Thursday, June 9, 2016

How NDA converted me to a new faith



There are ‘institutes’ and there are ‘institutions’. There are ‘corridors’ and there are ‘pathways to glory’. There are ‘batches’ and there are ‘courses’. There are ‘alma maters’ and there is ‘THE NDA’. I made a journey of converting my beliefs last weekend. This ‘journey’ actually requires a more powerful, weightier, impactful description – it was a peregrination. 

For the longest time I had been the most acerbic critic of whatever I found mindless in the Forces and wondered what was it that makes my husband so deeply passionate and motivated about what he does in the army. What is it that holds his belief intact that THIS is what he is meant to do and there is no better place than THIS for him to live his life, live his dream? Why is his profession his raison d’etre, his sense of identity and pride?

The journey to NDA (my husband’s course’s silver jubilee of having passed out of the Academy) answered these questions and even as an outsider I realized the umbilical cord that still binds the individual to a place where he came to as a boy and left as a man.



BAND OF BROTHERS

At the 2-day event, even as we drank and danced and laughed, what stood out in gleaming prominence was the bond among the band of brothers. Stories flowed, nostalgia hung over like the smell of wet earth after the showers, excitement among 45-year olds seemed to belong to 17-year olds and wives and children hung on with wonder and fascination at the extravaganza of emotions that kept going in a loop over and over. 

The Cycle up position

THE FURNACE
There was the bicycle and the NDA furnace – a manhole surface blazing in summer heat, on which the cadet would be asked to put his hands as a punishment. How being punished for finishing food late was acceptable over eating less in a limited period of time and how ‘sugarcane stealing’ and hiding 3 kg of jalebis and 8 milk
packets within the dungarees was easy until the ‘ustad’ caught you and asked you to get rolling. And then the benign ustad who would let you go, once you told him why you wouldn’t get rolling because of the jalebis and milk. How appetites were that of famished leopards and how the lowly 2nd and 3rd termers got even by sucking the gulaab jaamuns (on their way from the kitchen to the Mess) and putting them back for those in the higher pecking order.  And gulaab jamuns, by the way, were only for the higher species – the 5th n 6th termers. 

THE ROLL UP STAIRS
SMOKING JONES
                                                      

There was the tearoom and the smoking hideout, and the iconic wooden stairs which were never climbed up but 'rolled up'. And the hierarchy was clearly marked even in the 'pissing' department. The urinal in the
THE CENTRE PRIVILEGE
centre was only for the GODS - the 6th termers of course. As backslapping and embraces and loud shouts were exchanged, it was evident that there is bonding and there is friendship and there is camaraderie. But like I said earlier, just like there are institutes and there are institutions, there are ‘friends’ and there are ‘coursemates’. What gives these guys a higher pedestal is what they have been willing to do for the other guy who runs, sweats, does ‘ragdha’ and bears the torturous sadism of what the intrinsic character of training is all about. The training is about subjecting iron to flames to get steel. And so when 2 guys are seen from a distance breaking some rule, but only one is recognized and called for punishment, he refuses to give away the other’s name even if that means that he will have to go for 2 Singhadhs (this is a run up a steep climb to the Singadh fort in full rig weighing 22 kg. You start at 6 am and a drill ustaad is waiting on the top with a token which is evidence of your having 'peaked' and then you come down by 12.30pm). Now that is when I put ‘coursemate’ notches above ‘friend’. And I bow in all humility to what the coursemate spirit actually means, and what it manifests itself as, even years after having left your training ground.

Even though honour, pride, patriotism and glory remain intangibles, I felt them as real sensations as I heard my husband and his squadron types recall their NDA Prayer. If simply, on hearing it once, as an audience I felt this level of pride flow through me, I can only imagine that the sentiment runs as blood in the veins of the guys who repeat it day after day for 3 years as their minds and bodies undergo a series of physical and mental extremities which is like an inoculation for any kind of onslaught they may face in their future. And so when a man with his comrades shouts his lungs saying the following prayer, my belief is, that this becomes his belief for life.

O God, help us to keep ourselves physically strong,
mentally awake and morally straight,
that in doing our duty to Thee and our country
we may keep the honour of the Services untarnished.

     Strengthen us to guard our country
from external aggression and internal disorders.
Awaken our admiration for honest dealing
and clean thinking, and guide us to choose
the harder right instead of the easier wrong.

     Kindle our hearts with fellowship
 for our comrades at arms
and with loyalty to the men we command.
 Endow us with the courage
which is born of the love of
what is noble and which knows no compromise
or retreat when truth and right are in peril.

     Grant us new opportunities of service to Thee,
to our country and to the men we lead, and ever help us to place such service before self.



ONE OF THE POSITIONS TO SAY THE PRAYER

80th course NDA Sliver Jubilee was indeed a moment of celebration, exultation and exaltation for each of us who experienced the spirit of what the Academy envisages and how it burnishes each raw, rugged individual to step out as a flag bearer of the country’s pride and honour. And like mentioned at the start of this write-up, for me, beyond the moment of jubilation, it was a moment of epiphany. When I told my husband that I was moved to the core as I heard the NDA prayer, and he asked me how, I replied, “It made me wish I were a man (and I am a feminist by the way) and I had gone to NDA too, to feel every ounce of the camaraderie, patriotism and honour that you guys are feeling right now.” But alas not all of us are men and not every man goes to NDA to become the MAN that only NDA can churn out. Cheers to you 80th course and a bow to you, National Defence Academy.



31 comments:

  1. Fantastic. Worth many times read over. Keep at it Prachi.

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  2. Excellently written Prachi ...and you are so right; whenever I see the bond and comraderie my husband shares with his brothers in uniform, I wish to be in his place too....it's one of a kind

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  3. Beautifully written. One can feel the pride flowing. We will recreate the magic when we getogether next year, same time, at IMA.

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  7. Excellent Prachi! You really have a flair for writing. Must do it more often! Loved reading the piece.
    Harish.

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  8. Excellent Prachi! You really have a flair for writing. Must do it more often! Loved reading the piece.
    Harish.

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  9. Excellent Prachi! You really have a flair for writing. Must do it more often! Loved reading the piece.
    Harish.

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  10. Very well written and expressed aptly. Deliberately and thoughtfully each and every aspect of a Cadet's life has been highlighted. I went down the memory lane and re-lived my moments at NDA while reading the blog.

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  11. Wow...aptly worded prachi..proud to be an ex NDA...and by the way its the ladies n kids who laughed n made merry on the most bizzare n unbelievable memories...

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  12. Lucid as it could be this is the first piece of yours which I have read. Can say that reading this made me feel the celebrations are continuing. LONG LIVE THE SPIRIT.

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  13. Lucid as it could be this is the first piece of yours which I have read. Can say that reading this made me feel the celebrations are continuing. LONG LIVE THE SPIRIT.

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  14. Eyes are moist, vision blurry and then there is an idiotic smile pasted on the face too....thanks for opening the floodgates of wonderful memories...Prachi...good work done

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  15. Maam, An Apache at heart and soul.

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  16. Maam, An Apache at heart and soul.

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  19. Wow !! What a write up !!
    Proud to be ex NDA

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  20. Prachi, I got goosebumps reading this...hv always known this but 'lived' it now! Looking forward to my pilgrimage this Dec :)
    Payal

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  21. Prachi, I got goosebumps reading this...hv always known this but 'lived' it now! Looking forward to my pilgrimage this Dec :)
    Payal

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  22. Excellent article!! I totally understand this sentiment and although our silver jubilee is yet to come, i know with all my heart what NDA and the word coursemate means to hubby...

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  23. mam.......finally....u made it to the Apache Kingdom ..!very aptly put across....brought back nostalgic memories.salute !!

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  24. The write up is as vivid and lively as you...made my heart and mind race 25 years back , alas the body says grow up man... But what the heck -" Dil toh Bachcha hai.." ��.. Keep creating lasting memories with the power God has bestowed on your writings...

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  25. Awesome remembered n relived every bit of it....

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  26. Superbly amazing portrayal of true feelings...
    You transported me to the aura of your feelings and left me with moist eyes and goosebumps!

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  27. Superbly amazing portrayal of true feelings...
    You transported me to the aura of your feelings and left me with moist eyes and goosebumps!

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  28. Beautiful Write up ma'm... Cheers!

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  29. Wow...Awesome as alwz..n so vividly penned....n it does make u want to be a part of it...which in a way wevas army wives are lucky enough to be so...grt writing Prachi

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  30. Wow...Awesome as alwz..n so vividly penned....n it does make u want to be a part of it...which in a way wevas army wives are lucky enough to be so...grt writing Prachi

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  31. This is EXACTLY what we all wanted the reunion to be about -- nostalgic memories.. And ma'am, you penned it down beautifully.. And No more throwing those bottles please..

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