I read
a story somewhere about a seven year old boy, who was asked by his
class teacher, during his arts class to draw a chicken on a piece of paper. He
immediately and gladly accepted the task and went ahead with his
colour pencils and all that stuff and was totally engrossed in the
task for next half an hour. He returned his drawing to the teacher,
happily expecting that it would be appreciated and he would get some
like 'stars' as is the practice these days. Expecting the drawing to
contain at least some outlines of a domestic fowl with feathers and a
red beak, the teacher was most surprised to find in the drawing a
plate in which some long yellow things were drawn along with an
orange coloured blob. When the boy was asked to explain, what he had
drawn, he explained that the plate shows potato chips and chicken;
the way his mother always gives to him. He must have seen pictures of
fowl in his books, but for him chicken meant a dish that his mother
cooked or ordered in a restaurant.
It
would be easy to conclude from this story that the boy was so
ignorant because he must have been a city lad. No kid from the
village would make such a mistake because he must have seen fowls
running around. I however feel that this kind of ignorance is far
more wide spread and is not just restricted to kids. It essentially
comes from the principle of division of labour, the underlying and
guiding principle of modern societies. Just name few of the things,
we consume or use in our day. I am sure that not many would be able
to explain, how these things are produced or where from they come.
Let me explain. How many of us know, how the fine cotton shirt, we
are wearing is actually produced? Or where from the ink in a fountain
pen comes or how it is made? As a cog wheel in the society, we all
have certain skills, which we make available to the society. Using my
skills, I do some work for which I am remunerated. From this
remuneration I can get other goods and services and I do not have to
know how they are produced.
Once,
a group of my friends and their wives were visiting Mahabaleshwar, a
lovely hill station near my home town. While returning, we saw a
board showing direction to a strawberry farm. We turned in and went
to visit the farm. I had seen strawberry bushes earlier and knew that
this fruit does not grow on trees but on small or dwarf bushes. Many
from our group were really surprised to seen the strawberry bushes as
they were expecting trees similar to mulberry trees. This surprise
was a mild one compared to the reaction shown by a lady from our
group later. On the way, we saw another board about a sericulture
farm and timings, when it was open. We went in and saw how silkworms
are cultivated on leaves of mulberry trees and when the cocoons are
ready, how they are boiled and silk thread is unwound. This lady was
shocked to know that the silk cocoons are boiled in water when the
silk worm was still inside, just to kill him. She felt that it was
too cruel a step to get a fine gossamer fabric for our luxury. She
happened to be, till that date, rather fond of silk sarees. I never
saw her again in a silk saree after that day.
We are
such cocooned and protected lot today that we are becoming ignorant
about realities that support our lives. Humans have been killing and
eating other animals ever since they evolved. Yet how many of us city
dwellers really know about abattoirs, where we kill animals to get
our meat or poultry. For most of us a chicken leg is just a frozen
packet, which we remove from the deep freezer. I am quite sure that
the reality will shock many meat lovers.
Indian
ladies are fond of fine sarees with intricate in lay designs. How
many of them really know, how labourious and time consuming work it
is to weave a saree on a hand loom, which they wear on an evening. I
am not trying to say that we go back to primitive societies, but we
should not become blind to the hard work that is put in by some one
to make available all our daily needs and luxuries. We are loosing
our connectedness with the society and even worst; with nature.
Just a
generation or two earlier, man lived, adjusting himself to ever
changing nature. During summer, when even nights became hot, he slept
outside his house on terraces. He ate freshly cooked foods. During
monsoon months he avoided travelling. Certain foods were recommended
or avoided during each of the seasons. With the division of labour
principle, there is now always someone else to take care of all
eventualities. Now we have air conditioners, antibiotics to protect
us. Instead of avoiding travel during monsoon, we insist to travel to
places where monsoon fury is highest. I am not really against any of
these things. What I feel is that we should be aware of realities a
little more and the risks. A seven year old boy should know what a
chicken is and certainly it is not only something that his mother
serves.
23rd
March 2015
No comments:
Post a Comment