The Sun was going down and cold breeze was caressing my
cheeks as we climbed the stairs to the monastery in Bhutan.
It was evening, my prayer time at home and I was slipping into the bhakti mode. We got inside, I closed my eyes and started slowly slipping into the world of nothingness. Suddenly I was jerked out of my state by the sound of a beating and soft cry of a boy.
It was evening, my prayer time at home and I was slipping into the bhakti mode. We got inside, I closed my eyes and started slowly slipping into the world of nothingness. Suddenly I was jerked out of my state by the sound of a beating and soft cry of a boy.
A heart rending sight
My eyes opened automatically and I looked around. Just
outside the prayer area, a Buddhist monk was sitting with a teenage lama boy, who was
reading his lesson. As he read, the pronunciation was wrong and he got a
beating with a long stick from the monk (the sound that startled me), before
correcting his pronunciation.
I closed my eyes and again tried to get into the peaceful
state. But no, it was not supposed to be. Because the boy continued to read and was making mistakes. Each mistake brought a beating from the monk and many times he
was hitting on his shaven head. When the boy put his hand on the head for
protection, he got the beating on his back.
Transported to my childhood
I felt that each strike by that stick was coming over my
body. My eyes were welling up and my throat getting choked. When I was about
three years old, my mother started teaching me Malayalam alphabets. One day she
asked me to write the Malayalam letter 'ദ '(Da). I was not in the best of spirits
at the time and thought, “This is a very easy letter and I know it. So I am not
going to write.’
My mother got angry and told again. I just kept quiet. She
took a small stick and beat me. Still I didn’t write. She really got angry. She
was a school teacher and a very good disciplinarian. It was not easy for her to
take this behavior from her own daughter. She continued asking me to write, I simply
didn’t move and she kept beating me. Our maid who was standing there tried to
save me from the beating and in the bargain, she got beaten.
A good decision
When she couldn’t make me write the letter, she made a
decision, ‘I am not going to teach you again,
ever.’ I think that was a good decision. I was a self-motivated child and did
my studies well. Continuous beating would have scarred me for life. She asked
me later why I didn’t write the letter. I told, ‘It is such a simple letter and
you should have understood that I know it.’
Both of us took the lesson and progressed in our own ways.
After that many times she used to ask me, ‘Write the letter for which you got
thrashing’, and I would promptly write and show her.
Beatings from a monk?
Every time the stick fell on that lama boy, I was flinching.
A monk, who is supposed to be the epitome of non-violence (according to me),
doing this violence to a small boy was beyond me to take in. By the time we
came out, the tuition was over and I was terrified to look at the monk’s face
which reeked of violence.
And the boy was standing there and wiping his tears!
It was time to close the praying area for the day and every body left.
And the boy was standing there and wiping his tears!
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