical order and doesn’t indicate any ranking or merit.

a.     Rup Pokhrel
I haven’t met Rup in person. However, the several Skype calls and the umpteen Facebook interactions that we have had have convinced me that this man is definitive and objective of purpose. There is a saying that a person is judged by the company he keeps. I say that the quality of a son is judged by his attitude towards his old parents.

Traditionally, among ethnic Nepalese, elderly parents chose to spend their terminal years either with their eldest or youngest sons. Rup is neither the eldest nor the youngest in his family. Yet his parents chose to stay with him although his wife is a Chhetri and his parents are traditional purebred bahuns (Brahmins). The other sons and daughters-in-law are known to be no less caring and responsible. Thus, it was a measured move taken by his parents to initiate a change in the family of traditional Brahmins to accept people by their hearts and not by their castes alone. Rup has not only taken upon the responsibility of taking care of his parents, but also shoulders it with élan and pride.

I was impressed to know that Rup is a teetotaler and doesn’t smoke. These are excellent qualities to have in anyone in any part of the world. However, these qualities have even better values when it comes to living with your elderly parents. Thanks to Rup and his brothers, his father received good spiritual, material and medicinal care and died a very dignified natural death. Meanwhile, his mom continues to enjoy her life in the USA.

The Pittsburgh community didn’t take much time to recognize Rup’s contribution to the community. Here was a young man who was committed to helping and guiding those around him. In August, he was recognized and awarded as a Community Health Partnership Champion by the University of Pittsburgh Medical Centre, Centre for Engagement and Inclusion.

Rup receiving the UPMC Award

I have come to know Rup because he is my good friend late Omnath’s younger brother. As a friend of three decades, Omnath was dear to me and the care and affection that Rup had for his late brother endeared him to me. At a time when most of his relatives and friends forsook Omnath for his small waywardly habits, Rup tried his best to supplement love and care that Omnath lacked in his dying days.

Omnath was lucky to have a brother like Rup! The two brothers not only looked similar but also, perhaps, shared telepathic relationship. By the time he answered an early call from the grim reaper, Omnath had written more than thirteen stories reflecting his own life, societal maladies and fantastic romances. The truth of what he wrote in those lovely stories lay buried in the shadow of his untimely demise, until his brother Rup gave them life and published ‘The Silhouette of Truth’.

On behalf of my late friend, I thank Rup for resurrecting Omnath among his friends and relatives. I also hope that he will continue to find purpose and direction in life to be the family patriarch and a good community leader.    

b.    Preeti Nirola
Preeti was born cute and continues to radiate charm. After her Bachelor Degree, she was unable to immediately find a job in the competitive Bhutanese job market. However, she pursued with her passion in graphics and designs eventually leading the design and layout of a weekly Bhutanese tabloid.  A cool and caring father helped her overcome her initial tensions of remaining largely unemployed. Even after she graduated from college, her father continued to see her as his lovely little girl and put no pressure on Preeti to go out and earn.

Preeti has matured over the years and provides good gel for family bondage. When she decided to move to Dubai in pursuit of a long-term professional engagement, her parents, relatives and well wishers were quite worried about her adaptability to the new job and environs. Will she be able to handle the pressure of the job in retail trade in a foreign land? During the last month and half since she emigrated, Preeti has silenced much of the worries. Today, she is settled on her job and seems to be enjoying life. The fact that she continues to post regular updates on Facebook with her trademark hash tags is a major testimony to that.

As the only daughter of my only brother, Preeti has always been close to me. I pray that she will shine among her colleagues, rise up the ranks at work and make good money allowing her to indulge in her hobbies - good food and clothes. I also hope that she will give us an opportunity to celebrate as she decides to settle down in life with the man she loves! 


c.     Prem Kumar Bhattarai
He bears a striking physical resemblance to his father, with his brownish and, often, unkempt looks. However, Kumar, as his parents lovingly call him, bears a very soft and gentle personality.

He has always been known to be a very hard working and ambitious young man. He is also very articulate, a quality lacking in most people of his generation. When his higher secondary results didn’t turn out as per his (and others) expectations, Kumar was so upset with himself that he even took the disappointments expressed by some of his relatives as outright scorn. Since that fateful spring day about four years ago, Kumar fought back hard, humming along the way, to glory. As a result of his hard work, determination, and perhaps, his will to show those who scorned him when he struggled, Kumar finds himself among a select group of university graduates chosen to enter the Bhutan civil service as first class officers.

I am not sure if his parents have understood the significance of Kumar’s recent achievement; however, his two brothers and numerous educated relatives, such as me, have understood it. I wish Kumar a very successful career ahead. I hope, like a true champion, he will continue to dream and work hard to reach his goals. Good luck, Bhanij!

d.    My American nephews
Among ethnic Nepalese, the sons and daughters of one’s sisters are considered among the closest (and even pious) of relatives. In fact, nephews and nieces from sisters’ side are even addressed with respect, unlike those from brothers’ side. As far as nephews and nieces are concerned, I am filthy rich. I have many and three of them are in the United States of America – Deepak, Raju and Prakash. While Deepak and Raju are from my third elder sister, Prakash is the lone son of my second eldest sister.

It is a matter of pride and satisfaction to note that all three of them are doing well in their respective fields. Deepak, the eldest of the trio regularly comes out on top of his colleagues at work in Hampton; he has won several awards from his employer. Raju is pursuing his education, while providing (together with his caring wife) day-to-day moral support and purpose of life to his parents. His doll of a daughter provides the family, especially her grandparents, with new charm and enthusiasm in life.

Academically, it is Prakash who is creating a lot of buzz and excitement among his well-wishers. I am also excited about it. Prakash is so focussed in his academic pursuit that he lives away from his family (including his young wife) in a students’ house.

Way to go – Bhanijs! I wish each one of you greater success in 2016. Deepak needs to catch up on academic pursuits. I also wish Prakash and his wife a successful impending parenthood. Let me know if I become a granduncle or a grandaunt as a joke goes!

e.     Dolly Giri
Sarada was born a roundish chubby girl earning her the pet moniker (Dolly) she is known by among her relatives today. However, she has demonstrated good sportsmanship and even uses the nickname as her Facebook identity!

Dolly is fearsome, focussed and highly caring. The unfortunate and untimely demise of her mom about four years ago compelled her to mature overnight and bear the family lantern in her nimble hands. And she has risen rapidly up the family ladder to be its patriarch.

During the last couple of years, she has managed her family well, including the successful wedding of her elder sister, the rehabilitation of her father, who was struggling with some untoward aspects of his lifestyle and the college education of her younger sister. Besides, she has also found the time and motivation to further her own education.


As a good and caring niece, she reminds Tika and me that we do have a daughter! I wish Dolly successful completion of her first degree; may her thirst for education continue. A sweet girl as Dolly deserves a boy out of the imaginary. Tika and I pray that she will find a suitable partner as soon as she decides to have one.

f.      Bindhya Pokhrel
At home she responds to her pet moniker kali. When she struggled into her higher secondary standards, most of us had given up on Bindhya. ‘She will complete her Bachelor Degree, but that will be about it. We can’t expect too much from her’, was the frail prophesy. Contrary to the general fear and worry, she came out of her class 12 examinations with such flying colours that even the rare Himalayan butterflies looked monotonous in comparison.   After Yangchenphug, Gaeddug was her next port of call, where she anchored well. Although she had to face the tragic demise of her only sibling (younger brother) in the midst of her studies, she did herself and Gaeddug proud by emerging among the duxes.

End 2013 was a blissful moment in our family – thanks to Bindhya. At a time when young college graduates seeking to enter the job market in Bhutan are finding it increasingly difficult to land a meaningful job, Bindhya landed three at a time. Besides passing Bhutan’s Royal Civil Service Examination and securing one of the limited jobs in the civil service, Bindhya was also selected by Bhutan Telecom and Bhutan National Bank Ltd through competitive interviews. For a change, Bindhya and the family were faced with the proverbial problem of plenty! Over a few family dinners, we conducted SWOT and cost benefit analyses of the various options and eventually advised Bindhya to choose the Bank.


 Someone has perhaps quite appropriately said, ‘don’t choose a job choose a boss’. A good boss is particularly important during the formative years of a young professional. Bindhya has not been quite lucky as far as her supervisors are concerned. Nevertheless, Bindhya continues to be a role model in the family and in our social circle. Whether it is her choice of pure vegetable diet, a good dose of daily religio-spiritual regimen, or a gift of her gab, Bindhya regularly punches above her weight and no pun intended here!

Bindhya has always been a part of the family. Having held her as a baby and seen her grow through the years, I don’t need to glorify her importance to my family. I wish her a successful pursuit of her second degree and beyond. As she sets out on her academic pursuits, I hope that she will find someone worthy of being a life partner to her.

5.     Prayers for 2016
In this section, I have chosen a few people of national, public and personal importance to wish them well in 2016 and beyond.

a.     Her Majesty, The Queen of Bhutan
Any motherhood is important, but when you are bearing the heir apparent and future king of a country, its significance is multiplied. When his Majesty, the King announced the imminent birth of the sixth king of Bhutan on 11 Nov, the whole nation rejoiced.

As the country waits for the arrival of the royal baby and the future king, we pray collectively and wish Their Majesties a successful and happy parenthood. I wish her Majesty good health and a very successful and blissful motherhood. We are certain that our future king will be as noble and worthy as his father and the rest of his lineage have been.

b.    Ritu Raj Chhetri, MP
As I write this during the last week of 2015, Member of Parliament, Sipsu Constituency, Hon’ble Ritu Raj Chhetri is struggling for life in an intensive care unit in Samitivej Sukhumvit Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand.  

They say fate guides the willing and drags the unwilling. Ritu was neither willing nor unwilling. He was a practical person, who believed in god, but always locked his car. However, he was a bit careless and casual with his health. He was heavy right from his college days and went on to collect additional kilograms of weight and blood sugar. Diabetes got the better of him and in the ensuing struggle he lost one eye.

As an old mate I wish Ritu speedy recovery so that he is able to regain normal health.

c.     My parents-in-law
As fate would have it, my in-laws got separated when my would-be wife was a young girl. Soon after getting divorced, both mom and dad got a new spouse each. Thereafter, they went their separate ways. Today, my mother-in-law is in the USA with her second husband, while father-in-law is down under with his second wife and son. Both my in-laws have reached their advanced ages and thrive on good medical care in their new home countries. My wife and I wish them (as well as their current spouses) good health and happiness in 2016 and beyond.  

6.    Afterword
As a popular refrain goes, ‘until the lion learns how to write, every tale will glorify the hunter’. In this essay, I am neither the hunter nor the hunted. I find myself as a meek deer watching the power play between the devils and the angels and reflecting what is right and what can be improved.


A word of caution – Remember New Year eve and New Year day are also times for misadventure and notoriety among our youth and the unemployed. Going by past trends, there may be untoward incidents in the wee hours of the New Year as the citizens of one of the happiest nations on earth stagger home after several rounds of Druk 11000 (the most popular strong lager beer brewed in Bhutan) in bars, discotheques, streets and drains.  To translate a Hindi adage loosely, ‘if you want to enjoy a peaceful sleep, stay awake’! May your new year be full of gleeful oxymorons!