Heroes.

By Rummuser. Filed in Uncategorized  |   
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This post is the Loose Consortium Bloggers’ Friday post when Ashok, Conrad, Grannymar, Magpie11, Marianna, Maria, Gaelikaa, Helen, Judy , and I write one post each on the same topic. Please visit the other blogs too to have different views on this fascinating subject.

My earliest memory of Hero worship was of an actor named Ranjan. He starred as a villain in Chandralekha, I now understand, when I was around six years old, one of Tamil Film Industry’s all time greats and subsequently, as one of the brothers in the Tamil film, Apoorva Sakotharkal. I was too young to be impressed by his histrionics, but why he was my hero was because he was our neighbour. He used to indulge us youngsters with a smile and a wave as he elegantly got into his open top MG Sports car and drove away. On other occasions, we would catch him in his checked lungi and kurta in his compound quite nonchalant about his star status, ever ready with a smile and a wave for us. My class mates would not believe that he was our neighbour and I had to take them to show them that he really was. Is it a wonder that our son is named Ranjan? Luckily, Urmeela’s father’s name was Niranjan and it was a simple matter to persuade Urmeela to accept the shorter version for our son!

Sadly, I grew up and Ranjan moved on. My next object of hero worship was Johny Weismuller as Tarzan. I was then living with my uncle and aunt as an experiment for a year while my parents and siblings were away at Mumbai. In the campus where we lived, movies used to be shown once a week and Tarzan was a regular hit with boys of my age and perhaps even older. The campus also had a number of banyan trees with the roots climbing down from the branches, enabling some of us to do the Tarzan swing between branches, falling and getting hurt. But the best part of it was the Tarzan yell, we thought would get us face to face with the bad guys.

Other heroes came into my life, all from the reel world and none from the real world. At various times, different heroes were objects of my worship, like Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin from the English screen and many Indians like Sivaji Ganesan, Dev Anand, etc. Other fictional heroes like Robin Hood, Mickey Spillane’s Mike Hammer, Perry Mason, Ayn Rand’s Howard Roarke and so many others who gave me hope that mankind can produce heroes and may be I too can become one!

In the meanwhile life was passing by and I was growing up. My first real life hero came into my life only to lose his, to insurgents in the North Eastern part of India in an ambush. He was my classmate and fellow member of the boxing team who joined the Indian Army, rose to the rank of Captain in the Gurkha Regiment and was killed in action. At that time I was already into my working life and had little time for hero worship of the film world.

I also had newer interests and hero worship was not part of that agenda. The agenda was for me to become a hero to others. Whether I succeeded in that attempt is not for me to say, but the truth is that, that was my aim anyway. Some of my friends on the other hand have been convinced since those days and remain so till date, that I am eminently qualified to be a zero.

I grew up as we all do and value systems and definition of heroes changed. I started to notice that the world was full of heroes about who we do not know as they simply keep doing things that make them eligible to be called heroes without ever being conscious of that, nor being acknowledged as such. Ordinary people doing extraordinary things. Let me give some examples.

Among those I consider to be very close friends are two individuals who, in other situations would have been sainted!

The first is a lady, let us call her VW. (Yes, I occasionally call her Beetle and she still does not know why.) She is married to a man who must be the world’s most difficult person to live with. Let me clarify. He too is my friend and I have his permission to say this about him. His life has been like a yo-yo with a great deal of downs and a few ups. They are blessed with two lovely children, a son and a daughter. The younger one, the daughter is an American citizen with two lovely children in American colleges. The son is mentally challenged and has a body of a middle aged man and the mind of a teenager. VW’s husband, CW does not accept this and strongly believes that it is just a character defect. CW has had many health problems and has been semi invalid the last few years, and VW has become care giver to the two men in her life. She has recently undergone treatment for cancer and has had to put up with the side effects of that treatment as well manage the household. To see her, you would not know that this is her internal reality and quite how she manages all that is something that very few people know and I am one of the very few who do. No film life hero or heroine can come anywhere near portraying what VW does to me to inspire me with awe, admiration and the respect that her character fully deserves.

The other is KD about who I have written earlier and who recently provoked me into posting about my own inarticulate angst. KD too is an amazing man for his heroism, which is not recognized for what it is by most people. He is a bright Indian Civil Service man whose career has been stuck at middle rung because he is afflicted with Multiple Scelorosis. His wife has left him and because of some problems created by her, his career has been further affected as well as his having to be involved in many legal complications. Despite these obstacles and problems, he is successfully bringing up his children and is a loving and caring father to them. He has not let his handicaps affect his character and zest for life and is an inspiration for me.

I am sure that all my readers will have such heroes in their lives too. I shall however briefly talk about two more who, despite all odds have succeeded in their own ways in a highly competitive environment by sheer determination and grit.

The first is our newspaper vendor. When we bought our present home twenty years ago, Sanjay was an office boy in a builder’s establishment. We bought our home from the same builder and discovered that the office boy was also our news paper delivery boy. The neighbourhood was still sparsely populated and Sanjay would drop all the newspapers early in the morning and attend to his official work also from morning till evening. As the population increased, so did Sanjay’s business, and today, he employs a few other young lads to do the physical distribution. He has quit his job and is a successful entrepreneur with his own fleet of school buses and vehicles besides his newspaper distribution agency. He has enabled his whole family to come out of poverty and today is a respected member of the community and chances are that he will get involved in local politics too. If he does, I will canvass for him.

The next is another slogger from the backwoods of Uttar Pradesh. He is our bread delivery man and I wrote about him in one of my earliest posts. A cheerful and hardworking man, deeply religious and pious, a role model if ever for the kind of entrereneurs who form India’s unsung economic backbone which does not reflect in our GDP. He is a Muslim but even in during Ramzaan, when he observes the traditonal, not the modern, fast, but rides his bicycle delivery van and without fail delivers various types of bread to his regular customers. He is educating his children so that they can climb out of the life style that he has chosen and hopes that the boys would do well. That is his sole ambition in life.

There are more such people in my life who I admire and respect. Women and men who despite great odds do heroic things without being known to be heroes. There are some who do not get their recognition like Dean Kamen whose invention can revolutionize health in developing countries. There are others like our own Elly, quietly bossing her mother around but making her mother so proud. Like Looney who pushes himself to achieve great feats etc.

On the other hand, we also have wannabe heroes like the Heenes family who took quite a lot of folks for a merry chase with their caper!

And we have other heroes who wish to leave their footprints on the sands of Indian time with pithy slogans on their vehicles like this one on our Delhi Roads.
nobody is virgin

I believe that the world is full of heroes. I can write a book of perhaps fifty chapters, each about a person, at least in my eyes a hero. We can find them if we look hard enough.

29 Comments »

  1. Comment by Conrad:

    LOL. Our childhood heroes were in the movies, in the comics, on TV. Every boy has a few heroes to shape his ideals around, wouldn’t you say?

    Rummuser Reply:

    Yes, indeed Conrad. Somehow, we never seem to grow out of those fascinations. I would still like to read Mickey Spillane if I get a chance!

  2. Comment by Girish from Car Rental Auckland:

    Dear rummuser, your post is so touching and I it made to review my entire ideology on matinee idol worshiping. Now I feel that all people who have achieved something which I didnt should be treated as heroes. That includes leaders, actors, politicians, parents of friends, friends.. whatever.. what do you think?

    Rummuser Reply:

    That is the point Girish. If that gets assimilated in our society, much wasted energies can be used for more productive uses.

  3. Comment by Judy Harper:

    I appreciated the phrase “reel world and real world”. So true. I’m a big fan of Perry Mason and Mike Hammer as well, though I think I like the movie version of Mike Hammer more than the book version. You presented such wonderful descriptions of your local heroe. I was really moved by VW (Beetle). Great post!

    Rummuser Reply:

    Thank you Judy. Beetle is an amazing personality. Unless you know the inside story, like her close friends and family do, you would not even know what she goes through. Unlike DK, where visibly you know that he is affected, there are no external signs of what Beetle goes through on a 24/7 basis.

  4. Comment by Maria:

    You are so right about all the extraordinary people in our lives who do heroic deeds quietly and with no desire to be in the limelight. Your examples are inspiring, and yes, all we have to do is look around us to find these couragous people.

    Rummuser Reply:

    Thank you Maria.

  5. Comment by gaelikaa:

    Something which I have come to realise from reading our Consortium posts today is the fact that everyone has people in their lives to whom they look to for inspiration. Most of the heroes mentioned are very personal ones. We all seem to have our idols and personal heroes too!

    Rummuser Reply:

    You bet. And what is more important Gaelikaa, is that we too, inspire others. In our own ways, we too are heroes but all of us are modest enough not to make a song and dance about it. Is that being modest do you think?

  6. Comment by elly parker:

    Thank you. :-)

    Rummuser Reply:

    My pleasure Princess. I just could not resist the temptation to put you in there.

  7. Comment by Grannymar:

    Beetle sounds like a wonderful lady, having someone like that in your life is a blessing.

    I somehow missed the ‘reel’ world, my young life was spent in a kitchen in the real world! :sad:

    Rummuser Reply:

    Not that you missed a great deal Grannymar. Look at the benefit that all your readers derive from your recipes and hints and advise using vinegar!

  8. Comment by Darlene:

    The real heroes in life are the ones you told about. The ones who have enormous adversity, but continue quietly to keep on going.

    Caregivers are real heroes in my book.

    Rummuser Reply:

    I could not agree more.

  9. Comment by organic cotton t-shirt:

    Our childhood heroes are always the memory of us, no matter if we share it or not…

    Thanks for sharing such useful information.

    Rummuser Reply:

    Nice to have you comment Amit. I hope that you do more often. Thank you.

  10. Comment by Looney:

    Rummuser, the heroes for me also tend to be rather quiet. Perhaps a wife who struggles through to keep a difficult marriage intact and provide for her children. Certainly there is a transition from the notions of youth to what we honor as we grow old.

    Rummuser Reply:

    Yes. I suspect that reality plays a greater role in our value systems as we age whereas fantasy and wishful thinking influence hero worship when one is young.

  11. Comment by Lily:

    Enjoyed this post. Heroes the world over have a lot in common! This is my first visit to your blog, I’ll be back!

    Rummuser Reply:

    Thank you Lily. It will be a pleasure having you visit and commenting.

  12. Comment by Helen McGinn:

    I loved your post; I too could think of a lot of people who have, in some way or another, revealed the hero in themselves.

    Rummuser Reply:

    Thank you.

  13. Comment by Marianna:

    I disagree with your friends who say that your are , “eminently qualified to be a zero.” What are they thinking? (Well, they’re not…that’s obvious!)

    Those personal heroes of yours probably get strength and restoration from your friendship, which allows them to continue to do what they do.

    Excellent post!

    Rummuser Reply:

    Marianna, if they could think, they would not be my friends would they now? Nice to have someone defend me! You are probably right about my heroes getting support from me, but they get such support from a lot of others too. Thank you.

  14. Comment by Ashok:

    Who better than the ordinary common man fighting to overcome all those adversities which have become inseparable from life itself! As usual a fine job sir :)

    Rummuser Reply:

    Thank you Ashok. Nice to have you back and commenting.

  15. Comment by Mitch:

    Wow, what a wonderful post! Interesting how heroes can change up like that; I guess I can look at my life and say that’s happened also, although I have far fewer heroes than you do. Heck, I might have to steal this idea and write a similar post one day; thanks! :-)

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