Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Indian-ness

One of the values Chubbocks' school holds dear is Pride in being Indian and they do quite a few things to inculcate it in the kids. For me, though, the issue is not only pride in Indianness but being able to relate in many ways, especially for my kids - in knowing the folk tales and the mythology of their country, knowing Indian rhymes and songs and stories, not the filmy stuff...

It's quite tough if you live in the big cities, to find good Indian entertainment material for the kids. Many years ago, Dad came across a wonderful tape of Kannada nursery rhymes, many of which had been adapted by one of Karnataka's poets, GP Rajaratnam, from the English, and many of which were of kannada origin. They had been beautifully set to music and sung by little kids and were quite magical. This was years before my sis and I were married, but dad had the forethought to pick it up and keep it safely so now my kids have a copy of it they love listening to - Bannada tagadina tuttoori was the title. I'm hoping to find some other nice material for the kids on my trip to Bangalore tomorrow.

Another nice series for kids is the Karadi tales tapes and books, which come in a few Indian languages apart from English. Chubbocks' first Karadi tales was one called The Monkey King, and he loved the story of the good monkey (kapi) and the bag monkey ( korung) - their names are also from South Indian languages, which is a nice contrast to the Mickeys and Doras the kids are otherwise awash in. He used to listen to this story each night, and then one day he psyched A by coming up with a gem of a sentence, when A was looking for one of Chubbocks' favourite toys which had been misplaced, "Look for it abba. You will be well rewarded!" It was only after a few thunder-struck moments that we realised our pal had mugged it up from the book but cleverly used it at just the right moment. One of my friends gifted Chubbocks a lovely tape of Indian songs that the Karadi people have come up with, sung by Usha Uthup. It's a really lively tape with lots of original songs and music and great fun for the kids to sing along with.

At Landmark recently, I wanted to buy Chubbocks some nice books in Hindi so he would relate to it as well as to English, particularly in terms of reading and writing. But sadly, apart from the Karadi series which is a little difficult for him to read on his own right now, the store had nothing compared to the brightly coloured illustrations that English books abound in. Finally ended up buying a Chacha Chowdhury in Hindi and a Nandan magazine. When I was in school, my hindi was a little weak, so mom had started subscribing to Nandan and Champak in Hindi which induced me to start reading on my own. But even then, I remember comparing the production quality to that of Children's World, the English magazine, and feeling dissatisfied.

I wish some of the publishing houses would take up the cause of Indian languages and folk tales more seriously, and publish books for all ages in different languages, while preserving a uniformly high standard of production. One of the Government publication agencies had produced a series of Folk tales of India - one hardbound book for each state - years ago when I was a child. Now, sadly, you can only lay your hands on those books in some forgotten corner of a dusty library. For now I'm relying on my memory and my stock of Amar Chitra Kathas...

11 comments:

Unknown said...

Lovely post, lovely. We really have to wean these little ones off ben 10 and Power rangers and take them to Hanuman and Tenali Ram

Preethi said...

I have the karadi songs too.. Nantu loves it. And this trip I brought back loads of books and dvds from Indian history/ mythology.

noon said...

Hi BEV - totally agree with you...
It is nice to have good books written in your own language...
BTW check this out
http://www.tamilrhymes.com/CDA21.asp

dipali said...

I loved the Karadi series. My younger son was one of their early audience.
(He's over eighteen now, must have been 4-5 when they first came out).
Thompson Press used to have marvellous hardbound Indian stories, though in English, like Adrak the Ginger Cat and Dr.Bhondoo Dentist and Babban Hajaam. I still have them buried in a trunk in my store room- maybe my grandchildren will get them!
Yes, Hindi publishing leaves a lot to be desired quality wise. There is no dearth of material. I used to love Santha Rameshwar Rau's Tales from Ancient India. (again English).
Just today KBPM did a post on how embarrassed she is about not being able to read fluently in her native tongue, which I agreed with in equally whole-hearted embarrassment. I guess it boils down to the economics of it, which really doesn't justify this lacuna.

Anonymous said...

http://www.saffrontree.org/2007/02/seed-bilingual-book-from-india.html

http://www.saffrontree.org/2007/11/diwali-festival-of-lights-and-fun.html

and many more at

http://www.saffrontree.org/

Anonymous said...

Neevu kannadavara?

Swati said...

ohh no ..you cannot..i live here and I hardly find any..if you do..let me know the places.

bird's eye view said...

KK - You're right. I'm really happy that Pogo or whoever came up with the Krishna cartoon series, which is now the kids' favourite. We'd also discovered a wonderful animated Tenali Rama animated series a couple of years back but only ever found 2 VCDs.

Preethi - yes, the karadi series is lovely. Am planning to get the whole set one of these days.

Noon - will check it out. After Chubbocks was born, I started this tradition of buying a folk tales/ nursery rhymes or kids' stories of whichever place we visited, and even managed it in Germany and france...been desperately wanting to do the same with Indian destinations.

Dipali, Wow, I didn't know Karadi had been around for so many years. Their production quality is fabulous, I only wish they were in more languages. And about reading and writing languages - it's sad that today's city kids are only English oriented. I'm forvere grateful that my granddad taught me to read and write in kannada - even though I'm not very fast or fluent, it still feels like I'm in touch with my roots.

anonymous - will check out the links. thanks. and yes, naanu kannadiga.

Swati - where do you stay? Meant to try my luck in Bangalore last week but had such a busy schedule and with the Bangalore traffic to cope with, couldn't even get into a bookstore!

Anonymous said...

swati - sutradhar - off cmh road in indiranagar.

Choxbox said...

hi. first time commenting.
there are masses of books in regional languages/based in india/ with indian characters by folks like read india, CBT, NBT, tulika (which does bi-lingual books too) etc. the one place to find it all is sutradhaar in indiranagar. they also have a decent bunch of traditional indian toys/games.
not sure where you live, but in hyd too i have found a lot of these books in almost all big bookstores. i know you get them in mumbai too.

Choxbox said...

oh and karadi rhymes rocks!