Friday, July 16, 2010

The Transition Person

In one of my flights back from Kuala lumpur, I met a person, whose story made me feel some pain.  He was sitting next to me and he seemed so excited and so impatient about when he would reach Trichy airport.

With a little curiosity over his anxiety, I initiated a casual conversation with him. He told me that he is a native of a village near Madurai and that he is now working as a labour in an OIL PALM plantation in Malaysia. He is coming home for a holiday after 3 years, to see his family.  I asked him, what made him to seek a job in Malaysia, leaving his family and children in India. His reply was what I expected.  He said,” I earn good money here. I earn about 900 Ringgits a month”. Converted to Indian money, it is around Rs.12,500/-. He added, “I spend just about 1/4th of my salary for my personal needs and the balance money, I send it to my family in India. I have 3 sons and I want all of them to study well and go to some nice jobs. I don’t want them to suffer like me.” I enquired about his job and he said that, from morning to evening they work in the plantation. They are allotted labour quarters which is shared by 4 to 5 workers. In the evening they come to their quarters, prepare food, wash their clothes, have dinner, watch TV for some time and go to rest. Their life is monotonous, every day except for Friday, when it is a holiday.  On Friday, when they go out they call their family and talk to them. Other than that there is no entertainment. Their life is confined to work and taking care of their personal chores. 

Of what he said, something touched me a lot. He said, if the next generation has to live a comfortable life, one generation has to suffer.

When we talk about the life style of Indians who have migrated abroad, we tend to think only of the doctors, engineers and IT professionals who have made it big in life. But the vast majority of the people who have migrated have taken the less aspired path. They are into  jobs, like road construction, carrying heavy loads, mechanics, nursing and cleaning jobs. No matter how uncomfortable it is for them, they have decided to take the brunt, keeping in mind the needs of their family.

Don’t we see similar sort of factory workers migrating to Tamilnadu, from Orissa & Bihar in search of such odd jobs. It is because of the extreme level of poverty in the other parts of the country that they have decided to find a source of living elsewhere to support their family.

One of the recent tamil movies, “Angadi theru” was a emotionally powerful portrayal of the hardships of labour who migrate from rural parts of the country to fend their family.  Not being judgmental of the extent of truth, as shown in the movie, what we undoubtedly know is, it is an echo of a crying voice, somewhere.

All these people have one thing in common. They have decided to be the “positive transition person” in their family.  They are trying to get their family out of deep doldrums. They have taken personal responsibility to uplift their future generation, by providing them with the best education and making available the best opportunities to come up in life.
If we look behind our own story, we will find someone in our family, who was a positive transition person. It may be our father, mother, grandfather, grandmother or great grandparents.  If not for their hard work and sacrifice we would not be where we are today.

We too will be the transition person to our future generation, to whom we are morally accountable. We have a huge responsibility to our future generation.  We can be the transition person, who is able to raise the level of our family, our society and our world, one step ahead.

It is not about saving big amounts of money so that our children can inherit, lead a lavish lifestyle and get recklessly spoiled. It is about being the transition person, who makes sure that you give your children the best education he/ she aspires for, give them a good exposure to the world, impart them good values by being a living role model of good virtues and lead an exemplary lifestyle, so  that they can follow path.
Talk to doctors and they would say that most of our diseases, behavioral patterns, temperaments are genetic in nature. And the good news, in many cases, you can act as shield between your past generation and future generation, if you make a conscious change in your lifestyle.

 A Native American proverb says, “We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors; we borrow it from our children”.  Each of us has a responsibility to keep ‘Our World Green’ for the future generations and this is possible only if each individual contribute our little efforts. You can be a transition person in leaving this earth a little greener.  As a positive transition person, you can leave the world a much better place, for the future generation to live in.

Happy Reading,

D.Senthil Kannan
Article dated July 2010