aug 27, scene 1: random thought at work
was listening to some hindi song with the refrain "mast kalandar" .. got me thinking -- who/what is this kalandar thing? and more importantly why is it "mast"?
aug 27, scene2: reading an article about pakistan in national geographic sept 2007
"whirling dervishes glorify the shrine of lal shahbaz qalandar, a 13th century sufi saint who preached peace between muslims and hindus. a faith embraced by most pakistanis, barelvi islam combines sunni with shiite and sufi mystical traditions. believers flock by the millions to such zones of peace where the oppressed and the powerful worship side by side"
{dervish: a member of any of various muslim ascetic orders, as the sufis, some of which carry on ecstatic observances, such as energetic dancing and whirling or vociferous chanting or shouting.}
ok .. so the mast kalandar could actually be mast qalandar, and "mast" could be some reference to a state of spritiual enlightenment/fervour associated with the qalandar thingie.
aug 27, scene 3: wikipedia to tie the loose ends
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qalandar
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mast_Qalandar
postscript:
actually, i lied a bit. even though i presented the events happening in the order scene 1/2/3 .. reality is that physical access to wikipedia is nearer than to the latest issue of natgeo .. thus the real events went scene1/3/2 -- but the weird coincidence that i should think about qalandar in 1 and see it in part2 on the same day still holds!
the sequence of events presented above (1;2;3) make for more interesting reading than the sequence 1;3;2. ive taken some creative liberty in narrating the events in the order 1;2;3 as it does not take away the essence of the interesting coincidence.
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
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2 comments:
when authenticity comes in the way of telling a story, there is no harm in bypassing it... all that about 123 and 132 is a drag.
i agree ..
but alas, the several years of engg/science/research take a toll on your creativity and how much creative licence you can exercise. there is the inevitable sense of guilt in misrepresting the truth (hence the extended postscript) :-)
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