Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Kazhak memoirs - School song

School Song (English)

Fill your hearts with gay sunshine
Sing till the hills resound
Cast all cares away, let us hail
With loyal hearts that never fail
Then sing of all the happy hours
Carefree days of ours,
Spent within our alma mater
The school of our boyhood days.

To the fields, to the trees,
To the homes that have given us all we have
To the books, to the rules
To the games that are moulding and training us
To the seas, to the skies,
To the men who are guarding our frontiers,
To the young, to the wise,
To the leaders of men and their destinies.

Then toast to our dear land
United may we stand
Rise to drink the toast once again,
Merrily for Auld Lang Syne,
Then cheers to Sainik School,
Cheers to the days ahead
Pray that God may ever bless us
And keep us always strong and blue.

--------------(Composed by Mrs. Myrtle Jacob)

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Kazhak memoirs - Part 3

After an adventurous bath, we put on our uniform and rush for Breakfast. This is one thing that i did with sense of great pride. Our uniform is of typical military genre, the khakhis with a maroon berret. The shirt has flaps on the shoulders decorated with the house-coloured shoulder tabs on which is pinned the metal "SSKZM" shined with 'Brasso'. The belt and the shoe well-shined. Now, I stand in front of the life-size mirror over which is written "AM I SMART?". I pose this question to myself and always get answed in affirmative. On wednesdays, we look smarter with steel-grey pants, white full-sleeved shirt and our school tie. I still remember the day, in the first week of my kazhak days, when i learnt to knot my tie from a good friend Mani Kuruvilla. I owe him my gratitude.

Every morning, before i leave for breakfast, this is the important thing I do. The bed is to be neatly made and the mosquito net is to neatly stretched and folded without any visible wrinkles. A representative of the house captain makes a note of any intolerances. The last five to reach the breakfast table will be meeting the sergeant after lunch.

7.30 - 7.40 - Breakfast

Mess
In the mess, there are ten long dining tables for the ten houses. The housemaster sits at one end with the leaders sitting beside him. The cadets sit on either side of the tables, with food already served in the plates. Bowls of dishes and curries keep moving from one end to the other.

The breakfast begins after a small prayer "O Lord, we thank thee, for what You' ve given us". I never have complains on breakfast except on thursdays (Idlis - thou not that bad, it makes me think of the 'mallipoo' idlies my mom makes). I was very much comfortable with bread n eggs (served 3 or 4 times a week). We finish the breakfast with another small prayer and fallout in front of the house, to march towards the academic block.

8.00 - 10.30 AM and 10.45 AM - 1.30 PM – Classes
The academic block is about 5-10 minutes march from the houses. My experiences in the classroom have been cherishable and I shall give an exclusive account of them on a different occasion.

Assembly
Assemblies are conducted on Mondays, wednesdays and fridays before the classes begin. All cadets and faculty assemble in the auditorium (We had a wonderful auditorium to accommodate about 700) presided by the principal or the headmaster. The assembly session will be conducted by the senior cadets in turns, in order of the Roll No. The assembly begins with the school choir marching into the podium for the school songs. I cherish the moments I sang in the choir, coz i never got to sing on-stage after that. After the recitation of the school songs in English, sanskrit and malayalam, two senior cadets will deliver speeches on a topic given to them, a day in advance. Most often, they are well-prepared and well-delivered. Some are truly exemplary. Then, two cadets spotted randomly from the audience by the principal, come on stage and deliver their comments on the speeches delivered. This is a mechanism to keep people stay alert. Most often those picked to comment, will be those who were found dozing. The principal, then delivers his address and we conclude the session with the National Anthem.

10.30 - 10.45 AM - we rush to the mess for a cup of tea and a few biscuits.

1.30 PM - Lunch.
One thing that i didn’t like at that time, was to finish of the food. Punishment was awaiting those who didn’t complete what was served on plate. Boys usually put the dishes they don’t like on another fellows plate. There will always be a taker, for whom that dish is one among favorites. Usually boys make good deals on the dining table. "you take my cabbage today, i ll take ur 'Aviyal' tomorrow" ; "Take this slice of bread, I ll give you one poori, sunday morning"....
2.00 - 4.00 Pm - Extra-curricular/Hobbies/Library
This is the time to relax but I don’t usually get the full 120 mins. I always hav a 'meeting after lunch' with my captain. Usually i get a couple of rounds around the house or one hour night study. Then, rush to the library pick up a hidden book. Our library had a very good collection of books. I think i browsed thru every Enid Blyton, Franklin W.Dixon, on the racks. Those days, the 'world-famous' series of books were quite popular. It gave a great deal of information on various titles - Adventures, mysteries, spies, ghosts, assassinations, speeches,.... I loved the place and time spent, immensely.
I don’t remember taking a nap after lunch. Instead, other interesting events always kept us busy. We had well organized wrestling tournaments on the ring made by putting together a few cots. Its always better for puny little boy like me to don the role of a referee than dare participate n get thrashed black n blue.
4.00 - 4.15 Pm – Tea

4.30 - Evening parade
We assemble in front of the house in our sports attire – Blue shorts and house-colored vests. Parade is conducted.
4.40 - 6.00 – Sports
I don’t hav the count of the football and hockey grounds that our school had. I can tell u, it is adventurous to get to those football grounds farthest from the parade ground. The space is mammoth for sports in sskzm. I regret not having used them to the fullest. I did play every game available. But it was cricket more often, than any other. I recollect getting a handful of wickets with my slow off-spinners. Also have been thrashed for a couple of maximums.
6.45 - 8.30 Pm - Study in classrooms
Supervised study in academic block. My best way to kill time is to open the English book and read it cover-to-cover. I wud’ve read them over a hundred times during the academic year. I can still cherish memories of Somerset Maugham’s short story “The Luncheon”, where
‘the author recognizes a woman with whom he had lunch years ago. He starts remembering the unforgettable evening. He was young, living in Paris, and could barely make ends meet. She had read one of his books and wrote to congratulate him on his work. He invited her for lunch and to his horror she chose an expensive restaurant. He had only eighty francs to last him the rest of the month. She ordered one expensive dish after another and when the bill came he paid and was left with no money at all. However, in the end, the narrator feels that he has finally had his revenge when he sees that the woman now weighs twenty-one stone (approximately 300 pounds).’
My first poetry also was the outcome of attempts to kill time during these hours.

8.30 - 8.50 – Dinner – usually good and nothing much to complain

9.00 – 10.00 pm – Study in House study halls
Most eyes in the study hall will usually be found heavy and drooping. One best way to stay awake was to slap mosquitoes and increment the count.

10:15 – Roll call in the presence of the Housemaster
The housemaster and his family lived in the floor above the dormitory. They dorms are designed in such a manner that the master can always monitor exercise control and assist cadets, sitting atop. He comes down every night for roll call. Issues, if any, are brought to his notice.

10:30 – Lights off
These were days in my life, when I flew to heaven, the moment I got inside my mosquito net. The lost gift of innocence.


------------------------memoirs to continue.......

Monday, September 04, 2006

Kazhak memoirs - Part 2

After a pretty comfortable night, my first day dawned in kazhak with a siren blowing from atop the cadets mess. It was 5.30 AM. There had not been many occasions before this one, that i ever woke that early.

Here goes our daily routine:
5.30 AM - Wake up & Tea in cadets mess
5.45 AM - Fall out for PT in front of House (dormitory).
5.55 AM - PT parade
6.00 - 6.55 AM - PT
7.00 - 7.30 AM - Water flow in bathroom taps
7.30 - 7.40 - Breakfast
7.45 - Fall out in front of House
8.00 - Classes in academic block
10.30-10.45 - Tea at Cadets mess
1.30 - 1.50 Pm - Lunch
2.00 - 4.00 Pm - Extra-curricular/Hobbies/Library
4.00 - 4.15 Pm - Tea
4.30 - Evening parade
4.40-6.00 - Sports
6.00 - 6.30 - Water flow in bathroom taps
6.30 - 8.30 - Study in classrooms
8.30 - 8.50 - Dinner
9.00 - 10.00 - Study in House study halls
10.00 Pm - Roll call in presence of House Master
10.15 Pm - Lights off.

This is our daily schedule. We are supposed to strictly adhere to the schedule, with no margin for even the slightest errors. In failure of which means punishment at the hands of ur House captain or sergeant is awaited.
The only thing that is likely to change in the above mentioned schedule is the last one. A cadet may be awarded an additional hour or two of night study as punishment if he was found sleeping during the regular study hours.

Let me elaborate a little.

5.30 AM - Wake up & Tea in cadets mess
I usually find it very difficult to get out from beneath my cover and out of the mosquito net. There is always someone who shakes me awake at 5.43AM. I dont remember ever taking tea in the morning. Just rush to brush my teeth, put on my shorts, baniyan, socks and canvas shoes, all in white and rush out.
5.45 AM - Fall out for PT in front of House
We fallout as a squad of three columns. Being one of the shortest in the house, I am usually in the front row. The squards run from the respective houses to the parade ground.
5.55 AM - PT parade
The squads of the houses are lead in front by the house captains. In 1994, there were three sub-junior (6th & 7th std) houses - VKK, Vallathol and Veluthambi, five junior (8th - 10th) houses - Nehru, Patel, Prasad, Shivaji and Tagore, two senior (11th & 12th) houses - Ashoka and Rajaji. The school Cadet Captain conduct the parade. The house captains report the attendance to the cadet captain who gives instructions, if any, during the parade.
6.00 - 6.55 AM - PT
The PT begins with one round around the parade ground (Two for juniors n seniors), approx. 800 m,,, but with steep ascend on one side of the rectangle and a descend of comparitively lesser slope in another. We are supposed to run as a squad but by the time we start climbing the ascend, weaker ppl like me are left far behind. Each house takes its position in various segments of the ground and the excercise routine begins. Every kind of exercise u can think of is done about 10-20 times with the fittest guy among us performing in front. The captain and leader supervise this session. After the whistle is blown signalling the end of PT session, the captain usually instructs to shoot to the house with a command "last 5, meet me after lunch". Unfortunately, i usually be in that list almost everyday.
7.00 - 7.30 AM - Water flow in bathroom taps
By the time I reach the bathrooms, there's already a big queue of soap boxes lined in front of each of the doors. Its 3 mins per cadet to have his bath. Towards 7.20, that reduces to a minute or half. Banging on the doors begin before the end of the first minute itself. Some doors may not have a latch, where one needs to position his bucket to guard himself from being exposed. U can imagine how these kids wud’ve taken bath. This is why, once in a month, most parents take their kids out to give them a scrub.
The water stops at 7.30 and we use the water collected in the tank for the rest of the day.


------------------------memoirs to continue.......