Source: The Wire

My first acquaintance with Vinod dates back to the late 1970s, when I was given an MA course to teach at the Arts Faculty at Delhi University.

I was to discover that Vinod occupied a very back seat in that  copious class room, number 62.

I cannot recall now how well or badly he did on his exams, but it was clear that he had a rather cynically scant regard for the  prospect of a great academic career.

Such a course must have seemed inimical to his over-riding devotion to music and theatre. His restive impishness had more lively and creative things in sight at the time.

Of course, the calling of journalism – where he won fame, awards, and the anger of rulers so outraged by his honesty that they were to try and charge him with sedition – was to come later.

I was to earn his acceptance, unbeknown to me, in a most curious way—one that was a suggestive reckoner to what comprised his social, intellectual and related choices in the years before him.

Some two decades or more after we signed off as teacher and  student, back home on a late evening with a searing headache, my landline rang (there were no mobiles then); Vinod was on the line.

“Sir, aap tayyar rahein, mein gaadi bhej raha houn” (Sir, please be ready, I am sending a vehicle).

(In passing I could not dissuade Vinod from using that obsolete honorific “sir” to me: “thoda time lagega, sir”, he would say – ‘It will take me some time’.)

This was a precipitate invite to his TV show, due to go on air in barely half  an hour after the call.

Done in by my headache, and always reluctant to be on television, I demurred, but was persuaded to say yes by my colleague and spouse, Shashi, who felt one must never say no to a dear student.

Vinod’s subject that evening for the episode was cricket, it turned out; and I had come to his mind as an old  state-level player.

The show over, I asked Vinod to please have me sent home pronto, as I felt a little unwell.

“Aaj nahi jaanei doonga, sir; pehlei mere saath IIC chaliyey.” (i will not let you go today; please  accompany me to the IIC first.)

He would not take no for an answer.

Once at the India International Centre, we ran into friends who were frequent presences there.

The conversation carried on till well past 11 o’clock.

Finally, I begged Vinod to send me home. At which he took me to his car, sat himself behind the wheel and set off for campus, driving with aplomb.

Among other things, Vinod never shied away from enjoying the good things of life so long as these were hard-earned.

At the outer gate of the staff quarters of Kirori Mal College, I got off  to say thanks and good night.

Which is when Vinod let go:


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Badri Raina is a well-known commentator on politics, culture and society. His columns on the Znet have a global following. Raina taught English literature at the University of Delhi for over four decades and is the author of the much acclaimed Dickens and the Dialectic of Growth. He has several collections of poems and translations. His writings have appeared in nearly all major English dailies and journals in India.

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