Kids Corner

People

Thank You, Bhenji ...
For the Oorrah, the Saa, the Ik Oankaar!

by HARKIREN KAUR

 

 

A few months ago, I learnt that one of my teachers had left her physical body... Guru Ram Das raakho sharanaee!

Her actual name I did not know then, and I do not know now.

We, her students, called her Bhenji, and she was known to everyone as Aunty Nikki. To me her actual name does not matter. I have always thought of her as Bhenji, and that is enough for me ... It will be a rare family in Setapak or Gombak (Malaysia) that does not know Bhenji; most of us and our neighbours studied under Bhenji's guidance.

If in search of a Punjabi, kirtan or paatth teacher, you needed look no further.

As a teacher, she was firm, gave tonnes of homework which she checked with a stern red pen, loved giving surprise spelling bees, obsessed about neat handwriting, insisted on clear pronunciation, made us practice to perfection, and expected nothing less than best behaviour in class.

I learnt under her continuously from when I was around 6-9 years old, and then intermittently between 10-12.

As a child, I remember looking forward to class; not because I was excited about learning, but more because of the other kids I would get to meet and hopefully play with after class (if only Mataji would come a little later to pick me up!)

As a child, I remember being slightly intimidated by Bhenji; I liked her no-nonsense approach, but I also feared her slightly, and I knew she meant business. I guess she reminded me a lot of my Mataji, and even at that age, I knew that she was good. So I listened, I practiced, and I learnt.

As did many others under her care. We didn't have much of a choice. You see, Bhenji insisted that we learned.

As a child, I remember first the car journeys to class when we lived further away, and later the bicycle rides my brother and I made through the old Malay settlement to get to her home, using the quickest possible route.

I remember standing outside her gate to make sure the dog was tied up before we went in. I remember eating pakorey in her kitchen while we waited for class to start.

I remember that she held my hand when I wrote my first ‘Oorrah', and then I went on to write my name. She held my hand as she placed my forefinger on ‘Saa', and then ‘Re', and then I went on to sing a shabad. She held my hand as we moved our fingers across the first page of the Punjh Granthi, and then I went on to read the last.

I remember being told off as often as being praised, I remember patience, and above all I remember that she never gave up on any of us; no matter how slow we were to catch on.

And then our family moved. We lived further away, and by this time I had learned the basics, so Mataji took over the Paatth classes at home. Our contact with Bhenji more or less ended, aside from the occasional meets at the gurdwara.

Now that I look back, I don't think I met her more than a handful of times between my last class and when I heard the news. This is not to say that our paths did not cross, just that I did not make the effort to go up to her. She became just another person I saw now and then.

As an adult, it pains me to think that I never appreciated her while she was still with us. My only real contact with her was during class, which started with 'Waheguru Ji Ka Khalsa, Waheguru Ji Ki Fateh', and ended the same way. And she didn't expect more. All she asked was for us to be on time, pay attention, and learn.

As an adult, it pains me to think that after all my years of learning with her, I never went up to her, as an adult, and said 'Thank You ... for my first lesson, right to my last!'.

I owe so much to this wonderful lady, and I never said it. I don't have any pictures of her in our photo albums. I never visited her in her last days; mainly because I didn't know that she was unwell, but I cannot help thinking, also because I never took the trouble to find out about how my teacher would be doing, all those years after.

As an adult, I now realize how much of what I am and I know today, I owe to that ‘Oorrah', that ‘Saa', and that ‘Ek Oangkaar'. In so many ways, she is my Mian Mir; she laid the foundation that I am built on.

We have many teachers throughout our lives; but it is only a few that leave us with jewels so precious that we cannot repay them; only hold their teachings in gratitude, our heads bowed. As I sit here now, trying to say everything I wish I had said many moons ago, I hope she knows that she is loved, and revered, and missed. I pray that my young cousins have teachers like her, that my nephews and nieces have teachers like her, that my own children one day will have teachers like her.

You know what the beauty of it is? Bhenji is not alone. There are so many more like her out there, we call them our ‘Punjabi school teachers', teaching our children how to read, write, speak, sing.

Unsung Heroes.

Gentle women and gentle men, to whom we have entrusted the task of giving our Sikh children the tools that may help them on their way to discovering their identity.

I hope that you do not wait as long as I have waited to show your thanks. How I wish I could give her one last hug, and just say it. Instead, here I am, attempting to now sing to my Unsung Hero. She is no longer here to correct me as I go off-key, but I hope she has been listening, nonetheless.

From all your children, Bhenji, thank you.

For Oorrah, for Saa, and for Ik Oankaar.  

 

June 25, 2010

Conversation about this article

1: Sangat Singh (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia), June 25, 2010, 1:52 PM.

I spend more time deleting the flood of unsolicited mails that arrive to clutter my 'n box' and mostly, unknown to myself, that I have become a billionaire. But, on this rare occasion, I had. In this chaff arrived a genuine, priceless pearl. Such was a find yesterday - a heart rending and a most poignant tribute to a humble teacher who would have otherwise remained unsung but now posthumously recognized. Thank you, Harkiren beta. I tried to find your e-mail but that remained too elusive. But now, my dear hermit, you can't remain hidden. I am copying this to the list of addresses that came with your lovely account of your heart deep appreciation of this gentle teacher of yours. Reminds me of the the famous poem, 'Village Preacher' by Oliver Goldsmith, about the louts who would go to the village church to disturb him. But, "They came to scoff, but remained to pray". Harkiren, you are going to be famous now. Thanks to T. Sher Singh ji for this honour. My contribution was that of a sourcing agent to please my boss.

2: Sukhindarpal Singh (Penang, Malaysia), June 26, 2010, 1:37 AM.

It is always wonderful to read about how our teachers made/ make us better people. Many of us are fortunate to have parents who made sure that we were properly schooled in the Guru's way. I was three when I was sent to the Khalsa Dharmik School situated in the Wadda Gurdwara Sahib, Penang, to learn the Guru's Way. Giani Harnam Singh Ballabh, was my teacher. He was unique. Shudh paatth, kirtan (he helped me fall in love with Asa ki Vaar), Punjabi and English languages, tabla and vaaja. Gianaiji, I never said this to you personally, but wherever you are, thanks for being there. Harkiren, thanks for bringing back priceless memories. GuruRakha.

3: Gurmeet Kaur (Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.A.), June 28, 2010, 11:19 AM.

What a heart-felt tribute to the Gurmat/ Punjabi teachers around the world! Harkiren, your Bhenji will be happy if you paid it forward and volunteered your time as a Gurmat Teacher. And don't forget to tell this story to your students. Sangat Singh ji, thanks for introducing Harkiren to sikhchic.com readers. What a find!

4: Harkiren Kaur (Kuala Lumpur/ London), June 28, 2010, 3:09 PM.

Satnam jio: your words are kind, thank you. But the honour is mine, to write about my humble teacher. I hope everyone who reads this carries on to honour their own teachers. They are so precious, and too often we take them for granted.

Comment on "Thank You, Bhenji ...
For the Oorrah, the Saa, the Ik Oankaar!"









To help us distinguish between comments submitted by individuals and those automatically entered by software robots, please complete the following.

Please note: your email address will not be shown on the site, this is for contact and follow-up purposes only. All information will be handled in accordance with our Privacy Policy. Sikhchic reserves the right to edit or remove content at any time.