Monday, 20 July 2009

What’s in a name? A lot if its Jhumri Talaiya










Places like people have names. And some of them have an aura, a magic and a history that attracts you towards them. The rhythm and the phonetics of some of these names made you fall in love with such places even though you knew nothing about them. I remember growing up as a kid in the sixties being enamoured by exotic and quaint names like Dehradun, Chamba, Landsdowne, Mackleski Gunj, Dehri-on-Sone, Stratford-upon-Avon, Adis Ababa, Timbuktoo, Honalulu…

The list is long actually, but none can take the place of two words that rhyme so beautifully when juxtaposed next to each other- Jhumri Talaiya. The small town in today’s state of Jharkhand has been immortalised by Vividh Bharti and Radio Ceylon. Rather, it would be more correct to say that the music loving people immortalized their towns’ name in our national consciousness during the sixties and seventies.

Almost every song in Vividh Baharati’s Aap ki farmaish programme that was aired during that era had people from this town sending in their requests. But way back in the sixties there were many who even doubted that a town with the name Jhumri talaiya existed. The cynics said that it was a fictional town created just to keep the songs going. Gradually people realized that this small town in the then state of Bihar actually existed and was famous for its mining activities.

Apart from Mica which is mined in Jhumri Talaiya there is also a dam here under the Damodar Valley Corporation (DVC). It is because of this dam that the place has a beautiful lake- talaiya. This explains half of the history behind the origin of this name. The first half- Jhumri is ascribed to a particular type of broomstick that is made in this area. A-broom–town-next-to-a-lake!! Even the English literal translation sounds beautiful isn’t it?

Apart from people with a fanatic love for Hindi film songs, mica, brooms and lakes this place is also well known for its Sainik School. The surroundings are lush green and beautiful and during the monsoons it really was a sight for sore eyes.

My visit to Jhumri Taliya, after being in love with her for almost four decades, was a short one but somehow I felt that the people who I came across were not aware of the (sound) waves this town had created in the sixties and seventies. As a tribute to this town I picked up couple of CD’s of songs from the seventies. The songs, the nostalgia, the monsoon, the ambience and the long drive back was really memorable. It was truly a childhood dream come true.

Sorry Shakespeare but there is a lot in a name especially if its Jhumri Talaiya.










Jhumri talaiya se rinku,pinku,tinku,reena, meena,tina aur
unke bahoot saare saathi!!










Sainik school of Tillaiya is another landmark of this place










A touching moment!!! Been there, seen there and touched there.
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12 comments:

Venu N said...

Hey Arun---that was a great re-cap!

How can we forget Jhumri Tillaiya, Dongorgarh, Rajnandgaon, etc?

While I discovered 28 years ago that the latter 2 are close to Bhilai, it was only now that I came to know where the former place is!!

Thanks for taking us down memory lane!

Nargis said...

Arun....even I thought it was a fictional town. Thanks for clarifying it. Btw...those rinku pinku tinku reena meena deekas all look more like a product of our SVC than jhumri talaiya.....:-}

arun bhatt said...

Venu,
Next to Bhilai is Bhatapara which was also very high on the vividh bharti list of farmaish loving towns, But nothing can beat Jhumri talaiya

Nargis,

There is an error in your observation. The rinku, pinku... are products of Sainik School. For the SMART VERY CHARMING (SVC) product of St.Vincents look out for the guy in the black T-shirt!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Vimal Parmar said...

I remember JT... every song had a request from this town. Once there was a write-up in a magazine... an interview with one of the guys who sent in a request regularly (i forget that listener's name - quite popular around that time) and he mentioned that he would buy postcards in dozens and send them across everday!!! After that even i started buying postcards but would mail them to magazines - Letters to the editor. And got quite a few published! Had send them to Sunday Magazine (Post MO's write-up on JN), a snippet in RD (Humour in Uniform) etc..
ARUN: Have you finally begun working on a book??

arun bhatt said...

Vims,
thanks for the back hand compliment but really i am not good enough for novel-shovel stuff.

Vimal Parmar said...

Short stories would do then...
Or compile all your similar posts (+ add some more)on this blog and get them published in an eBook format. Kya?? Seriously...

Louis J Rao said...

Yes, Arun you are gifted.What does a writer need - creativity, imagination, right phrases et al.
Infact everytime I read your snippets, your imagination and coining of words literally forces me to feel the experience .
No flattery sir !! I am speaking my heart out to you.
Like it or discard it, agree with Vimal .You have to go for it.

arun bhatt said...

Dear Louis,
Correction.
Dearest Louis,
forget flattery thou have flattened me!!! Thanks for the generous praise. I hope someday my dream of writing a novel comes true.

Enarkay said...

Arun we are all awaiting that day.
Narayan and I had gone to Nainpur for playing TT, Badminton etc from Railways and passed through Rajnandgaon and Dongargarh which till then we thought were fictitious places like JT.
Those days listening to Radio Ceylon(later SLBC) and Vividh Bharati was a passion for radio buffs like me
Thanks for the ride back through time

Naresh said...

Men in Black ! or Man in Black w /o
a pulverizer in hand ' to fight ALIENS ! Or the legendary fire breathing Dragon popping out from the Talaiya of Jhumri !

arun bhatt said...

Enarkay,
the ride back was indeed very nostalgic for me. Apart from aap ki farmaish the Binaca Geet Mala was one of the weekly high points of life.
Naresh,
good to see you with your high octane stuff.

Naresh said...

Yes Bandhu

Was away for a week / 10 days on tour to Delhi / Jalandhar / Hoshiarpur .

Never had the time to enjoy and take snaps of the green expanses of Punjabi countryside, yellow blanket of Mustard , gormandize on makki- di - roti, sarson - da - saag, matke di lassi and all those mouth watering stuff...

However the decent hospitality and Punjabi bonhomie at Shatabdi express from Delhi to Jalandhar worth a feel !

Boarded ' Thyme ' [ Spicejet names each aircraft with a different spice ] enroute to VZG