Saturday, 1 April 2023

Yousuf Siddique’s Mango Tree (Then Mambalam) by Vaikom Mohammed Basheer

 

Vaikom Mohammed
Bhaseer

Originally written in Malayalam by famous Malayalam writer Vaikom Mohammed Bhaseer.

Tamil translation from Malayalam by Sukumaran

English Translation by Saravanan Karmegam

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“None of what you have heard about it is not true. I won’t worship any tree. To be very right, not anything under the sun! But I do share a very intimate relationship with this mango tree. My wife, Asma loves this tree too. This honey-tasting mango tree stands here as the symbol of an extremely virtuous deed.”

We were sitting under that mango tree. The tree had a lot of mangoes. A layer of white sand was seen spread around the tree in a broad circle at its bottom. Two rows of bricks were found erect along the circle with some rose plants planted in small circles between the rows- A huge number of flowers blossoming in different colours.

His name was Rashid. He was living in a house nearby with his wife and son. Both husband and wife were working as teachers in a school. His wife had sent their sixteen year old son with plateful of mango pieces. We both were savouring it. Its taste was quite unique, a taste of honey.

“How does the mango taste?”

“You are right. It tastes honey”

“I am still quite amazed to think about this moment given to us to relish this mango”

“Who had planted this tree?”

“It’s we, I and my wife Asma, planted this tree here. I will explain the story behind this mango tree. I have narrated it to so many. The one who listened to the story conveniently forgot the incidents that led to the planting of this tree and spread a false narrative of Tree Worship. There is no worship involved in this. It is just a memory of a noble act. My younger brother was a police inspector and was working in the town seventy five miles away from here. I had gone to meet him; stayed in his house. Though it wasn’t a big town, I went out of the house to get a feel of the town. It was a scorching summer and the wind was blowing hot. Everyone was facing water scarcity. When I was walking along road, I saw an old man with long beard and hair lying under a tree, looking extremely tired. From his appearance, I could understand that he must nearly be eighty years old. He was looking very exhausted, clearly waiting for his last breath. On seeing me, he mumbled, “Al-hum Dulillah! O! My people! Please give me some water”  

“I ran to a house nearby and found a young lady reading a magazine sitting in the veranda of her house. I asked her some water. She was a beautiful lady. She went in, and brought some water in a mug. As I left her house with the mug in my hands, she grew intrigued and asked why I carried the mug along with me. I explained her that a man was lying completely worn-out over there and in need of water. She also came along with me to see him. I gave him water. The old man slowly got up, sat. It was only after that, he did something marvelous. He got up, still tottering, with the mug in hands, went near to a mango sapling which was looking withered under heat, and poured some water at its root by chanting a prayer. It was a mango seed thrown away by some unknown passer-by after consuming the mango that had got sprouted with its roots visible on the ground. He then came back to the tree shade, sat, drank the remaining water, praising the god “Al-hum, Dulillaah” and said, “My name is Yousuf Siddique. I am above eighty years old. I do not have any relatives. I have been moving around the world as a mendicant. Now the time has come for me to die. May I know the names of you both?”

I told, “I am Rashid, a school teacher”. The young lady told him, “My name is Asma. I am a school teacher. “Let Allah bless us all”, said the old man, and lay under the shade. He breathed his last right in front of our eyes. I told Asma to wait there and went to my brother, explained him everything. We brought a mortuary van and took the old man's mortal remains to a mosque and got it bathed. We covered his body with the shroud of new cloths and buried him with necessary rituals. We found six rupees in his bag.

“I and Asma added another five rupees with it, and bought some toffees. I gave it to Asma for distributing it to the school children. Later, I married Asma. She was regularly watering that mango sapling. Some days prior to our coming to this house after completing its construction, we uprooted the mango sapling without damaging its roots, kept it in a rug sack filled with required amount of soil, and watered it. It was kept leaned against the wall at the corner of Asma’s bed room for a couple of days. Once we came to this house, we brought it here, planted it in a pit filled with dried cow dung and ash and watered it regularly. As the fresh leaves started coming out, we nurtured it with bone powder and compost manure. This is how this tree had come here.”

“A very pleasing event indeed. An old man watered a dumb mango sapling just before his death. I will keep it in my heart for ever.” As I walked ahead after bidding them adieu, I heard someone calling me out from behind. I turned around.   

It was Rashid’s son. He gave me a bundle- four mangoes wrapped in a paper- and said, “Mother has asked you to give it to your family members”

“O! Son! You are studying.  Aren’t you?”

“Yes…in college”

“What is your name?”

“Yousuf Siddique”

“Yousuf Siddique?”

“Yes…my name is Yousuf Siddique”

***Ended***      

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