Chellaachi
If you happen to meet ‘Chellaachi’ (an acronym for Chellamma Chechi ) , chance is that
you’ll never keep her in memory. She has such common features. Dressed in
blouse and lungi, decoloured and torn due to over usage ...slender malnourished frame….two teeth protruding
outside from the front row. Yet she had the grace which made her dearer to people. She was a coir
worker, ratt-operator, to be precise.
She rotated the device by hand at variable speeds. Her day started when perumeen (Venus) made its appearance
at the sky during the pre-dawn hours. Chellaachi
and her peers had almost entirely depended on nature to have an idea about
time. She used to get ready in less than half an hour and started the daily
grind by day-break! Sweeping the sprawling front and back-yards of a couple
of dominant households of the village was the first activity. (The schedule
continued even after she turned seventy).
Muralidharan K. |
Ponnappa, shall I
write alphabets on your legs….Hari…Sree…
His skin was so dry that if some pointed object had a brush
over it, it made a distinct mark.
Jagathran died an early death. His meagre body was kept on a
plantain-leaf. Chellaachi cried non-stop, almost uncontrollably.
Chellaachi and other working women always had to face the
bitter side of life. They were not enlightened or wise people but they never
complained. In contrast my mother with a far better upbringing made her
displeasure known, always. I often wondered why Chellaachy didn’t get angry
like my mom. She should have, in fact. I haven’t heard her telling any lousy
remarks about others either. Including her employer Sarada, the entrepreneur-cum-worker
of the four-woman coir spinning unit. Just to ward off the monotony of work,
they often invented spicy stories about men and women of the
village. Who is love with whom….who is
having an extra marital affair with whom…who got red-handed in the act and so
on. Chellaachy never got amused. In fact, she disliked gossiping.
Muralidharan K. |
Saradechy finds fault
in everything, even in a flying bird..
She once told me.
Chellaachy and people like her always listened and never reacted.
A deadly indifference in matters directly affecting their lives. She earned Rs.22 as
wages in her heydays for the nine-hour grind. Health problems were too common.
Skin, lungs and bones were permanent sources of worry. They didn’t have any
sort of Social-security net. No betterment of working conditions. No rise. No
retirement benefits. No, nothing. And still they didn’t complain. They worked,
took care of their husbands and children and cared little for their own
existence.
Political parties often declared stoppage of work and Chellaachy
would cool off her heels sitting at home. She never failed to participate in
striking. If you ask her why, she would draw a blank.
Oh…fine..
Chellaachy , do you
have anything to eat?
She would grin again with all those disarrayed teeth. She
was going to bear with this one too. After several rounds of hullaballoo the
government would announce a rise in minimum-wages of Rs.2 per day.
For Chellaachy, it is an investment opportunity and there was
no question of wavering regarding the parking of money. The kudukka was her safety vault. As her
booty grew to a formidable hundred, someone in dire straits was destined to
approach her with a pressing demand. ..hospitalisation, house-repair or a business
purpose soft-loan . More often than not, Chellaachy’s formidable hundred would
vanish into thin air.
Untitled- K.G Subramanyam- gouache and crayon on paper |
I met her recently and she was still active in spite of her
advanced age. Keeping afloat on her own. During the evenings she gave company
to a widow in the neighbourhood.
A hurriedly prepared dinner for both with fish curry , rice,
rasam and then
its serial time. Chellaachy squats on the floor but never really watches the
mini screen. She is in a quasi-state between sleep and wakefulness.
A completely black and white world where colours have no
significance.
Thank you, Roopa. So nice of you...
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