November 5th
saw one of the darkest days in the annals of Indian music industry. It lost its
last balladeer the dreamwover from the east Bhupen Hazarika. The maestro who
had enthralled the audiences across the world took the music of Assam to the
world stage. Not only was he a musician; but a legend who united the North East
through his words and his actions.
Starting his journey as
a 10 year old Bhupen Da as he is fondly called attained one musical height after
another. He was infact a true successor to the Leonardo Da Vinci concept of a
complete man .Bhupen Da was not only a singer but a lyricist, director, author
and a poet. He held the post of President of the prestigious Assam Sahitya Sabha.
In his stint as the director of Sangeet Natak Akademi Bhupen Da was able to
bring Sattriya Dance of Assam national and international recognition. Infact Bhupen
Da was not only a messenger of Assam but of the entire North East. This was
reflected in his death when the governments of Arunachal Pradesh and Nagaland
expressed mourning as well.
Bhupen Da was Assam’s “Jatir
Pita” (Father of the Nation) where he commanded the love and respect of every
Assamese. And his death now poses a dangerous proposition of the Assamese
people being left rudderless. This was aptly exhibited in the fact in the story
of the 4 pigeons. It was a breathtaking sight to watch 4 pigeons following the caravan
of Bhupen Da from the airport to Judge Field and finally to the cemetery. It
was discussed that these 4 pigeons were indeed the soul of the 4 great Assamese
sons of the soil; Jyoti Prasad Agarwalla, Bishnu Rabha,Phoni
Sarma and Khirod Baishya present to escort the maestro to the doors of heaven.
But it later turned out that the pigeons had their legs tied up to give the
whole last journey as supernatural feel. While the crime doesn’t need to be
discussed the motive why it was done must definitely be done.
Another line of thought sought to play this turnout
of Bhupen da’s death as a sort of assertive Assamese identity. What this
Assamese identity however stands for; has mystified each of us for the last
three decades especially as one of the strongest student’s movement in free
India the AASU movement of 1980’s eventually became a terrible failure.
There has been another further tenacious tendency
to count the greatness of the man in terms of his funeral attendance. In his
life he was acclaimed, applauded but there was also a stage where perhaps his
role was questioned especially his role during the “Khadya Andolan” and “Bhasa
Andolan” in Assam in the late 1960’s and the early 1970’s.It was his humanist
greatness that he choose to look above the two struggle but a section of people
of Assam at that stage couldn’t take it lightly. And yet his friends and more
importantly his lifelong detractors arrived to pay homage to his greatness at
his death. What matters is not the number of people attending the funeral but
his ability to join his friends and foes with his death.
The death of the maestro perhaps should not be
given a supernatural coloring in form of four pigeons nor must it be counted
among the “Greatest Funerals of the World.”We all
watched as the world cried there was invariably a section of people who smiled
everytime the television camera zoomed on them. There was always a section who
arrived to pay homage because it looked on camera and hoped that it would a few
brownie points with the public. There was always a section who updated Facebook
status about Bhupen Hazarika’s death and their well cooked biriyani within a
matter of 2 hours. In such a scenario it is almost foolishness to count the
greatness of the man in terms of “funeral attendance”.
What then is the real legacy of Bhupen Hazarika?
Is it a supernatural journey, a record of funeral attendance or a sense of
super-assertive Assamese nationalism? The answer is an empathic none of these.
To understand the phenomenon that is Bhupen Hazarika
we must understand that the basic nature of the Assamese psyche is high short
term emotional quotient and an extreme form of belief in simple symbolism. This
short term symbolism is perhaps also the reason why Assam has never been able
to produce another Jyoti Prasad Agarwala. The Marwari community, to which Jyoti
Prasad belonged, today prefers to exhibit a strong Marwari identity instead of
believing in the immersing Assamese cultural sojourn. These makes one wonder
what is wrong with the psyche and how will perhaps Bhupen Hazarika be different
and how can we make it different.
To understand this we must go back to the
composition of the 4 pigeons. The 4 pigeons included a Marwari,A Kaystha,a
Rabha and a Brahmin. And this cluttering is perhaps where the success of Bhupen
Hazarika will lie. For the first time Assam that has formerly been Balkanized among
its tribes, its various linguistic divisions and its two valleys the
Brahmaputra and the Barak, stood together. The pain of Bhupen Hazarika was felt
from Sadiya to Dhubri from Silchar to Dibrugarh. He united the people of Assam
across its lengths and breadth. Those who arrived at the scene to pay homage were
not Assamese linguistic speakers or Bengali linguistic speakers. They were not Hindus
or Muslims or Sikh they were the people of Assam who were bound together by one
common thread the love for their maestro.
And this is the point from which a new sense of
cultural identity must be incolculated. Whether 1
man attended his funeral or 50 lakhs did it doesn’t matter as long as there was
one solitary heart with a prayer in their lips and tears in their eyes. It doesn’t
matter whether the 4 pigeons actually flew with the maestro or not. None of it
matters as long as the true message of his legacy is understood. Assam as a
concept is broad and encompassing. Assamese nationalism as an identity is
perhaps not a reflection of a linguistic chauvinism but an identity moulded in homogeneity.
This nationalism is not the reflection of a secessionist tendency but a strong sub
national aspiration that runs parallel to the Indian identity.
It is from this
idea oh homogeneity the death of Bhupen Hazarika endows that Assam must move forward. The road to
a new Assam lies in the road to reapproachment and forgiveness and humanity and
that I belief is the true lesson of the legacy of the Bhupen Da.
He is truly the Jatir Pita the Father of the
Assamese nation.
No comments:
Post a Comment