Exactly eight years ago, this very day, I broke a promise – a promise that I made another twenty-five years ago. That was also the day I joined Britannica. Let me start from the beginning.
It was the summer of 1974. I was in first year college, studying physics. One evening I was with a bunch of my friends, sitting on the grassy lawn of a park in south Calcutta, enjoying the cool breeze that starts after sunset, bringing some relief to the stifling heat and humidity of the day. The conversation somehow turned to the year 2000. We suddenly realized what an amazing date that would be, and we’d all be there to witness it. Century changes have happened 19 times since the time of Jesus and that’s already very special, but the millennium changed just once, and we would be lucky enough to witness the second one!
I was 20 years old, so another 26 years seemed like a lifetime away – a time span that was hard to imagine. Yet we did, and we made a spontaneous decision to get together again on the eve of the millennium New Year in our city of Calcutta.
This was a few years after the first moon walk. We all witnessed what can be achieved in just ten years since Sputnik. We also just watched Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey. Therefore, in our imagination the year 2000 looked amazingly fantastic, and we even considered the possibility that some of us may actually live outside this planet, but in spite of the huge expenses involved in inter-planetary travel, we would still keep our promise, and meet again in Calcutta.
The problem was to decide our reunion venue. We all agreed that Calcutta will probably be completely unrecognizable by that time, with spaceports and monorails and all that. Therefore we chose a prominent public structure, the Victoria Memorial Hall, a Taj Mahal-like building in the center of the city. We agreed that whatever they do to the city to modernize it, this beautiful building will be spared from the bulldozers of progress. We decided on the north gate. The time would be 10:00PM on December 31 of 1999. Someone pointed out that time may be expressed in a different, may be decimal unit by then, and if so we should translate that back to the time we used then.
The plan was set, and most of us had difficulty sleeping that night, thinking of the evening far out in the future. Over the next few years we all extended this invitation to any special friend we made. This was the ultimate ticket into our little private world.
Eight years after that I came to Chicago. Many things changed, I got married, my friends got scattered all over the world. Yet none of us forgot our promise. Every time we met, we reminded each other of the meeting. Our youthful imagination was somewhat subdued, but the excitement was still there.
In 1999 I was still in Chicago, and I was desperately looking for a job. A few that came by were not to my liking. Finally, towards the end of November, I got an offer from Encyclopaedia Britannica. I couldn’t have asked for something closer to my heart, and I immediately accepted it. At that moment I didn’t think of the promise I made 25 years ago.
However, it quickly dawned on me that there is no way I can ask for a vacation so soon after joining a new company. It was a sad decision, but it wasn’t hard to make. As Christmas approached, in the backdrop of festivity all around, my sadness deepened. Promises are hard to break; especially the ones you make to yourself. One day I called my parents and told them the story.
On New Years eve, in the early afternoon hours, our phone rang. It was one of my friends from Calcutta. It was already past midnight in India. He told me that quite a few of them had gathered at the north gate of Victoria Memorial, he told me that they missed us, that my father, a seventy-seven year old man, surprised them by showing up as my proxy, and that they decided to give us a call.
What was comforting, but strange, was the fact that everyone agreed that I made the right decision. Twenty five years ago could any of us think of putting our personal careers above our promise? But now it seemed so obvious and pragmatic.
I visited Calcutta later that year. One evening I wanted to go back to the same park where we made our plan. Walking down the dark street leading to the park I stumbled badly, and somehow managed to prevent a nasty fall. I suddenly remembered that this very crack on the sidewalk used to trip me when I lived there many decades ago.
When we were twenty we all believed that our city will change beyond recognition but we will remain the same. There are still no spaceports in Calcutta, no monorails, we still measure time in hours and minutes, the cracks on the sidewalks have only gotten wider, but my twenty-year old self would have found it hard to recognize me today. We believe the world is changing fast, and maybe it is, but its speed is majestic compared the speed at which we change, but we don’t see it. Like in a moving train – it is the outside that zooms past.
Calcutta changed its name though – it is now called Kolkata.
Older Comments (3)
1. Abhijit Gupta said on 10/27/12 - 09:44PM
brought back a lot of memories...thanks Kunal.
2. Anjan Dutt said on 7/5/13 - 01:40AM
Brilliant. This will come handy in anything that I do on our city kolkata...Right now I'm working on a film about my mentor Mrinal Sen and Kolkata, and it becomes so relevant to what you are saying. Thank you.
3. Kunal Sen said on 7/5/13 - 07:22AM
Anjan, I was very glad to see your comment. We spent our youth in Calcutta almost during the same period, and from your songs I always felt that the city came to us in similar ways. I'll be eagerly waiting for your Calcutta films, just as I waited for your new albums.
It was the summer of 1974. I was in first year college, studying physics. One evening I was with a bunch of my friends, sitting on the grassy lawn of a park in south Calcutta, enjoying the cool breeze that starts after sunset, bringing some relief to the stifling heat and humidity of the day. The conversation somehow turned to the year 2000. We suddenly realized what an amazing date that would be, and we’d all be there to witness it. Century changes have happened 19 times since the time of Jesus and that’s already very special, but the millennium changed just once, and we would be lucky enough to witness the second one!
I was 20 years old, so another 26 years seemed like a lifetime away – a time span that was hard to imagine. Yet we did, and we made a spontaneous decision to get together again on the eve of the millennium New Year in our city of Calcutta.
This was a few years after the first moon walk. We all witnessed what can be achieved in just ten years since Sputnik. We also just watched Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey. Therefore, in our imagination the year 2000 looked amazingly fantastic, and we even considered the possibility that some of us may actually live outside this planet, but in spite of the huge expenses involved in inter-planetary travel, we would still keep our promise, and meet again in Calcutta.
The problem was to decide our reunion venue. We all agreed that Calcutta will probably be completely unrecognizable by that time, with spaceports and monorails and all that. Therefore we chose a prominent public structure, the Victoria Memorial Hall, a Taj Mahal-like building in the center of the city. We agreed that whatever they do to the city to modernize it, this beautiful building will be spared from the bulldozers of progress. We decided on the north gate. The time would be 10:00PM on December 31 of 1999. Someone pointed out that time may be expressed in a different, may be decimal unit by then, and if so we should translate that back to the time we used then.
The plan was set, and most of us had difficulty sleeping that night, thinking of the evening far out in the future. Over the next few years we all extended this invitation to any special friend we made. This was the ultimate ticket into our little private world.
Eight years after that I came to Chicago. Many things changed, I got married, my friends got scattered all over the world. Yet none of us forgot our promise. Every time we met, we reminded each other of the meeting. Our youthful imagination was somewhat subdued, but the excitement was still there.
In 1999 I was still in Chicago, and I was desperately looking for a job. A few that came by were not to my liking. Finally, towards the end of November, I got an offer from Encyclopaedia Britannica. I couldn’t have asked for something closer to my heart, and I immediately accepted it. At that moment I didn’t think of the promise I made 25 years ago.
However, it quickly dawned on me that there is no way I can ask for a vacation so soon after joining a new company. It was a sad decision, but it wasn’t hard to make. As Christmas approached, in the backdrop of festivity all around, my sadness deepened. Promises are hard to break; especially the ones you make to yourself. One day I called my parents and told them the story.
On New Years eve, in the early afternoon hours, our phone rang. It was one of my friends from Calcutta. It was already past midnight in India. He told me that quite a few of them had gathered at the north gate of Victoria Memorial, he told me that they missed us, that my father, a seventy-seven year old man, surprised them by showing up as my proxy, and that they decided to give us a call.
What was comforting, but strange, was the fact that everyone agreed that I made the right decision. Twenty five years ago could any of us think of putting our personal careers above our promise? But now it seemed so obvious and pragmatic.
I visited Calcutta later that year. One evening I wanted to go back to the same park where we made our plan. Walking down the dark street leading to the park I stumbled badly, and somehow managed to prevent a nasty fall. I suddenly remembered that this very crack on the sidewalk used to trip me when I lived there many decades ago.
When we were twenty we all believed that our city will change beyond recognition but we will remain the same. There are still no spaceports in Calcutta, no monorails, we still measure time in hours and minutes, the cracks on the sidewalks have only gotten wider, but my twenty-year old self would have found it hard to recognize me today. We believe the world is changing fast, and maybe it is, but its speed is majestic compared the speed at which we change, but we don’t see it. Like in a moving train – it is the outside that zooms past.
Calcutta changed its name though – it is now called Kolkata.
Older Comments (3)
1. Abhijit Gupta said on 10/27/12 - 09:44PM
brought back a lot of memories...thanks Kunal.
2. Anjan Dutt said on 7/5/13 - 01:40AM
Brilliant. This will come handy in anything that I do on our city kolkata...Right now I'm working on a film about my mentor Mrinal Sen and Kolkata, and it becomes so relevant to what you are saying. Thank you.
3. Kunal Sen said on 7/5/13 - 07:22AM
Anjan, I was very glad to see your comment. We spent our youth in Calcutta almost during the same period, and from your songs I always felt that the city came to us in similar ways. I'll be eagerly waiting for your Calcutta films, just as I waited for your new albums.