Read Tandoori Texan Tales Page 19


  There were also suggestions that the company be taken over

  by the government. To pull the company out of this morass,

  the government had to be convinced that no matter who

  runs it, the price of electricity had to be increased to

  generate real resources. Having done that, the investors had

  to be convinced that the extra resource had to be ploughed

  back for buying better and more efficient machinery to

  produce more electricity cheaply. Then the real profits had

  to be shared between the labor and consuming public.

  At this point there was one local politician called Mohanlal

  Sukhadia who rose to prominence and held the position of

  the Chief Minister in the Rajasthan government for record

  number of years. For him keeping the city of his home

  constituency happy and prosperous was of paramount

  importance for political survival. Electric power is the basis

  for every other economic development he had in mind. The

  old cliche goes, “There is no Power as expensive as no

  Power”. He himself figured out that taking over a company

  that was being managed as best as it could be, was not a

  smart idea. He wanted the company to expand and grow,

  along with the growth of the city and all the new plans he

  had in mind. As a matter of fact, Sukhadia not only wanted

  Appanna to continue the good work he was doing in

  Udaipur but also nominated Appanna to the Consultative

  Committee for the State Electricity Board, so his knowledge

  and experience could be utilized for other projects,

  government had in mind. Appanna was also nominated for

  the State Productivity Council and was given medals of

  honor.

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  RAJ DORÉ

  By around the middle of 1955 it seemed like the dark

  clouds hovering around Appanna’s work were slowly

  clearing. Even then he would put some 16-hour a day and 7

  days work week.

  Pinnacle of Glory:

  In 1955 after graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in

  Commerce, Giri was going to start working on Chartered

  Accountancy with a firm Appanna knew in Indore.

  Meanwhile Vichanna informed that Siemens were looking

  for three fresh graduates to train in Germany for 3 years

  before being absorbed in Management cadre. That was a

  golden opportunity and Giri left for Germany in January

  1956. We all were terribly excited about the whole event.

  That was the first ‘Doré’ to set foot outside the country. Giri

  got excellent reports there. His weekly letter home was a

  family event we all would look forward with eagerness and

  excitement all week. We would sit around as Appanna

  would read it to us and we would be looking askance.

  Next to go overseas were Vichanna and Sarlamanni. They

  were in Germany too and came back with a whole lot of

  slides of Europe and gifts for all of us. Tape Recorder was a

  great novelty then. We were quite fascinated at listening to

  our own voices played back.

  1956 was also eventful for we got our first ‘Doctor in the

  House’. Yes Premanna passed from Madras Medical

  College with good honors and our pride went up one more

  notch. He had made all arrangements to go to Edinburgh

  and then to London for doing his MRCP. He came to

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  Udaipur to spend some time before departing overseas.

  Even his passage on the ship had been booked. There was a

  certain amount of nervousness on the parts of Appanna and

  Akka at one more son, especially a doctor son, going away

  for so long when their own age was advanced and health

  was uncertain. To make things worse there was a crisis in

  the international scene as Gamel Abdel Nasser of Egypt

  nationalized the Suez Canal and there was an imminent

  danger of a 3rd World War breaking out. With all this

  Premanna’s going to Edinburgh got postponed and then

  canceled altogether. He got a job at the General Hospital in

  Udaipur itself.

  Around this time our family had reached its zenith. We had

  gained a lot of stature in the society. While our family was

  known for Appanna, it was now also being widely

  recognized for Premanna. In fact there was hardly anybody

  in the city and even state wide, that was not some how or

  other touched by either. Akka had her own circle of friends

  and so did I. We were members of local country club. Even

  though Appanna himself was not the clubbable kind, we

  used to make full use of it with his membership. In a town

  of about 100,000 people we were one of the just a half a

  dozen family that became highly respected and recognized.

  At the end of a typical day we would all sit together or get

  into the car for a drive around the Fateh Sagar Lake,

  exchanging our day’s happenings. Premanna’s experiences

  in his medical world would never stop amusing us. If

  nothing else, he would tell us all about a ‘fantastic’ case of

  some latinized name for heinous medical malady. We

  would all wonder how such an abomination could ever be

  ‘fantastic’.

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  RAJ DORÉ

  There were times when Premanna and I were left alone at

  home with only the local servants who did not know any

  South Indian cooking. We asked Akka to give recipes and

  directions in writing. We experimented with cooking

  ourselves. We only had problem in getting the right

  proportions of different ingredients. The outcome was not

  always all that bad. We exhausted Akka’s year’s worth of

  grocery stocks in about a month in this process of learning

  by trial and error. Once we made Pudhina Chutney and left

  it on the grinding stone as we forgot to bring to the dining

  table. Next morning we found a rodent quite dead near that

  stone. It is still a mystery if our Pudhina Chutney was the

  cause. If we could figure that out we could have got a patent

  for pesticide.

  Premanna’s wedding to Prabhamanni took place in 1959 at

  Madras. We had taken some servants from Udaipur for

  help. One of them was Kishan Singh who knew no word of

  Tamil and was also one eyed. In the afternoon of the

  Wedding Reception, all the male members were having a

  siesta on the floor of a big hall. The groom woke up with a

  start and remarked that the trousseau for that evening’s gala

  was all crumpled and needed ironing. I woke up hearing

  that and said my suit needed ironing too. I volunteered to

  take his and mine to a nearby laundry. Slowly each man

  woke up rubbing his eyes and wanted to join the fray.

  Before long I was entrusted with the onerous task of getting

  a dozen suits properly pressed. I went to the laundry along

  with Kishan Singh carrying the load of suits. I got the

  groom’s suit pressed first on top priority and sent it back

  with Kishan Singh, as we were already quite late and

  dignitaries would have started
arriving. I was to follow with

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  the other suits after they had been done. When I reached the

  Wedding, there was no sign of Kishan Singh and the

  groom’s suit. At the appointed time we were all dressed

  prim and proper, excepting the prima donna, who was still

  in his underpants! Kishan Singh finally showed up an hour

  late. There were half a dozen Wedding Receptions in the

  neighborhood that evening. He had lost his way and was

  looking for us in the wrong wedding. He could not even ask

  anybody for directions, as nobody would understand him.

  Moral of the story: Don’t mix an important assignment with

  a bunch of less important ones. You may call it a corollary

  of Murphy’s Law.

  Our parents had set a goal for all of us. They wanted that

  every single one of us must complete a Bachelor’s degree at

  the very least. Better if we chose to go higher. They never

  forced a choice of any particular profession. We were pretty

  much free to take any subject or line we felt comfortable

  with.

  After we returned celebrating Premanna-Prabhamanni

  wedding in September 1959, I went to Jaipur to attend the

  Convocation ceremony at my University there. I received

  my degree of Bachelor of Science. I came back and showed

  my picture in the gown and hood, bearing the rolled up

  scroll in hand. Appanna and Akka were sitting together.

  Appanna took the picture from my hand. The expression he

  had on his face is still frozen in my memory. The gray

  eyebrows over his eyes were knitted. He had that glazed

  look on his wrinkled face. Was it pride, joy, sense of

  accomplishment or just relief? May be all of it. He was not

  a person that was easily moved to tears. He could barely

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  control a couple, ebbing in his eyes. That was of joy and

  happiness. It was not so much of a degree for me. It was for

  the Shepherd and Shepherdess whose last sheep had finally

  romped home.

  They must have felt like marathon sprinters having finally

  made it to the finish line. That was a long sprint from where

  we were ten years ago.

  THE END

  220

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Raj Doré is a Software Engineer hailing from a very

  orthodox South-Indian Brahmin family. He was born in

  Hyderabad (Sind), now in Pakistan, before the Partition.

  When the Indian sub-continent was divided, he and his

  family fled to India. He migrated to the United States in

  1977. He now lives with his wife Sumita in Dallas, Texas,

  U.S.A.

  He has B.Sc. (Mathematics, Physics & Geology), MA

  (Political Science) and MBA. Later he worked on MS (CS)

  at the Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas.

  He is a member of MENSA and INTERTEL, the high-IQ

  societies. His writings have been published in their

  magazines as well.

  He has traveled widely in Europe, South America and Asia.

  He knows English, Hindi, Tamil and German.

 

 

 

 
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