Four wobbling wheels, a rickety platform and something on it
to sell. In this side of the country it is called Tela. Those wonders who sell
vegetables, fruits, peanuts, golgappas, ice creams and so on together and alone
make a moving market. With the corner shops closing and paving way to the
organized supermarkets and international markets with franchise showrooms,
these telas come to be seen as alternative market place. In the text books of
cultural studies we see how the alternatives slowly turning into mainstream
forces but in real life the mainstream of yesteryears turns into alternative
these days. Telawalas were erstwhile mainstream market vendors. They used to
come to a locality confidently, sell their wares and go back. Often they made
friends with the local people and housewives waited for their favourite vendor
to sell vegetables and fruits.
I do not say that today the telawalas are completely gone
but I am sure they are a vanishing lot; a species at the verge of extinction.
Telawalas still have that beautiful theory of makeshift markets. They could
change a road into a temporary market place; a play ground or a parking lot
could turn into a weekly market when the telawalas gather there with their
wares. Somehow the municipalities, corporations and the policemen seem to be
not so keen to have them in the streets as before. They are periodically chased
away, brutalized and at times manhandled as if they were petty criminals. These
policemen take bribe from them and when there is pressure from the higher
officers either to keep the streets in order or to fetch more bribe, the
telawalas are terrorized. The people who gather around these hapless men and
women are mute witnesses of these police atrocities. Men and women with loving
and waiting families back in some far off places, at the distant site of the
Khakhi uniform push their carts and run away to the side alleys as the
frightened animals hide behind bushes and rocks to save themselves from the
preying beasts.
These telawalas used to live somewhere around. They used to
live inside the towns and cities, in small holes devoid of basic living
conditions, still hoping to make it big one day in the city. With the arrival
of flyovers and metros and also with the general beautification of the cities,
these itinerant vendors are now pushed out of the cities. They are literally
taken away from the cities and dumped in the outskirts of the cities from where
they have to push their carts for kilometres to reach the places where people
inhabit. Vegetables and fruits are bought by people, not by trees and bushes or
the vast expanses of dumping yards that these people have to cross in order to
enter the cities. Those people who have cars and other vehicles go to the
organized markets to buy things without looking at the price tags. But the poor
people still depend on these telawalas who would sell things in a decent price
because they know those who come to buy are also like them. You may have a
different opinion about it. Telawalas too over charge; they too bully the
buyers. They do this when they know that the buyer is from middle class and the
haggling is just their second nature.
In one of the very good novels of the 21st
century so far is ‘A Strangeness in My Mind’. Written by the Nobel Prize
winning novelist, Orhan Pamuk, this novel has its protagonist, Mevlut who is a
Boza seller. Boza is a Turkish traditional low alcoholic drink which the
vendors like Mevlut say contains no alcohol at all. Before the ‘thirst market’
was monopolised by the multinational corporations with their aerated drinks,
there were drinks like Boza that used to cool off many a citizen in many a
country. Mevlut tries different businesses including chicken-rice selling and
ice cream vending. Each time he does it some sort of calamity affects him and
he finally has to go back to his Boza selling. He calls out Bozaaa along the
darkening alleys of Istambul (Boza is an evening drink mostly) while carrying
the jars of Boza hanging from a bamboo staff kept across his shoulders. The old
timers call Mevlut to their homes only because they want to taste the nostalgic
drink and listen to the Boza teller talking about the streets of Istambul. Some
people ask him to call ‘Bozaaa’ just to transport themselves back to the good
old days. Mevlut knows that one day he has to end this business too.
Each time I see a telawala I remember Mevlut. After reading
the novel last year, I forgot what I used to think about the telawalas before.
Now a days I think only of Mevlut and his father and many other father who come
to the city of Istambul from rural Turkey in search of a job in the city and
most of them end of up in selling Boza. We wonder whether these people have a
story or not. We are taught to give ear to the story of people with some
consequences. But there are inconsequential people whose lives are richer and
complex than those of those rich and powerful people. If life is an intrigue
for the rich and the powerful, for the poor it is a riddle that they want to
find an answer. But for us, the middle class it always a straight line story
with an end that we have already thought of (even if the ending is always
contrary to our belief). The happy ending and happy hours lead the middle
class. But for the telawalas it is a story that looks alike day after day but
so complex, varied and dark. Dostoevsky, Dickens, Okri, Pamuk, Roy and so on
are such writers who go under and see the underbelly of cities and recount
stories from there. Giving voice to the voiceless is one of the prime duties of
art. Unfortunately, our artists and novelists fail in this even if they see the
telavals being chased each time out of the alleys that lead to the respectable
colonies where they live.
(photographs by
Sushma Sabnis)
1 comment:
Some lovely work of young artist Sohan jakhar on same theme. Have a look.
http://miheg.blogspot.in/2013/08/sohan-jakhar-present-and-past.html?m=1
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