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Taking a break
The Writers' Bar at Mussoorie was host to writers coming together
to felicitate master story-teller Ruskin Bond. It was also time
for some sincere soul-searching, says ANITA JOSHUA.
GOING by the writing on the wall of Writers' Bar, this watering
hole of many at Savoy Hotel in the Queen of Hills, had, in all
its 99 years, not had more than a dozen-odd writers come by. And,
even if the number exceeded this guesstimate, seldom - probably
never - had the Writers' Bar had so many writers and wannabes
within its sprawling confines together at the same time as it did
on the evening of April 27, 2001.
At that sundon hour came to this musty room of the Savoy the
"honour" of playing host to arguably the first "Writer's
Retreat". In the process, Nandu Johar, the owner of the hotel
fast going to seed, got more names to nail on the wall of
Writers' Bar; albeit none of the same league save the man already
up there, Ruskin Bond.
And, it was a Bond show all the way. After all, Mussoorie is Bond
countryside, Writers' Bar his favourite haunt, and the entire
exercise - put together by Roli Books to prop up its new imprint,
Namita Gokhale Editions - "A Festchrift for Ruskin Bond".
Challenging the academic claim to the word festschrift - a
collection of articles brought out by colleagues and students at
the time of retirement of a renowned academic - Gokhale justifies
the borrowing of the term for this endeavour with a "Ruskin is a
master storyteller, and he is our Master". So, the brief for all
present at the retreat - journalists included - was to write a
short story each on either childhood or adolescence for the
collection in honour of Ruskin Bond.
But, that was the homework everyone returned from Mussoorie with
after the three-day retreat. In the class of Gokhale, the time
was apportioned for readings, "chatshows", interactive sessions,
print-making, a walk through a Landour cemetery with Bond, story-
telling, and a dream analysis round with the "interpreter of
dreams" and author of Faith and Fire Madhu Tandon.
Leaving the interactive sessions for the two full days the
writers had up in the hills, the retreat began with an
introduction of the concept and was followed up with readings
through which writers introduced themselves and their works. And,
though neither Bond nor his writings needed introduction, some of
his works were read out to give everyone a feel of the setting of
the retreat; particularly, Landour, the cantonment area above
Mussoorie which is where the 67-year-old Master has his "room on
the roof".
After all, Landour was where the whole group would be transported
to on the second day of the retreat. On the lawns of St. Asaph's
Cottage - a stone's throw away from actor Victor Banerjee's
"Parsonage" and the Landour cemetery where a number of characters
of Bond's ghost stories reside - began an abortive search for an
answer to the question: "Who Are We Writing For - Ourselves,
Peers or Society?" Initiating the discussion, Pawan Verma of The
Great Indian Middle Class fame questioned the "incestuous and
insular world of Indian English writers".
Probably realising that the retreat itself was an example of this
incestuous relationship, he asserted that "for writings in
English to be in touch with wellsprings of creativity elsewhere,
there is a need for breaches in our little world to allow greater
interaction with authors in other languages". While most were in
agreement, it remains to be seen whether the next retreat - the
hosts plan to make this an annual event - will have a vernacular
presence.
Another issue that was brought up during the course of the
retreat pertained to "Media and the Writer" which saw the writers
- many of whom have, of late, made it to the "Page Three People"
clique - give vent to their angst against the Fourth Estate.
Again, it was left to the resident authors - Bond and friend
Ganesh Saili - to voice the sobering thought: "Good books will be
read with or without good publicity".
Though the issues that were raised begged for answers even as the
group bundled into cars for the journey downhill, the cool and
clean air of Landour was a refreshing break for the Delhi-based
bunch. So what if the retreat began with not many knowing what to
expect and ended without any particular sense of direction?
Everyone had a good word for Roli Books.
As poet Keki N. Daruwalla put it: "When do writers meet and
interact in Delhi? Here, away from our worries, we have spent
time with each other." And, done things they might not have
considered doing back home like for instance dabble with paint at
the bidding of Bulbul Sharma in her print-making workshop. Or,
for that matter, share their dreams.
To what end, no one had an answer save for the fact that Madam
Gokhale would definitely get them to write that short story for
the festschrift. Why, she even got after Bond to write one and
managed to get him to commit himself to doing a post-script!
And, it was in this avuncular figure on his first Writers'
Retreat that Namita Gokhale Editions found the raison d'etre to
go on with an endeavour that more often than not looked like an
all-paid-for excursion. Certain that the breath of fresh air in
Landour would make the writers do better work but unsure about
the utility of such retreats, the ever-optimistic story-teller
capped his doubts with the observation that "all glory comes from
daring to begin".
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