father returning home by dilip chtire
Post on 16-Aug-2015
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Video Impression
• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3rzut2c44M
Dilip Chitre (17 Sept 1938 – 10 Dec 2009)
• One of the foremost Indian writers and critics to emerge in post-Independence India.
• Wrote in Marathi & English• Also a painter & filmmaker• Born in Baroda• Family moved to Mumbai in 1951• Published his first collection of poems in
1960
What is this poem about?
• Alienation of the elderly in a modern world• Isolation of old age• Estrangement from family• Loneliness in modern cities• Modernisation• Loss of historical and cultural identitySetting: Mumbai, India
Father Returning Home My father travels on the late evening train
Standing among silent commuters in the yellow light Suburbs slide past his unseeing eyes
His shirt and pants are soggy and his black raincoat Stained with mud and his bag stuffed with books Is falling apart. His eyes dimmed by age fade homeward through the humid monsoon night.
Now I can see him getting off the train Like a word dropped from a long sentence. He hurries across the length of the grey platform, Crosses the railway line, enters the lane, His chappals are sticky with mud, but he hurries onward.
Coming out he trembles at the sink, The cold water running over his brown hands, A few droplets cling to the greying hairs on his wrists.
His sullen children have often refused to share Jokes and secrets with him. He will now go to sleep Listening to the static on the radio, dreaming
Of his ancestors and grandchildren, thinking Of nomads entering a subcontinent through a narrow pass.
Khyber Pass• The Khyber Pass is the best natural land route to India through
the Hindu Kush mountain range. It is one of the most famous mountain passes in the world, with a long and often violent history. It has been not only a major trade route for centuries, but also an entry point for conquering armies carrying on their invasions. A very interesting curiosity is that "Khyber" seems to be a Hebrew name: its meaning is related to the Hebrew root chet-bet-resh, the verb "to connect", "to couple", "to join", implying also partnership, junction, intimate union. Even though this term may not be Hebrew, no other possible etymology has yet been found. How did a Hebrew name be applied to such an important place in the gates of India?
• The Aryans are a group of people who migrated to India through the Khyber pass around 1500 BC. There is a lot of debate about whether the Aryans actually did arrive in India. Dr. Dinesh Agrawal's paper Demise of the Aryan Invasion Theory states that the Aryans could not have been in India because they moved from East to West. He supports this by saying that this is how Europeans languages are so similar to the Sanskrit language. Agrawal also says that there is no mention of invasions in any Vedic writings. An article from thinkquest.org declares that the Aryans did influence India. They believe that horses, an animal not native to India, were brought with the Aryans. The Aryans also brought a set of deities with them. The gods that they brought weren't Indian so it can be reasoned that they were brought by a different group of people.
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