A song that we Kerala Syrian Christians sing only at funerals is "samayamam rathathil njan swargayatra cheyyunnu... (I travel on the chariot of time towards heaven, To see my homeland I go alone). I love it but on January 3rd when I heard it as the ambulance brought my dad's body home from the morgue, I was overwhelmed by grief. Close relatives and well wishers carried the coffin into the house, where bouquets of flowers, an ornamental cross and long candles made Chandanapally's first English professor's final journey a grand affair.
People had been visiting us ever since the hospital confirmed the news, and the day before the funeral being a holiday for Mannam Jayanti we saw a lot of mourners. His friends poured in, so did casual acquaintances he chatted with on his daily 4 km evening walk around the village and neighbouring villages until his prostate surgery in 2023.
He was not an easy person to hobnob with, but he had his loyal companions too. In a village where a good many people had only basic education, dad stood out in the 1960s with an MA in English from Christ College Kanpur where his classmates included an Orthodox priest, who later became the Catholicose (pontiff) of the Malankara Orthodox church of Kerala. In place of the nearer Catholicate college run by our community, he chose to join an arts & science college in Kozhencherry further away from our home town, changing two or three buses to reach the institution. He did not ride a bike, but the relaxed timetables in Kerala colleges made the commute easy for him as well as for a female colleague who travelled daily by train from Kochi. The pit stop at his maternal cousin's printing press cum shop in Pathanamthitta town in the evenings - where professionals of his ilk discussed life and politics - or a late afternoon nap at his aunt's house made the journey less arduous. He would not eat until he reached home by 4 pm, saving every penny in times when life was harder and money less forthcoming.
The savings helped him manage the family house and property as well as provide us a better higher education in Chennai, Pune and Delhi. In an era when people in my village went to Madras only to "learn computer", we went to do humanities in MCC along with the rich kids of Kottayam and Ernakulam districts. He let me and bro do English and Economics respectively at a time when science was the mantra for success. He reiterated that any subject was good enough to excel in if we had the passion and potential, and always gave great importance to language and communicative skills for success. He brought us books from his college library and subscribed only to Balarama (for kids) and Mathrubhumi weeklies at home, magazines that were a class apart from the Manorama and Mangalam weeklies that churned out pulp fiction for the masses.
His pride in us knew no bounds, as I graduated out of IIMC and Robs out of Reading Uni, and joined our respective careers in The Hindu and Sopac in Fiji. We moved places in the 20 years thereafter, but always returning to our roots and our parents every year.
Mom, who always thought she would be the first to go, now has to grapple with the reality of a life without dad and the companionship they had even in their bickering and teasing. Her 80th birthday bash which he had looked forward to will now be a quiet affair. Chandanapally, a village best known for its churches dedicated to St George and his miracles, will be short of a George.The best part about funerals, I must say, is the support, love and bonhomie that we experienced from cousins, friends and neighbours. Unlike weddings, which are also occasions for social gathering, funerals make us believe in the goodness of people and their allegiance for a departed soul and his family. I bow in gratitude to all especially Roychan who helped us with the funeral norms and church rituals, first cousins Rosemary, Renjith and Joji who flew down from abroad for two days to be at the funeral, dad's maternal cousins Sen, Susheela, Asha, Jose, Suba and Sunil, our MCC friends and dad's colleagues, and our many dear ones who called or messaged in the days before and after the funeral.
We will try to console ourselves that he had a good "maranam" or death, not struggling or suffering from his lifestyle diseases. But the pain will linger, and a part of him will live in us giving us strength to move on.