HandooAN INHERITANCE By Dhanvanthi Rama Rau Allied Publishers, New Delhi, 1978, Rs. 50.00 VOLUME III NUMBER 3 November/December 1978 To the tell-me-a-story request from
her grandchild, grandmother Rama Rau responded with tales of her own childhood
and little Asha listened with wonder—'... from her expression I might have been
describing a totally foreign land in a remote period of history'. From the
girl's insistence that her grandmother write her memoirs comes this century of
family history—an inheritance that links up the past that Dhanvanthi Rama Rau
had known with the present world of Asha's.
The lady of family planning in India
was the sixth of eleven children in a Kashmiri Pandit family, settled in a
railway colony in Hubli in the south-west of India. The early and perhaps most
interesting part of her book, is a portrait of her mother, lovingly and
carefully pieced together from anecdotes and scraps of family history that
finally link coherently 'her past narrow orthodoxy with her later mental
expansion, the phenomenal progressive growth of her thinking and the ambitions
she developed for her children'. The orthodox background of Bhagbhari Handoo
included being a bride at eight and moving from one large joint family to
another. In her husband's family she had a major part of the household
responsibilities, her mother-in-law depending more and more on her. And then
came the break when young Handoo defied his family and moved away with his
wife. A break that was the beginning of many other breaks with tradition and
the past.
From the Handoo home in the Kashmiri galli
of old Delhi to the railway colony in Hubli was quite a change in the
1880s. There were other changes too; Bhagbhari was determined to educate her
daughters no less than her sons and so the Handoo girls became the first in the
Kashmiri community to attend school. And to learn English and be taught
Christianity and be exposed to children from all communities and backgrounds
and learn at first hand the ways of other, very different, Indians. 'To do so
was not a matter of pride in those days.'
But it was a matter of pride that the
girls did well at school and two even completed their matriculation before
their marriage was arranged. Dhanvanthi was the oldest girl at home now and
drew close to her mother who was a strong influence over her awakening mind.
After she matriculated the family moved to Madras, to a· ... Table of Contents >> |