Habib Tanvir, Centenary year

1923-2023 a hundred years of the great playwright, actor, director, poet and dramatist. Born on 1st September 1923, Habib Tanvir passed away on 8th June 2009 leaving behind a rich repertoire of his plays. Some of the important plays written and performed by his group Naya Theatre are:

1995A Broken BridgeAuthor
1954Aag Ki GendAuthor
1954Agra BazaarAuthor
1970Arjun Ka SarthiDramatisation
1992BaghAdaptation
1978Bahadur KalarinAuthor
1977BhagavaddajjukamTranslator and adaptation
1989Case No. 432Author
1977ChandainiDramatisation
1954Chandi Ka ChamchaAuthor
1974Char NaiDramatisation
1975Charandas ChorDramatisation
1995Daddy Ka GharAuthor
1992Dekh Rahe Hain NainAuthor
1980Devi Ka VardaanDramatisation
1954Doodh ka GilasAuthor
1978DuryodhanDramatisation
1989DushmanAdaptation
1988Ek Aur DronacharyaDramatised
1999Ek Aurat Hipetia Bhi ThiAuthor
1979Four PlaysImprovisations
1954GadheAuthor
1974Ganga JamunaDramatisation
1973Gaon Ka Naon Sasural Mor Naon DamadAuthor
1954Har Mousam Ka KhelAuthor
1985Hirma Ki Amar KahaniAuthor
1971Indra Lok SabhaAuthor
1953Jaalidar PardeAdaptation
1977JamadarinAdaptation
1976Jani ChorImprovisations
1990Jis Lahore Nai Dekhya Wo Janma Hi NaiDramatisation
1993Kamdev Ka Apna Basant Ritu Ka SapnaAdaptation
1954KartoosAuthor
1955KhudkhushiDramatisation
1998Kissa Thela Ram KaAdaptation
1970Kushtiya Ka ChaprasiDramatisation
1967Lady Windermere’s FanDramatisation
1981Lala Shohrat RaiAdapted
1984Mangloo DidiAuthor
1968Merey BaadAuthor
1955Mirza Shohrat BegAdaptation
1978Mitti Ki GadiTranslation and Adaptation
1988Moteram Ka SatyagrahDramatisation
1996MudrarakshasTranslation and Adaptation
2003Mujhe Amrita ChaihyeDramatised
1984Nand Raja Mast HainAdapted
1954ParamparaAuthor
1959PhaansiAdaptation
1960Ponga PanditAuthor
1977Prahalad Nataka and Bharat LilaDramatisation
1972Raja Chamba Aur Char BhaiAuthor
2006Raj-RaktAdaptation
1960Rustom-O-SohrabDramatisation
1959Saat PaiseDramatisation
1978Sajapur Ki ShantibaiTranslation and Adaptation
1974Sampoorna MahabharatWorkshop production
1994SarakAuthor
1964Servant of Two MastersDramatisation
1980Shah BadshahAdaptation and Dramatisation
1976Shahi LakarharaDramatisation
1948Shantidoot KamgarAuthor
1953Shatranj Ke MohreDramatisation
1969Shatranj Ke MohreDramatisation
1981Sone SagarAuthor
2000Sun BahriAuthor
1971SutradharAuthor
1959Tambaku Ke NuksanatTranslated
1974Thakur Pritipal SinghDramatisation
1961The Good Woman of SzechwanDramatisation
1961The Importance of Being EarnestDramatisation
1964The Shoemaker’s Prodigious WifeDramatisation
1968The Signet RingDramatisation
1961The Taming of the ShrewDramatisation
1977UttaramcharitDramatisation
2001Veni SanhaarTranslator and adaptation
2005VisarjanDramatised
2002Zhereeli HawaTranslated and Dramatised
1948Shantidoot KamgarAuthor
Habib Tanvir with his wife Moneeka Misraat a Sahmat event

Mother

How is that when we want something dear and one that we really love, and want it now-now, 

                 we think of the mother and grandmother?

How come – patience is what we are taught by our mothers!!! 

How come ‘Ma’ is first the word on our impatient tongues?

A mother, is she the closest and most distant at the same time?

A mother, is she a unit of time?

Was the Big Bang – The Mother? 

Is the Mother that void, yet an all encompassing space ?

World Bicycle Day, 3rd June

<World Bicycle Day, June 3> In the rocky and desolate countryside off Nashik, as one approaches the Western Ghats, a bicycle lover has created a highway resort overlooking the mine-pit hollows and a solitary windmill. His / their love for biking is evident as one enters the complex and finds a bike track and a model of  an old bike displayed in the lawn. No rent is charged from biking enthusiasts. Exploring the resort one finds handle-bars, wheels, chain-sprockets, cross-bars, steel rims, paddles and even saddles of different shapes used as functional art pieces. Signs outside washrooms, a combination of mirrors above wash basins, light fittings etc. amplify their love for bicycles.

The tall bushes in this region fight for every drop of moisture and produce some stunningly coloufull thorny-flowers.

Commemorative Matchbox Set

​Phillumenists (matchbox/match label collectors) in India were overjoyed when a premium matchbox manufacturer announced the launch of a special pack commemorating 75 years of India’s Independence with 75 new & old matchboxes, some which were available way back in 1942. While it was a delight to see the three-fold large box (14 x 36 x 3 in), its price tag of Rs. 1947 was a dampener. On another occasion one would have waited for the price to be reduced but for this one, the risk of losing it was high as it was a limited edition box. Out of the 75 match boxes in the special set, eight can be counted as ‘Rare’; twenty five as special editions of the “I Kno” series which are really good; while the rest can be procured either from the current market or with a bit of patience can be bought from collectors. The reprints in this pack include many of ITC and WIMCO’s legacy brands, some of which are still available in the market are, SHIP, Three Mangoes, Kapas, Vaxlit and AIM. Wish the older specimens also had the replica of excise duty stickers which were pasted on each matchbox in earlier years. At the time of Independence matchboxes were available for 3 paisa a box. Even after 75 years a box of 30 or 50 sticks is still reasonably priced between 2 to 3 rupees. This commemorative set is surely expensive (capitalists encash every opportunity), but worth every stick if you are a memorabilia collector and have a large empty drawer. Get it till it is available. The packaging though could have been better. Caution: keep matchsticks and matchboxes away from extreme heat and places in proximity of sparks; away from direct fire and away from the reach of children. As collectors, we empty the box leaving only three or four sticks in the box to keep a record of the wood used, the colour on the mix of potassium chlorate on the tip and a thin film of wax on the stick. The striking surface on the side of the matchbox has a coating of red phosphorus which is highly inflammable. And please, ‘Strike Gently’.

Stand firm girls

What will the river give back
in return for your medals?
For your sweat, blood, your toil?
Will it return the honour or punish
the guilty? Will it drown those men 
in a deluge of shame or water? 
Ask the river, will it, in return 
for what you are offering her.

The river too is being sullied
by the same men and women
who have perpetrated injustice 
in the name of gods, temples, and holy books.
Its waters have been poisoned
so are the minds of the mob; the soil
rivers, trees and the house of honest men.
The river, girls, can’t protect itself. 
Neither prayers nor faith 
can get you justice. 
Stand firm and fight girls, you must.

I wish you had gone to your akhara, and 
shown the medals to each girl in the village
and had vowed 
with a fist full of soil in your clenched hands
to wrestle your dignity
from the men who also assault
the very essence of this nation.

Stand firm girls. Stand mightier 
than the Ganga in spate.

In solidarity with protesting wrestlers. 31 May 2023

Protesting wrestlers at Ganga ghat in Haridwar on 30 May 2023. Photo: unknown