Illustration by Dang Hong Quan He is not only a friend to the
street dogs scattered all over the city. The homeless dogs who happen to live
in his neighborhood often congregate at his front gate for their lunch and
dinner. Exactly twenty-one of them.
Ravi has named each and every one
of those dogs. But before I continue, let me fill you in, chronologically, on
Ravi’s back story. The first time I visited Ravikanth Shankar’s house was at
the end of 1993. The year before, the Shankars had helped out a destitute
Vietnamese student, giving her free room and board at their house for a
month, and helping her navigate the entrance procedures for a university.
That student, Diep, had received an Indian scholarship, including travel
expenses. It was her first time abroad, and her first time traveling by air.
But when she arrived at Bangalore, there had been no one from the university
to meet her at the terminal: the semester had actually begun three weeks
previously. She had been standing there, helpless and sobbing, when she met
Ravi, who had come to the airport to pick up a business colleague. Ravi’s
mother, a teacher, and the rest of his family extended helping hands to Diep.
They put her up in their home and proceeded to bang on office doors for a
month, fighting the bureaucracy in order to get her enrolled into a
university.
Later, Diep would tell us funny
stories about those first days in India when she had been so helpless and
clueless, and also moving stories about how kind and accommodating to her
those Southern Indian people had been. So in July 1993, I took the opportunity
of an official trip I had to make to the South to meet Ravi family. They were
quite friendly and spoke very openly with me. Ravi’s mother led me to a room,
opened the window and said: You see, this room has been kept exactly as it
was when Diep stayed here. On the table was a tiny lacquer screen, consisting
of the four panels representing spring, summer, fall, and winter, left there
by Diep.
When I came back to visit the
Shankars this time, I had not seen the family for twenty-four years. It took
me four and half hours to go from Jakarta to Colombo, Sri Lanka and an hour
and fifteen minutes from Colombo to Bangalore. The city had changed its name
to Bengaluru and though it had been secluded and quiet in the old days, it is
now teeming with cars and people. The only thing that had remained the same
was the climate: it is cool and mild like the Da Lat hill station in my
country. Ravi’s family had also gone through changes. His parents has passed
away and now Ravi, his wife Sangeeth, and their twenty-seven-year-old son,
Rishab, lived in the house.
At the doorstep, Sangeeth — who is
an artist — had created colored chalk designs of flowers and leaves. I had to
step on her work in order to enter and accept the customary Indian welcome
for a noble guest. Sangeeth came forward with a bowl of ghee, the purified
butter that fueled sacred lamps, and waved it in circles before me, following
the Indian custom of driving away the demons and bestowing good fortune on a
guest. Their son Rishab put a garland of flowers and a shawl around my neck,
another customary way of drawing luck to guests.
As these simple and friendly
ceremonies continued, I felt something large and heavy rubbing against my
leg. I looked down. A black dog, as big as a calf, was going through its own
welcoming ceremony for me. I found out later that he was the only dog that
actually belonged to the family. At the same time, several brown and a yellow
dogs pushed through the front gate, wagging their tails. The black dog barked
at them loudly, as if to drive them away. Stop it, don’t be jealous, Ravi
said to him, Be polite and let them come in for a little while to welcome my
guest.
Later, Ravi took me to visit the
institutions run by his family. The education center was founded by his
mother, Mrs. Vimala Shankar, in 1957 with only four female students at the
beginning. It has now grown to 1600 students, with classes ranging from
kindergarten to college. The college enrolls 350 students in the natural and
social sciences. After his mother had passed away, Sangeeth became president
of the institutions and Ravi and their son Rishab are members of the managing
committee, with Ravi as the committee secretary.
A red carpet had been spread for
me, from the front gate to inside the entrance. I bowed to the copper statue
of Mrs. Vimala Shankar there, remembering the day she showed me the room
where the Vietnamese girl had stayed and said to me: See, it has been kept
exactly as it had been when Diep stayed here.
Afterwards, we returned to Ravi’s
house. It was dinner time, and the tribe of street dogs had gathered at the
front gate. A big pot of milk rice was brought out and Ravi ladled the
contents into plastic boxes lined up at the gate: one box for each dog. Each
even had his or her own name. Tony, a hefty lad. Daisy, an elegant girl. Mr.
Brown, most certainly a gentleman with brown fur. Chikki, a meddlesome little
girl. And Doey, Stanislaus, Joe, Sam, Cheenu, Tito, Robin, Durwas, Princey,
Rani, Cutie, Spotty, Sarge, Cop, Anu, John, and Nick.
Initially, the black dog would not
accept them. A pampered domestic dog, he arrogantly drove away the strays.
Ravi had to scold him, lecture him about his attitude and instruct him how to
conduct himself. Gradually Blackie learned to restrain his annoyance. Ravi,
in the meantime, taught the street dogs to behave with respect and
discipline. When Robin, for example, stuck his snout into Cutie’s box and
shoved her away, Ravi rebuked him. A deluge of reprimand poured down on Robin
and then Ravi confiscated Robin’s rice box. Tears filled Robin’s eyes. Only
then did Ravi return the rice box to him. Seeing that the master had cooled
down, Robin got mischievous again and rubbed up against Ravi’s calf, always
finding ways to jostle the other dogs away from their master.
As for the food for these dogs,
Ravi bought bags of dog biscuits and had his cook prepare rice with milk.
Everything was vegetarian. And since the master was a vegetarian, the dogs
had to be vegetarian also. Pet dogs in Vietnam eat about a hundred milligrams
of beef a day, while dogs in India eat only milk rice and vegetarian
biscuits. Diep told me that in 1992 when she stayed in Ravi’s house and ate
with his family, she went vegetarian for a month. One time she was about to
cook some Vietnamese instant noodles in the kitchen, but seeing the
illustration of prawns on the package, Ravi said that prawns were also
animals and she couldn’t cook them in his kitchen. Ravi had been a vegetarian
from the time he left his mother’s womb.
The tradition of vegetarianism
began during the time of Buddha and then influenced Hinduism, resulting today
in the existence of almost a billion vegetarians in India. Because of that
same belief, Indian pets are also vegetarian. The vegetarians do not follow
that diet for health reasons or because they have allergies to certain foods
and fear meat – though someone would vomit whenever they see meat and fish
dishes. They are vegetarians because they follow a philosophy of non-violence
and refuse to participate in the process of killing any living being.
Does the presence of a pack of dogs
wandering all over the streets and gathering at the Shankars’ front gate ever
make the neighbors uncomfortable? Yes. Sometimes. It isn’t that they are
annoyed at their neighbor feeding strays, only that sometimes the dogs get
into fights with each other and bark up a racket. Ravi then has to apologize,
which usually satisfies his neighbors. But sometimes even his wife questions
his behavior: her husband leaves food on their rooftop terrace for the
monkeys and peacocks who are now frequent visitors. You’ve turned our house
into a zoo, Sangeeth told him.
For the last six years, Ravi hasn’t
even been able to leave town on job-related travel. A mechanical engineer, he
worked for Swiss and Korean companies before establishing his own IT company.
In addition, after his mother passed away at the age of eighty, while in the
middle of teaching a class, he began to manage his family’s educational
institutions. It was a return to the family business for him, and now his
wife and his son have joined him in that career.
One might worry that if Ravi had to
go away for a few days, the dogs would be helpless. There was a time when
Ravi didn’t see Rani for two days and worried that something had befallen
her. The name Rani means "queen” and he ordered the rest of the pack to
search for their queen. It turned out she was sick and lay in a corner of the
Rose Garden, the Lal Bagh. Ravi took her to a veterinarian, who told him that
he only treated household pets and never street dogs. Then here’s your
chance, Ravi told him. A doctor could not refuse to treat even one of the
wandering urchins who hawked newspapers with the excuse that such a boy was
homeless.
In the end, Ravi and the
veterinarian became friends. Every year Ravi bought twenty-one anti-rabies
shots from him. Stand still, Ravi would say, as he patted each dog. This will
just take a second and it won’t hurt, he reassured them as he stuck the
syringe into their hindquarters. Each dog would cringe and bark, but they
would stand still and let Ravi give them the injections. Only the mischievous
Robin ran away. Looking back from a safe distance, he wagged his tail, as if
teasing Ravi. Ravi disciplined him by withholding his food that day, and
reprimanding him. The next morning, Robin let Ravi give him a shot.
One of the neighbors wondered why
Ravi, who was so close to the dogs, didn’t just build a cage in his house and
keep them there. No, Ravi said; it’s like those roving newspaper boys in the
street, if they were put into a re-education camp and given plenty of full
meals, they would still run away after several days. They are the free sons
of the streets. They need freedom above all.
***
One time, the dogs became confused
and worried.
They had not seen Ravi going out of
his house for two days. At meal time, only the lady cook brought the milk
rice out and ladled it into their boxes. That part seemed normal to the dogs
because every day the cook helped Ravi to do it. However, it was not normal
that Ravi didn’t go out.
The dogs rubbed against the irongate.
They peered through the lattice-work vertical and horizontal bars to see what
was happening in the house. Blackie, the house dog, came out to drive them
away. Go away, you guys, the master isn’t coming out today. Why not, they
demanded, but Blackie resolutely refused to give information. Just go away,
he barked and drove them out.
And so the situation remained for
four days, until the dogs could bear it no longer. They were confused. They
questioned themselves. They worried. What was wrong with the master? They
barked and howled incessantly. The whole street was disturbed. Blackie ran
out to bark at them. Yes, we are sorry, they howled back, but how is our
master, what’s wrong with him?
What was wrong with Ravi was the
flu. His doctor had insisted he remain on bed rest and not go out into the
wind. The four days had passed, and it seemed the dogs had mounted a protest
demonstration at the front.
Finally Ravi let them come in to
visit him.
One after one they were led in by
the cook. Playing the role of domestic dog, Blackie escorted and monitored
them, constantly reminding them to behave in accordance with the house rules.
It was their first time these street dogs had been permitted to enter the
domicile of a respectable family and they had to act accordingly.
One by one, they came in. Came to
the side of Ravi’s bed. He was still tired, but he had to pat the head of
each dog, telling them behave themselves and not to worry, in a few days
later he would recover.
But for Robin, old habits died
hard. He was the seventh dog to come in to visit Ravi. But after he had left
and was back at the front gate, he found a way to pretend to be the
sixteenth, and came in to visit Ravi again. He was aided by the cook’s poor
eyesight and Blackie’s straying attention.
But Ravi recognised him. He tapped
Robin’s head; you devil, he laughed. Robin was so elated that he wagged his
tail crazily and then ran out of the house.
***
But Ravi cares for more than just a
pack of twenty-one street dogs. That evening, at the gate of his house in
Bangalore, I also saw four wild cows. Cows are holy animals for Hindus. Ghee
or purified butter, is processed from their milk for the holy lamps used in
the rituals of the Brahmin priests. In this no-killing country, the holy cows
are free and not possessed by anyone.
There are four free cows who always
come to the gate of Ravi’s house to be fed. Ravi has named them Ganges,
Gowri, Lakshmi, and Sarasvati.
Ganges is named after the Goddess
of the Ganges river. Gowri is another name for Parvati, the spouse of Lord
Shiva. Lakshmi is the Goddess of Wealth. Sarasvati is the Goddess of Learning
and the Arts.
All the cows named after the
goddesses.
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Source: NDO