Wednesday, August 7, 2019

Running Errands, A Visit to St. Andrew-By-The-Sea and An Evening Spent at a Cyber Café


Friday, August 2, 2019
Bombay

Running Errands, A Visit to St. Andrew-By-The-Sea and An Evening Spent at a Cyber Café

     Namaste from Bombay!

Clearing, Cleaning, Trawling, Culling:
     I am getting used to the novelty of waking up in Dad’s home (the home of my teenage years onwards) where the sounds are different although there is still bird song. Breakfast was a chappati which I ate with mango jam and coffee. I then decided to create some room by taking some of Russel’s books and magazines that have been in the loft for so long out of there (to be disposed of) and replacing them with others that have accumulated in the cabinets. This has freed up space in the cabinet. Magazines that were piled in the living room were then placed in the cabinet! This is the situation that loved ones have to encounter when faced with someone who has OCD (Obsessive Compulsive Disorder)—which Russel has (from everything I have observed). Rohit gave me a hand putting things up and that was great.
     Also in an attempt to free up space in the different storage cabinets of Dad’s place, I went through a really old suitcase that had been placed under the bed and found it full of the most unspeakable junk.  The only things I salvaged and retained from there was a diary belonging to my maternal grandmother (she had a variety of addresses of people she had worked with in it), a diary belonging to my maternal Uncle Henry (it was full of the lyrics of Hindi songs!) and a pair of binoculars (in rather rusty shape) that my Dad told me he used to take along when he went to the Brabourne Stadium to watch cricket matches! Just imagine! They are truly field glasses. I had no idea that my Dad used to actually attend cricket matches! It is amazing how much one learns from a probing into the detritus of one’s parents’ past.
     I then went through a cabinet containing books (paperbacks) that I used to carry with me to read on the long flights to India and during my stay in India. There were about 20 such paperbacks and I texted my friend Nafisa who had told me to pass on any books to her that I wished to discard. She told me she would love to have them. I put them in a giant bag and she will pick them up when she returns from a short trip she is currently taking. Doing that freed up two shelves of space in that cabinet. I also have a bag of books for the library of Bandra Gym and I discarded a whole lot of book that were eaten by silver fish—a perpetual problem in India as silver fish thrive in damp conditions. Tomorrow I shall start on some other cabinets with the idea of freeing space.
            I then received a message from Herman, my friend the amateur historian, telling me that he was taking a Spanish friend of his to the church of St. Andrew-By-The-Sea for a tour of the interior. I had told him that I was interested in accompanying them if it took place. But first, I needed to get to the church office to book a Thanksgiving Mass for the eve of my departure from Bombay. I really did want to offer a Mass for all blessings received this year. It has been a terrific year for me, work-wise, and in terms of my ability to help my family members. Plus, with the Lord and His Blessed Mother answering our prayers for Russel and allowing me to return home to the States with a greater sense of comfort than I have felt for months, I really did want to offer a Massof gratitude for all favors received.

Caught In A Rainstorm:
            I carried my umbrella (just in case) although it was very dry when I left Dad’s place. Then, quite suddenly, while I was en route to the church, great, fat, raindrops fell on me and even before I could quite open my (already damaged) umbrella, the downpour was so copious and the wind so fierce that I actually had to stand under a tree (as there was no other shelter anywhere) and hope it would be a passing shower.  No such luck! With the fury of the wind, another spoke of my umbrella broke—mind you, this is the umbrella of whose praises I was singing just a little while ago! It is the Nautica umbrella that had been presented to me by my English friends in Connecticut, ten years ago, when I was leaving to live in the UK. I never used it there, but boy, have I used it here in Bombay! Now I absolutely have to find an umbrella repair man (and apparently they are a dime a dozen in Bombay!). I really have to splurge on a good umbrella when I am in London. I have always hankered after a solid umbrella from John Smith And Sons, “Stick Dealers” at Bloomsbury in London. They make walking sticks, canes and umbrellas and although each one costs a small fortune (they actually engrave your umbrella with a monogram, if you so wish), they are supposed to last a lifetime. With the fury of the Bombay monsoon though…I rather doubt that claim!  
After a while (a good 15 minutes under the tree), the wind calmed down and I was actually able to complete my walk to the church. At the church office, I met Norma, a family friend who is the secretary. She booked me in, took Rs. 50 from me and gave me a receipt. I sat and chatted with her for a while although she was busy and had to continue with her work. Herman called to tell me that he was at the church gate in his van and was ready to pick me up—but he suggested I wait until the downpour eased—it continued in this manner almost through the entire day.

A Tour of St. Andrew-By-The-Sea with Herman:
      After a while, I did reach the van and we did start our journey to St. Andrew’s. Herman has made quite a study of the church’s history and was instrumental in bringing out a book on the church that he and Vinita had presented me at dinner last night. He told us about the early history of Santa Ana, the church that has built by the white Portuguese colonials, in Bandra (close to where Bandra Station now stands). But after they converted so many Koli fisherfolk (the original East Indians) to Catholicism, they too started worshipping in the same church.  The Portuguese began objecting to their presence in the church as they smelled of fish! And so they decided to build another church for them close to the waterfront where their shacks were located and where their catches were cleaned. This became St. Andrew’s Church and the year was 1616.  
            The rain continued to pour down in buckets as we went inside the church to admire the glorious Baroque-style altars—the main reredos (or main altar) which, Herman said, dates from the mid-1800s and the twin side-altars.  Recent refurbishment has resulted in lavish gilding on the altars which are truly stunning. He also drew attention to the choir loft (which was a new addition—in the 1960s). He told us that the statues in the niches on the altar date from the medieval to the 19th centuries. Of course, all of this information was passed on to us while we looked at the decorative features inside. We were sorry to hear that the marvelous frescoes that were in the style of Murillo were painted over, at some stage, by a parish priest who did not value them. Probably, a layer of whitewash will have to be stripped off to reveal the treasure underneath. Sadly, funds are not available to carry out the refurbishment—nor does it seem as if parish priests wish to undertake such lengthy and costly projects.
     It was still coming down in a steady incessant stream when we left the church and Herman dropped me home. It was nice making the acquaintance of Peter who is Belgian and whose uncle was the much-revered Spaniard Fr. Macinet who gave his life for the Jesuit missions in Nasik. He has come down to India for a brief period to participate in the memorial service for his uncle in Nasik. Since I discovered that he was from Ghent in Belgium, I had the chance to speak French to him—which is always fun.

Clearing Up Indoors:
     Once home, I dried myself (as I’d had a right royal soaking because one more spoke from my umbrella had broken in the rainstorm!) and then sat with Dad to have lunch. Lunch was chicken mince, cutlets, cabbage and a chapatti—Dad also receives his meals from Valerie. As everyone nodded off for an afternoon siesta, I did so too. When I awoke, I used Rohit’s help to put a few of my things up on Dad’s loft: my electric kettle, my microwave oven, my table lamp, my stainless steel waste-paper basket/garbage bin (which were the few things I had needed when I first set up house, a year ago). I made a list of the things I was leaving behind so that I never need to bring or buy them again.

At the Cyber Café:
     When that was done, I decided to go out and get some work done on my computer at the cyber café as there is no internet connection in Dad’s house. I went to The Bagel Shop, which is a very cute and very popular coffee shop just one block from Dad’s building and which is very popular with expats as they sit there all day on their laptops. Sadly, there was no internet service there today—no idea what technical glitch caused this. But with no choice, I walked over to Jay, my photocopier, and there I got the work I wanted done: Dad needed a banking KYC (Know Your Customer) form printed out for him (I got him two copies), I needed to print out my air ticket for my return home, I caught up with some email to NYU, etc. Subhash is supposed to come and install an internet connection…but until this happens, I shall have to use the cyber cafe.

Cancelled Plans:
As it turns out, I was able to do this because my plans for the evening had been cancelled. I was supposed to take the Principal of St. Xavier’s College, Dr. Rajendra Shinde, and my Coordinator at the United States-India Education Foundation, Dr. Ryan Pereira, for dinner to the Copper Chimney restaurant. This was after I had attended an opening reception for a new exhibition on the work of V.S. Gaitonde, one of the most famous of contemporary Indian artists. He was one of the members of the famous Progressive Artists Group of the 1950s and 60s and there is a retrospective of his work that has just been installed at the Shivaji Museum. My friend Shahnaz’s daughter, Azra, who is an artist herself, was supposed to accompany me to this opening. But then, Raju Shinde emailed me to say that he was not feeling well and wanted to reschedule our dinner and perhaps it was just as well as the rain was quite alarming in its intensity and made me wonder whether or not I should keep our date. When Raju pulled out, it was a no-brainer. I texted Azra to tell her that I would not be going to the opening after all.
This left me the evening free. I shall try to catch the exhibition early next week when I go again to the city to meet some friends before my departure from Bombay.  
            Neither Dad nor I went for Mass today. Instead, we said our family rosary and then got down to having dinner—more of our lunch. I had a quiet evening with my laptop before I went to bed at about 10.00 pm.
     Until tomorrow…

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