Saturday, May 8, 2021

Dear Humanity

 


Dear Humanity,

Big things start small! It all started with a whispering rumour and then it took the shape gradually of a news coverage of a sensation amounting to an international conspiracy, to wage a biological war against You! Humanity, the fragile and formidable You, to annihilate You – a virus named Covid-19 was the latest of the onslaughts on You – on Your desire for an ordered universe in a fragmented, wounded and despiritualised waste land that talks of clash of civilizations and end of history and the last ‘human.’

 

The government communique started circulating rules and regulations for a lockdown period. Press releases, broadcasts and advisories from the presidents and ministers of the mortals and friendly precautions and warnings gradually turned into strict administrative control of the movement of people and commodity. Social and cultural distancing now were seen to be ‘new normal.’  Love thy neighbour from a safe distance, masked miens and safely sanitized hands were preferred, rather had become and still are the elitist (with ethnic and designer masks!) routine of the civilized lot.  In the densely populated ghettos of the modern world and the rural population (particularly in Indian Subcontinent) people follow the ‘normal’ routine of their lives.  Like chicken-pox, tuberculosis and other once considered dreaded diseases people seem to have started an ambivalent attitude towards the new frenemy, Covid-19.

 

Soon national emergency was declared. Curfew was imposed. April turned out to be the ‘cruellest’ month, beginning of an interminable period of trepidation, distress and doubt.  The lockdown period was very stressful in the beginning. we were not used to get our things done within a restricted period of time, for example, a transaction in the Bank, booking an appointment at a Doctor’s or routine things like buying vegetables and provisions.  Gradually, we got ourselves adjusted to the new routine for ours and society’s well-being.  Friends and relatives called and narrated their experiences with the data of people hospitalised and dying in India and abroad of this mysterious Covid-19 virus.  Some people took it lightly and some very seriously. People who believed in the efficacy of alternate medicine like those of traditional and herbal time-tested remedies put forth their ideas and social sites turned out to be a Babel of voices for such suggestions for keeping one away from the Covid-19 virus, increasing the anxiety and dread of the global pandemic with the news of  death of so many on the glocal scene.  We preferred to stay indoors to stay safe and to save You, Humanity! Slowly the fear resulted from the lockdown restrictions from without has started affecting the inner world, moving from the physical to the psychological worlds affecting society, family, education, living and work in a way that was unprecedented.

 

 Generally speaking, in any kind of misfortune like this people think of family first. My thoughts turned towards keeping my family away from the contact of the ubiquitous feared virus Covid-19.  I looked at the timings when Banks and markets were scheduled to be open and rushed there to buy provisions and medicine and masks and sanitizer.   Usually, I had the experience of living in Yemen and Libya during the time of political unrest in those countries and I witnessed people taking recourse to hoarding provisions and the merchants increasing the prices of commodities exorbitantly. I was wary of that situation.  But in India in general and in Patna (my present place of relocation after I came to India after having spent about three decades of working abroad in  various countries of the Middle East) in particular I saw the governmental machinery and the people  empathetic to each other except for some sporadic instances of police excesses to restore law and order during  grey and grim times that was looming large before all of us.  The people who we think of as the part of a governmental machinery were also human beings with their families harbouring forebodings staying and praying from home for their safe return from work.  An undefined feeling started creeping in the heart as I drove out into the deserted streets of Patna for buying provisions and medicine, the lines from Philip Larkin’s “Ambulances” reverberated in my entire being and I “sense[ed] the solving emptiness/That lies just under all we do!”

 

My 15-year daughter studies in 10th standard, the closure of her school was like snatching away from her the new electronic gadget that was given to her recently to enjoy.  Along with studies, she used to have several activities at the school, above all the thought that she would not meet her peer group for a long time made her feel sad and disappointed.  The talk of conducting online classes was in the air on the local and the national levels. It was a new experience. Not all were familiar with the digital class management. Besides, despite the digital revolution, there exists a Digital Divide due to lack of Internet facilities in the remote rural areas.  And those who were familiar with the new technique were not conducting online classes regularly, it was something new and necessary now to be done in the interest of the educational institutions and their beneficiaries. Gradually, people had come to realise with the feeling of unexplained unease that it has been the worst year for students. 

 

Amidst this situation I received a WhatsApp invitation from my daughter’s school to attend a meeting on ‘Zoom.’  First, I thought it was a parents’ meeting but to my surprise it was a staff meeting to find out ways and means to deal with the extraordinary situation. I was requested to teach English language and literature in some classes at the school as the teacher concerned was stationed at his native place and the chances of his return were naught. He went to his native place and he was quarantined for fourteen days, in the meantime a strict lockdown was imposed and in absence of transport facilities he stayed put there. Moreover, he was over sixty-five years old and the people of that age group were instructed not to go out as they were vulnerable to Covid-19 virus contagion. I accepted to handle the classes.  I was to teach from home.  It was a blessing in disguise for me.

 

But for my daughter and innumerable students like her (as per UNICEF estimate 1.57 billion students have been affected due to school closure in more than 190 countries worldwide) shifting from offline to online, from physical to virtual classroom was sudden and shocking.  Like the teachers who were not technically conversant and harboured a kind of deep doubt and apathy, students too did not have any clarity about this new system.  My daughter like Margie in Isaac Asimov’s story “The Fun They Had” (it is in her syllabus) thought that the new virtual class would be taught by robots and the school would soon become a thing of the past.

 

Teaching online on Zoom was a new experience to me too. Though while working at a University in K. S. A. I was trained to use Blackboard Collaborate; it was an altogether different context.  In the beginning students were enthusiastic but parents were wary of the newfound freedom of their children with android phones.  Things moved on with the persuasion of parents and the pieces of advice given to students and teachers from time to time. I had an opportunity to read and teach some of the finest poems, classic stories and one -act plays like “Dust of Snow”, “The Road Not Taken”, “The Lake Isle of Innisfree”.  “The Necklace”, “The Happy Prince” , “The Last Leaf” and “The Marriage Proposal” respectively.  During the lockdown period of ‘home alone’ I felt that we were not alone as we started new negotiations to enhance the bond between pen and pandemic with a new dimension: the digital dimension. Of course, it had and still has a constant refrain of “Sir, when shall our school reopen?”

 

   Then was added to this dimension webinars, live sessions on the social sites and several other things that chanted hymns of  revival  of the indomitable will of survival in the face of death and destruction; the historical memories of the first true pandemic of the outbreak of Cholera in 1832 was revived too as a parallel for the latent human potential that waits for such trying times to pop up its brave face! I attended several webinars and gave one or two too to be in the fray. In India, my country, I naturally acquired the status of a senior citizen two years ago. By the Almighty’s grace I am still active and always persuade myself to keep a positive outlook even in the face of the most unsettling of challenges.  My wife has been a co-warrior fighting by my side during all the thick and thin of life. Even today when her health is under the threat of gradual deterioration due to Osteoarthritis and, during the dark times dawned upon by Covid-19 virus when “we are here as on a darkling plain/Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight”, she has shown unparalleled grit and determination. One formidable weapon we have wielded against the Covid-19 virus and the bleak atmosphere created by it is the weapon of keeping ourselves meaningfully engaged.  Our daughter revived her long-forgotten blog. My wife and I apart from reading books and writing for self-satisfaction enrolled ourselves in online classes to learn Sanskrit, our long-lost desire which was there flowing like an antecedent stream in a desert.

 

In order to “devour” Time before it devours us, we tried our hands at making drawings, watching films, playing the piano, the Ludo, the Carom and playing more with our pet, the beautiful and loving Pomeranian, Crystal.  Amidst all these developments, there was a piece of news that made us happy and worried about her that she was in the family way! So, taking her for a walk was compulsory. She walked on the road until the morning of her D-Day and what was interesting that she, as her wont, continued to challenge her canine friends whenever she ran into them. At 3 pm I drove to a chemist to buy some medicine and I received a call from my wife that Crystal was moaning. I rushed back to my apartment and Lo and behold! I found Crystal with a tiny red thing near her hind legs. I immediately called her caretaker in panic. He told me to keep calm and came to my apartment after a few minutes. He helped Crystal deliver three puppies and it was 6 pm, the time for the lockdown period to be imposed. He explained certain procedures about how to deliver the rest of the puppies as he guessed that there would be at least four more to be delivered and taken care of.  I was to play the midwife! And I was not sure of myself without any training to hold life in my palm; causing death and havoc does not require any training! Humanity you are the only and lonely witness to this downhearted fact of the world! I helped Crystal deliver four more puppies one after the other, taking the life out of the membrane, cutting the umbilical cord with a new razor, disinfecting the cutting ends with Dettol, tying them with thread and wiping their bodies with fresh tissue paper and then life is alive and kicking hungry for the mother’s milk! Our daughter assisted me and she opened their tiny mouth taking her to their mother, eyeless they knew the places from where they would get the life-sustaining milk – the first drop of sap that only a mother provides! My wife was watching the entire scene with unbelievable expression on her face. To me this incident was symbolic of the hidden potential of the recent pandemic caused by Covid-19 virus. It is still ‘a riddle wrapped in a mystery’ which only Time will unravel!

 

The impact of Covid-19 pandemic has been sudden and severe in the economic and social spheres globally.  The pandemic has taken toll on those who earn their livelihoods living far away from home particularly outside their countries. It has added a new conflicting dimension to the negotiations of home and exile.  People are still there in their host countries as work diaspora, trying to save their jobs without thinking of coming home in the absence of regular flights or in some countries, the flights have been cancelled sine die. Inside the countries like India the massive migration of daily-waged migrant workers back home after the outbreak of the pandemic in the months of March and April 2020 was reminiscent of mass exodus of people that took place during the Holocaust!

 

Dear Humanity, despite all the vicissitude we have suffered, we still have faith in you. Human beings have been blessed prisoners of hope. We need to go back to Nature! We need to vitally and ‘virtually’ ‘reconnect’ with our work and people, particularly with our fellow beings and loved ones. We need to stand still for some time for a better hindsight. We should keep a healthy lifestyle and better hygiene.  We should accept the seamless structures of digital classrooms and virtual office spaces that have connected ourselves with our homes in unique ways of remote working and learning. Once again, distances are no longer challenging and the kaleidoscopic change is going to show (I am quite hopeful!)  the other side of the paradise of Marshal McLuhan’s concept of a “Global Village.” Until that time, in our sheltered existence, with so many sentiments which remained unexpressed that made our loneliness a defining tool during the difficult times as we suffer silently thinking of our presentiment, our future and the future of the generations to come, let the present be a:

“Balm of the summer night, balm of the ordinary,
imperial joy and sorrow of human existence,
the dreamed as well as the lived—
what could be dearer than this, given the closeness of death?”
― 
Louise Gluck, The Seven Ages

 By:

Anil Kumar Prasad, Ph.D.,

Formerly Professor of English,

 Nageshwar Colony, Patna, India

 (Written during the first wave of Covid-19)