Sunday, October 22, 2006

Waada Raha Sanam

Just last weekend, listening to Waada Raha Sanam, from the movie Khiladi, reminded me of the time spent at Oak Grove. To be very honest, it always does. I vividly remember hearing the song first time from Nicholas Banerjee. I was then in Class VI, the junior most class of the senior school and Nicholas was in XI, the class of the prefects, the all powerful, feared, awed lot.

As clichéd as it might sound, boarding school is a world in itself, especially true for our school. It was in a godforsaken place called Jharipani where our only contact with the outside world was the nature walks that we used to go on, once in a few months. Imagine 8-9 year olds walking in pairs holding hands visiting the same old Raja's palace again and again. In spite of the sameness, it had the freshness which only 8-9 year olds know who stay in a remote hill village with its bunch of ghosts and even more dreadful seniors in a hostile jail like administration. Being away from home didn't really matter except for the first few days because after that it really was rock-n-roll. Of course we didn't go for nature walks in VI. Senior school made men out of young boys and women out of young girls (not sure of the latter though) - who were allowed a monthly outing to Mussoorie.

When I think of Oak Grove, so many thoughts come to my mind that it becomes hard to keep track. It is so easy to lose myself but it has got to be Waada Raha Sanam and Nicholas today.

Our world was so complete that we didn't have to look outside to find people we idolized, we hated or admired. We had our own Tendulkars, Dhyanchands, and Shahrukh Khans. Nicholas didn't exactly fit into one of these categories - but he was up there somewhere. He was from Dubai and he brought peanut butter to campus. In a school where children of lower-middle class railway employees studied, it meant something to be from Dubai. His cupboard was full of deos, perfumes, chocolates and latest electronic gadgets. Nicholas was a great guy and had a girlfriend too. The only thing queer about him were his designer under wears. I always felt that those bright-shiny-little things were so sissy that they were never ever to be touched by men of honor.

Coming back to the music of Khiladi, I am not sure if people find the songs of Khiladi as good. To me, I had bought the audio cassette of the movie 4-5 times before the world was taken over by unlawful do-gooder copyright violators. The average and simple lyrics of the song meant hope to an eleven year old and the belief that the world was simple and innocent where promises of love were kept and where people like Nicholas existed – rich, generous, in possession of tons of peanut butter and a girlfriend too.

Like they say, those were the days, my friend!!!

9 comments:

Pankaj Jain said...

ice one. well written bhai. and of course the first one had to be about oak grove :).

Varun Singh said...

Bygone times always look sweeter, don't they? Was thinking about the "manly" things you boys did there at the Oak Grove :-P

himanshu agrawal said...

aao thakur.. tum bhi aa gaye dost.. khiladi ka har ek gaana stud hai yaar.. but apne pass bangalore main cassette nahi thi.. btw main abhi jaipur main apne school gaya.. chalo likhte rehna.. mujhe bhi likhna chahiye, mahine ho gaye yaar..

Unknown said...

bolo bhai sab ek sath bolo thakuri thakuri.......how does tat sound thakuri..i knw reminds u of hum aapke vaste pastry lein hai etc.gud one thakur nice to knw u remember so much i thought may be u ve forgotten many things..but seems wrng.Nicholas ke bare mein u just forgot to mention one thing his cupboard full of porks which made him so ...chal take care send me ur contact no as i dont ve urs.V r planning a get together on nov 11'06 and i m sure u must ve received the email regarding the same if not i will send u one.send me ur contact no. i will tell u wat happened in the last get together and many other interesting things

Grimfandango said...

agla waala kab likhoge bhai?

Anonymous said...

anshuman .. sardar patel school..?? p.k road railway colony.. uncle seth..??
is this the same guy..???
can u guess who is this..??
mail me rathoreaditya81@gmail.com

and dis is some coincidence!!

Anonymous said...

Waiting for some new post from your side...have not been a person to leave my comments though..:) You will find my comments now..

Anumeha said...

I think I stayed on the "missing end" for quite a long time for not having visited ur blog earlier.

Extremely sweet memoir!

P.S.: Writing it with a lingering smile on my face... :)

Anonymous said...

It is nice to see a blog with reference to Oak Grove

Sameer Mohindru