My Incomparable Pradipda
Once in the
1980s at a seminar the Sports Minister Subhash Chakrabarty asked me to help
sell wads of 10-rupee donation cards to the general public for the construction
of the Yuva Bharati Stadium. He added, “Please do not worry. My men will be
with you at the Moulali junction. Here the common people respect sportsmen.
They will love to buy from you.” I hesitated not knowing if I would be able to
do the job. Pradipda, unarguably the most popular speaker present, encouraged,
“Just stand and flash your smile. The tickets will vanish in 5 minutes. When
the stadium comes up, you can tell people of your contribution!” What a way to
motivate.
He was a
modern-day Socrates. Generously served his wisdom to all and sundry who
gathered around him freely and frankly. Could hold his audience enthralled for
hours on any subject. Like Plato he trained a host of teachers who made
successful careers of themselves.
Thank God he did not get the Dronacharya award.
No, no, that was certainly not for him. He was not a vulgar teacher who would
ask his pupils for guru-dakshina.
Rather he was a replica of the Avatar
Parashuram who freely gave away his acquired knowledge to all those who asked
for like Karna and Drona.
Unfortunately
in our country we could not find a place for Pradip Kumar Banerjee as an
independent candidate in the Parliament. He would have changed the complexion
of India’s sports ethos within months. He had that kind of personality,
dynamism and vision. People of all age-groups, provinces, communities, class
and creed revered him for his wisdom and total lack of bias. He was a kindred
soul who traversed the earth alone to meet and educate people.
He was never an
Establishment crony. Never gave undue respect to politicians, sponsors or the
influential. He was the People’s Man. A man who always held his head high and
walked tall with purposeful strides. Found time for the poor and the needy; for
the weak and the ordinary. I remember once at a Blood Donation camp held at
Netaji Indoor Stadium he went up and down the street to enthuse people to come
and donate blood. The pedestrians followed him and the magic figure of 1000
donors was reached for the first time. When he came to my bed, he shrugged his
shoulders at the blood bottle, “Oh! Raju, yours is also red! How wrong I was!”
Once when my
wife Seema was hospitalized, Arati boudi and Pradipda arrived with a big box full
of sweets. We protested but to no avail. Pradipda gave the attending nurse one
huge sandesh and told her, “These are
not for them! Keep these for the visitors who come to see my daughter!”
Mid-1970s.
Calcutta Maidan. Every morning the
Bengal women’s cricket team would use the Kalighat Club ‘nets’ for their
practice sessions before we began ours. One elderly lady – warm, matronly and
ever-smiling – would be present from start to finish. As it happened, she and I
got along very well. We would discuss any and every subject possible. One day
she asked me, “Raju, why do you avoid physical training?” Told her that I hated
running. She laughed, “Wait, I must tell PK about your laziness.” Only then I came to know that she happened to
be the wife of the legendary football player, PK Banerjee, who at the time was
riding the crest of a wave as the coach of a local football club.
Next season, as
it transpired, PK Banerjee was appointed to guide the Bengal Ranji Trophy squad
in physical training. As usual I would run just about two laps of Eden Gardens
and find excuses to rest. Pradipda, who had developed a great liking for me (I
suspect because of Arati boudi), once said, “Rajubabu (that’s how he generally
called me), unless you do your physical training seriously, you will forever
remain as physically weak as you are.” My Jadavpur University background
surfaced: I argued that cricket was a mind game and physical training was not
that important.
Instead of
getting upset, in his softest tone he confided, “I am sure you have a health
problem, Rajubabu. Otherwise a person like you will not have this wrong notion.”
Much later, after 25 years, it was actually diagnosed that I had a congenital
heart ailment. How was he so sure? I am certain he had a fascinating intuition
which separates these men from ordinary mortals like us.
Pradipda and
Boudi did not attend my wedding reception. Pradipda said, “No way, Rajubabu.
People will crowd around me and spoil all your arrangements.” This was no
immodesty; no idle boast. The kind of ‘traffic-stopping’ popularity that he
enjoyed, his presence would certainly have caused a pandemonium.
If he was born
under straitened financial circumstances, nothing in his conduct suggested so.
His generosity would embarrass many a wealthy man. Larger than life in
everything he did. When Arati boudi and he invited people to a meal, that would
invariably be a ‘spread’ that never seemed to end. If boudi’s speciality were prawns and hilsa, she was as brilliant with
the basics of rice, dal and rakamari torkari.
Innumerable
meals my wife and I had at Pradipda’s residence, both at Salt Lake as well as
at their Qaiser Street Eastern Railway quarters. Once after a very heavy meal
of shukto, posto, prawn malaikari, keemar chop, fried chicken followed by malpoa and payesh the magnanimous hostess Arati boudi actually packed a tiffin
carrier for us to take home! When I mildly protested, Pradipda’s fond reply
was, “Shey ki ray, khabar bedhe niye jabi
na? Kemon bamun tui? ” (What kind of Brahmin are you that you do not want to
carry food back home?).
Wonder if
Pradipda is the householder-rishi
that Sri Ramakrishna had in mind? He was truly a saint: a karma-yogi, like Swamiji, in the most appropriate sense of the
term. He was so very sincere and absorbed in his effort that the result would not
cross his mind. In addition, he was the epitome of a husband and father. If he
was a wonderful father to his two marvellous daughters, he was no less a
father-figure to his brothers as well as to his innumerable students. He did
not need to crave for respect. He earned reverence by his deeds.
Once at our
Lake Road residence Pradipda brought a basketful of gifts for us. I was very embarrassed.
Pradipda’s loving rebuke was, “This is for Seema, not for you. I am merely
carrying out Arati’s orders.” Even today my friends have not forgotten the
fabulous time he gave us that evening which stretched for hours. Our adda continued beyond midnight with not
a drop of liquor involved. Just goes to show that it’s the company and nothing
else that matters for a genuine, worthwhile adda.
After Arati
boudi left for nirvana, Pradipda just could not come to terms with the loss. He
seemed to have misplaced his soul. He tried to involve himself full steam in
various social activities, but he was practical enough to realize that his
salad days were no more. His daughters and the nursing staff worked wonders to
keep him in high spirits as he readied himself to reunite with boudi.
Pradipda is
(tense intended) very much in our midst. His life is a perpetual source of
inspiration. Even people who have not met him or seen him have been motivated
by his actions. His life-story is a tale of positivity and idealism. What a
raconteur of incidents he was. His orbit and depth remain unmatched.
Exceptionally
strong both mentally and physically, the iconic gentleman’s goodness flows in
abundance: generous to the extreme;
magnanimous in praise of others; impeccable integrity; honest effort without
bothering about the consequences; courage in the face of odds; completely away
from petty issues; never bothered about posts and awards; never conspired for
any influential position after retirement.
Once he
casually asked me, “I must be your favourite football player?” I replied, “Not
really.” Surprised he raised his eyebrows. I added, “Well, they are Tulsidas Balaram,
Arun Ghosh and Yousuf Khan.” He patted me on the back, “Excellent choices.
Where do I figure?”
I bent low and
touched his toes. He put his hand on my head and, raising me, embraced. I said,
“Pradipda you are not a mere sportsman. You are a Real Man. The most admirable
all-round personality I have ever met.” Pradipda looked at me and just said,” I
have one message for you: Just be as you are.” That has remained my diksha-mantra ever since. I have no
hesitation in sharing my diksha-mantra
with the world. With Pradipda’s blessings, I know it will remain that way till
the last breath.
In 1955 when
the teenage ‘right-wing’ recruit from Jamshedpur was running circles around
defenders for Calcutta’s Aryans Club at New Delhi in the Durand Cup, from the
stands the legendary India football coach Syed Rahim realized that he had found
the gem India was waiting for. Next year he joined Eastern Railway and was on
the flight to Melbourne for the Olympic Games to begin the 6-year chapter of
India’s best-ever football era, 1956 to 1962.
If Swamiji was his inspiration, he himself is
no less an inspiration to millions. I can still feel the power and the warmth
of his embrace. He is still in our midst in more ways than one. He is beyond
compare.
You are just 100% right of Pk's human aspect. Yet I cannot but restrain from highliting his soccer skill and his coaching ability. In those days changing positions was not so much in vogue. But when Pk cut in, he was unstoppable except by a nasty foul tackle. As a coach he once reprimended a very promising player (winger who had the tenacity but not the imagination when to cut or centre and would often land up outside the goaline) saying " don't be a bachha mosh"!
ReplyDeleteThanks, whoever you are,
Deletefor the compliments. I purposely avoided his careers as player, as captain, as coach, as director, as mentor etc because reams have been written on those aspects. I just highlighted my experiences with the extraordinary man. Wish to know your name, if you do not mind. God bless.
Excellent rememberance of an extraordinary personality...i was blessed to have treated him once in my OPD at my hospital in 2017...what began as an medical consultation...ended in an adda of 2 hours...some might say...adda in a hospital OPD...but u dont get to meet this person...everyday...i met him once in my lifetime...the memories remain in my heart...
ReplyDeleteThanks, doc. Yes, you are absolutely right. Knowing him is a blessing. His memories stay with you forever. Following you on TV very earnestly. You and your peers are doing a great job. Congrats. God bless.
ReplyDeleteAs always, wonderfully written, Raju da. P.K. Banerjee, the footballer and the coach, we know about. It was fascinating to read about P.K.Banerjee, the man!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kallol. I value your comments. God bless.
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