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Saturday, June 28, 2008
Of Libraries and Homeless Existence
His long hair was tied in a surprisingly tidy knot behind his head. His long beard was braided. He wore a sleeveless black travel jacket, long shorts and trek shoes. His possessions were one big backpack, one shoulder sack, one bicycle helmet, one Rottweiler named Stephano and an Alaskan Huskie (name forgotten) tied to the fence next to which he sat, on the pavement, in front of the Chicago Public library. He nodded as I smiled at him while getting in to the library.
Chicago public library is this heavenly abode of nine floors, of the smell of books, of open spaces, of thoughtful silence, sounds of pages turning, high ceilings and free internet browsing. Chicago Public Library provides great facilities to its members. Free Membership. Free heating and cooling. Spanking clean restrooms, ample seating area, free internet browsing and not to mention the amazing collection of books, films and CDs – of different languages. No, ‘am not trying to ‘sell’ Chicago Public library to you. All of this has a point.
Libraries remind me of ‘home’. May be because ‘am getting old and sentimental, or may be because its been long that I haven’t called any place ‘home’, these days I tend to define places that flood back old memories as ‘home’. My grandfather left their home in Dhaka, Bangladesh in the 40s to find peace in India. I grew up in Agartala, Tripura, educated till 12th there, moved to Bhopal for college education, then traveled and lived across places - Bombay, Pune, England and the US (these days) as a ‘perk’ of married life. I do not go to Agartala anymore and when it comes to ‘maika’, I camp in Kolkata.
So, yeah ‘home’ is probably in memories now.
To make the long story longer, every time I step into the Chicago public library, it feels like home. I do not know how many of us associate good memories with libraries, but I certainly do have many. My introduction to Shirshendu Mukhopadhyay, that world is often enough for few billions, that Nicholai Gogol can dream, that Gandhiji traveled on trains, the first realization of being admired, sitting across the table and not talking, browsing the same shelf and sharing glances (yes, I belong to the stone age – things were slow those days), or merely to bunk ‘Debabrata sir’s’ class in school. Libraries from school to college to this city of Chicago still give me ‘home’ – of being on a known ground, of being confident.
The great physical comfort that the library offers is probably the reason that two tables away from where I am seated is a gentleman. He is African American, his meager possession a torn rucksack kept on the floor, unkempt clothing and hair, dejected eyes staring at the empty space filled with books, waiting away his time till the doors close for the day at 9:00 PM. He will look out for a shelter later, I think.
Next to his table is seated another lady – all her possessions bundled in her over coat. She snoozes as the young Japanese student struts by hurriedly towards the foreign language section. She’s startled for a while, but continues with her snooze nonetheless. For 12 hours Monday-Friday, she and her friend can stay off the scorching Chicago roads or the biting Chicago winds – a place that becomes a ‘home’ albeit not literally.
The restroom doors proclaim ‘More than one person is prohibited inside a booth.’ “A ‘home’ away from the crowded streets for some?” I wonder! Down in the computer floor, people are busy browsing the internet. From Turbotax.com to explicit pornographic sites. Free access and no ‘firewall’ to cross – touché to the indomitable human spirit.
I make up my mind for the picks of the day – armed with two Bangla novels, I walk towards the escalator. I’ll start my decent to the 3rd floor to issue the books. The African American gentleman decides likewise. It’s almost 8:30. 10 minutes later as I walk out of the door, I stop to hear their conversation.
“Hey man, you got a place tonight?” he asks the long haired man.
“I’ll be here,” the long-haired man says.
“How long are you on road?” asks the African American.
“8 years” says the man, “Started from Alabama.” He adds.
He had picked up Stephano from the roads he recalls. I smile at both of them and look at the dogs one last time, still lying down peacefully at his feet before I walk away to the 43rd floor where the roof and the walls wait to give me shelter.
Inside or out on the pavement, here’s to the library – ‘home’ to some of us.
If some hapless soul decides to visit this blog and read through it, please share your thought of ‘home’, if it appeals to you.
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5 comments:
hahahah....nice one....library...quite an intruging topic.....well i have to be frank here....library is the one place i, for as far i can remember, did not venture into......i do like books but so many on them at one place just gives us too much of a choice......life wise mine was no diffent though the england and the US part is yet to happen(hopefully) and ya the marrige part as well......
Quite unlike some of ur previous blogs, this one i quite enjoyed reading....the writer in u is slowly coming out......be that as it may...library for me is still way too far from Home.....
Nice post and what we call home is after all a perception. a place where we have memories , good or bad. a place where we are happy no matter what .. thats home for me :)
Great post Durba,
I can see the spirits of all the Bengali writers inspiring and guiding you :)
About home...
I believe that bricks and mortar do not make a home... it is all about people.
I remember my early days in Mumbai. Five of us got selected in campus and moved to Mumbai.
We did not have any relatives or friends there, so we were almost on our own, and the worst part was, we were severely short of money needed to pay the exorbitant deposits of decent flats there.
As a result, all five of us shared a small dingy room there. It used to stink like hell during the monsoons and get hot like an oven during the summers (you see, Mumbai has only these two seasons).
We always used to imagine that the refugee camps in Uganda would have better sanitation, water supply and neighbors.
But you know what, even today, all of us have fond memories of that flat. We had some great fun there, we got drunk, we discussed world politics and the local girls and everything in between.
We shared our hopes, our tragedies, our dreams and our ambitions in that hell hole.
Today, we are in a much better place both from the accommodation point of view and financially but whenever we talk, we usually discuss that flat and some joke related to it.
So, I guess, the thing that makes four walls and a roof a home is not what furniture or what book or what interiors you have there...
It is the people who share that space with you, that make a cave, a tent, a caravan, an igloo, a flat, a bungalow, a palace... home.
-Gunjan
Nice post! U have excelled in every blog and this one is no different. Keep it up.
If I say frankly, 'library' - a boring topic... but the way you presented... with a little mixture of your life history, a bit of humor and the suspense in the beginning of the topic... it was great... you kept me reading the story...
looking forward to more..
cheers..!
JD
www.jdodyssey.co.nr
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