Mere adharon par ho antim, vastu na tulsidal
pyaalaa ..
Meri jiwha par ho antim, vastu na gangaajal
haalaa..
Mere shav ke peechhe chalne waalo, yaad ise
rakhnaa..
Ram naam hai satya na kehnaa, kehnaa sachchee
Madhushaala..
[The last thing
on my lips should not be the basil leaf but the
cup/ The last thing on my tongue should not be
holy water from the Ganga but wine/ Those who
join my funeral procession, must remember not to
say ‘Ram is the truth’/ since truth is in the
tavern]
The stanza has
been taken from the famous poem ‘MADHUSHALA’,
but these words may not sound very familiar to
all. However this is the writing of a great
romantic revolutionary of Hindi poetry who no
longer is physically present between us but will
stay alive through his work
Dr. HARIVANSHRAI
BACHCHAN’ passed away silently into the night on
January 18, 2003, immersing the world of Hindi
poetry in darkness forever. Dr Bachchan was 94
yrs and had been suffering from serious
respiratory ailments for quite sometime. However
his condition became bad to worse in the last
few days so much so that an intensive care unit
had to be set at Amitab Bachchan’s residence ‘Prateeksha’.
Fame knocks at his door
Dr. Bachchan or
rather Bachchanji as he was popularly called,
got instant fame after the publication of his
poem Madhushala in 1935. Till date he must have
published some 30 collections of his poetry, but
he is known mostly for his poetic trilogy of
Madhushaala, Madhubaala and Madhukalash, and
more so for the first of these. Bachchanji
recited this poem on different occasions to huge
crowds and at various kavi sammelans, as it
became a literary craze.
His stardom was an
unique occurring in Hindi literature as it was
mostly the gift of the 135 versed poem-
Madhushaala, which undoubtedly is one of the
most enduring works of Hindi literature. This
amazing popularity of Madhushaala could be a
coincidance or a zara hatke style of writing
compared to the then existing of Chaayavaadi
poetry. As it happened in the year 1935, which
saw the appearance of Kaamayani (a Prabhand
Kavya) (classic poetry) which was represented by
Hindi Chaayavaadi (romantic) poetry, and
Premchand’s Godaan which was directed towards
the aesthetics of the future. The Chaayavaadi
school followed a particular style of lyricism
and included spiritual and mythological motifs.
However the idealism of this school could not
break free from the element of mystery and used
a polished language that the common man could
not understand. This is one of the reasons that
Madhushaala made a place for itself in the
hearts of millions with a simply understandable
language and imagination. Thus making a poetic
affirmation of writing for the people in a
language which common man could read and
understand himself. Thus Madhushaala has been
translated into English and various regional
Indian languages such as Bengali, Marathi and
Malayalam. It has been choreographed, and
performed on stage too. It also happens to be
the first pieces of Hindi poetry that was set to
music, with its best-selling cassettes and CDs
attracting generations of listeners.
It is little
wonder that Bachchanji got a rousing reception
and became a literary superstar of his time. But
despite his great popularity, his initial
breakthrough did not lead to the sustained
growth a poet because after madhushala a
literary revolution brought about a strong
stream of emerging poets who broke free of the
limitations of the Chaayaavadi concept thus
diversifying the essence of romanticism. But
Bachchanji stuck to his romantic idiom and
continued to run in a parallel stream.
The
post-independence period had Bachchanji become a
popular poet from a bygone era. Although he
continued to write and publish he never again
quite managed to reproduce that inspiration.
However, he carved out another niche for himself
decades later with his autobiography in four
volumes, beginning with “Kya Bhoolun Kya Yaad
Karoon” (what to forget and what to remember),
which is regarded even now as a literary
masterpiece. Rupert Snell, translated this work
into English and the synopsis has been entitled
‘In the Afternoon of Time: An Autobiography’. In
a literary career spanning over more than 50
years, Bachchanji captured the imagination of
readers and continued to hold it with an
unbroken series achievements.
Making of Dr. Harivanshrai Bachchan
Harivanshrai
Srivastav was born on 27th November 1907, in an
ordinary Kayasth family in a small town near
Allahabad. He was called “bachchan” at home,
which means “child.” He received his formal
schooling in a municipal school and attended
Kayasth Paathshaalas to learn Urdu, which was
the family tradition so as to help getting jobs
in court. He completed his later education both
at the Allahabad University and Banaras Hindu
University. Since he gave up his university
education to participate in the great upsurge of
nationalism that began in 1930.
However he
realized shortly that this was not the path he
wanted to follow, so he went back to university.
However from 1941 to 1952 he taught in the
English Department at the Allahabad University
and after that he spent the next two years at
Cambridge University doing his doctoral thesis
on W.B. Yeats. It was then, that he used
‘Bachchan’ as his last name instead of Srivasta.
Bachchanji’s thesis got him his PhD at
Cambridge. He however is the second Indian to
get his doctorate in English literature from
Cambridge. After returning to India he again
took to teaching and also served at All India
Radio, Allahabad.
In 1955, Bachchan
shifted to Delhi to join the External Affairs
Ministry as an officer on Special duty and
during the period of 10 years that he served he
was also associated with the evolution of Hindi
as the official language. He also enriched Hindi
through his translations of major writings.
Besides Omar Khayyam’s Rubaiyat, he will also be
remembered for his Hindi translations of
Shakespeare’s Macbeth and Othello and also the
Bhagvad Gita. However in Nov 1984 he wrote his
last poem ‘Ek November1984’ on Indira Gandhi’s
assassination.
Personal life
He got married to
Shyama his first wife in 1926. She was just 14
yrs old. But she died 10 yrs later after
suffering from a long spell of TB. Shortly after
her death Bachchanji married Teji Suri in 1942.
The birth of his two sons Amitabh and Ajitabh
changed the course of his life as his days of
hardship ended when both his sons did extremely
well in their careers – Amitabh became a
superstar and a multi billionair and Ajitab
turned out to be a successful business magnate
in England
AWARDS
Bachchan was
nominated to the Rajya Sabha in 1966 and
received the Sahitya Akademi award three years
later. In 1976 he was honoured with the Padma
Bhushan for his immense contribution to Hindi
literature. He was also honoured with the
Saraswati Samman, the Sovietland Nehru Award and
the Lotus Award of the Afro-Asian writers
conference, for his unique contribution to the
world of letters. But if ever asked to introduce
himself, he had a simple introduction: Mitti ka
tan, masti ka man, kshan-bhar jivan — mera
parichay. (A body of clay, a mind full of play,
a moment’s life - that is me.) Truly a man of
erudition and zest.
Thus to conclude
few lines from his own poem Madhushala
Kabhi
na kand bhar hkali hoga,
Laakh piyenge, do laakh piyenge,
Patthakgan hain pinewale
Pustak meri madhushala
[Never will the cup empty, no matter how many
people drink from it. The readers are the ones
who will drink from my book-Madhushaala] |