A
Roman Column
Harbingers of
the New
Neeman
Sobhan
It's an
annual event like the migration of birds. To keep the metaphor
going, it is that time of the year when the baby birds of
the human kind who have flown the coop return to their parent's
nest, flocking from all over the world. Here in Rome, it's
the Christmas-holiday season, bringing students back into
the family fold. Collapsing from the exertions of the end
of semester or classes, children are tumbling home into the
welcoming arms of waiting parents.
Rome is
never very enthusiastic about wearing festive colours for
Christmas, and I can never tell from my Italian neighbour's
homes if they are in the celebration mood, so understated
is the Italian approach to Christmas. Still in certain homes
with young children, one sees some balconies half-heartedly
strung with lights or decked with a pot or two of crimson
Poinsettias, and less frequently a small Christmas tree. My
home looks like any ordinary Italian home in this period,
stark and un-Christmas-like, until my birds fly home.
As soon
as my son or sons walk into my house from the airport, unshaved,
unwashed, tousled and jet-lagged dragging their backpacks
and dirty-laundry filled suitcases, the festive season begins
with a bang as if invisible light bulbs turned on all over
my home, imaginary bells started pealing and fire-crackers
were going off all over the place! The giant tinsel-bedecked
Christmas tree displayed on the Piazza Venezia might be planted
in my front garden. It's not just my face that glows, the
countenance of almost every mother or every parent within
my network of acquaintances does the same. It's the season
to be jolly, to be cosy, and to draw together at the family
hearth.
The children
bring not just the reminder of earlier times when things were
the same but also newer versions of themselves. They come
home smelling of other worlds, speaking the language of their
other interests, describing horizons etched with their emerging
dreams. Brimming with enthusiasm, crackling with energy they
light up your world with their vision, their plans. I chat
for hours with my son about signs and semiotics, literature
and film, politics and history and as the words, ideas and
images flow from him to me, I feel as if I were sitting before
a fireplace getting the heat of freshly leaping flames that
bring new life into every pore of my soul.
We exchange
books. I give him the one I've just finished, Azar Nafisi's
'Reading Lolita in Tehran': A memoir in books, about life
under the repressive Islamic regime after the revolution in
Iran and he laughs in delight as he hands me the book he just
finished reading on flight. We cannot believe it---it's the
same theme! And too, this is the exact book I had wanted to
get next. It is called, 'Persepolis' and is the memoir of
an Iranian childhood of the same period done in cartoons,
by Marjane Satrapi.
He returns
to me the Kurt Vonnegut novel 'Sirens of Titan', which he
had borrowed last semester, and picks up the one I recommend
to him, Yann Martel's early short stories, before he wrote
his Booker winning 'Life of Pi'. In between shuffling the
pages he asks if I've seen a certain film and I tell him about
the ones I wished he could have seen. He tells me the plot
of his favourite film so far, I discuss the one I loved recently.
He shows me his paper on Cinematic coding and I give him my
latest poem. And seamlessly we weave new bonds that knit our
ever-evolving relationship into a tighter pattern that moves
from parent-child to teacher-mentor to friend and back to
family ties.
When he
falls asleep at the wrong time, I sit watching his face and
think this is what our children do for us: they bring the
song and music of Life into our lives; make our old souls
clap and sing. What was it Yeats said about age? "An
aged man is but a paltry thing/a tattered coat upon a stick,
unless/ Soul clap its hands and sing, and louder sing/for
every tatter in its mortal dress…."
As I go
around picking up my sons flung off clothes, his jeans with
ragged edges, the faded tee-shirt and worn out sweat shirt,
I know that in spite of my freshly laundered pants and almost
new cashmere sweater, the tatters are not his but mine; it
is my torn mortal dress that needs to be picked off the floor
of my being, mended and repaired. And he, the new flesh of
my flesh, skin of my skin, sailing to his world of dreams
and smiling in his sleep, is the 'singing-master of my soul'.
Just listening to him breathe within his distant new worlds
of fresh creativity, makes me believe that I too have exchanged
my ragged robes for gilded wings, and like my jet-lagged sleeping
bird been set upon a golden bough to dream and "sing
of what is past, is passing or to come."
And this
is a good moment for souls and songbirds: the New Year is
upon us. The young, intoxicated with their youth, and jet-lagged
from chasing their dreams, embrace the New Year as just another
continuing chapter of their ever-unfolding newness, of fresh
triumphs. But we who are older, the aging, the aged turn this
new page as if turning to a Pied Piper who will lead us to
a whole new world, to a new Byzantium, of fresh possibilities
and new hopes of unending beauty, vigour, love, of last chances,
of groping towards 'unaging intellect' and 'the artifices
of eternity.'
Personally,
I don't wish for either eternity or mindless youth, but for
a moment when eternity seems within reach at that point when
some personal dream comes to fruition. I desire the experience
of age and the energy of youth towards the realisation of
goals. I pray that the New Year gives each of us the music
to quicken our soul to clap with joy. If we cannot defy age
or time, may the New Year still grant each of us the immortality
of fulfilment in our deepest desires and dreams. Let the dreaming
begin. Let the year roll. I hear it is a great film.
Copyright
(R) thedailystar.net 2004
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