The Matchbox and the Message
Pandit Janki Nath
Misri did not smoke.
His aversion was not casual—it was grounded in science, discipline, and a
certain moral clarity. To him, smoking was a form of chosen disorder—a small,
private cloud one carried deliberately.
During his tenure as Headmaster of the National High School in Srinagar, he
encountered a formidable contrast to his own nature.
The Secretary-cum-President of the governing body, Sri Kanth, was a man of
authority—and of relentless habit. He smoked continuously. The staff often
joked that the haze in the school corridors owed less to weather and more to
his presence.
There was an
unspoken rule:
No one corrected
him.
Janki understood
this.
He would not
confront.
But neither would
he remain silent.
The opportunity
came unexpectedly.
One afternoon,
Sri Kanth discovered his matchbox was empty. Standing in the staff room,
cigarette poised but unlit, he called out:
“Misri! Do you
have a matchbox?”
Janki looked up
from his papers.
“Yes, sir,” he
replied calmly.
From his neatly
arranged drawer—where everything had its place—he retrieved a matchbox.
But he carried
something else as well.
A small,
carefully folded note.
He approached,
placed the matchbox in Sri Kanth’s hand, and with a single fluid motion added
the folded paper on top.
“A small request,
sir,” he said gently. “Please read this at your leisure. At home.”
Then he returned
to his desk.
No confrontation.
No instruction.
Only a gesture.
The room held its
breath.
Sri Kanth lit his
cigarette, glanced briefly at the note, and slipped it into his pocket.
Nothing more.
But something had
begun.
In the weeks that
followed, a subtle shift emerged.
The constant haze
began to thin.
The chain slowed.
The habit, though not gone, weakened.
No announcement
was made.
No acknowledgment
offered.
Only change.
Years later, the
truth surfaced.
At Master Ji’s
bereavement, Sri Kanth—older now, quieter—drew Sham aside.
“Your father,” he
said, his voice low, “was a dangerous man. Not with anger—with precision.”
He spoke of the
note.
“It did not
accuse. It explained. It showed me what I was doing—clearly, calmly. I could
not ignore it.”
He paused.
“I could not even
enjoy a cigarette without remembering his handwriting.”
Then, with a
faint, reflective smile:
“He did not fight
my habit. He educated it out of me.”
That was Janki’s
method.
He did not oppose
force with force.
He introduced
clarity.
He did not curse
the darkness.
He placed a
candle quietly—exactly where it would be seen.
Pandit Janki Nath
Misri did not smoke.
His aversion was not casual—it was grounded in science, discipline, and a
certain moral clarity. To him, smoking was a form of chosen disorder—a small,
private cloud one carried deliberately.
During his tenure as Headmaster of the National High School in Srinagar, he
encountered a formidable contrast to his own nature.
The Secretary-cum-President of the governing body, Sri Kanth, was a man of
authority—and of relentless habit. He smoked continuously. The staff often
joked that the haze in the school corridors owed less to weather and more to
his presence.
There was an
unspoken rule:
No one corrected
him.
Janki understood
this.
He would not
confront.
But neither would
he remain silent.
The opportunity
came unexpectedly.
One afternoon,
Sri Kanth discovered his matchbox was empty. Standing in the staff room,
cigarette poised but unlit, he called out:
“Misri! Do you
have a matchbox?”
Janki looked up
from his papers.
“Yes, sir,” he
replied calmly.
From his neatly
arranged drawer—where everything had its place—he retrieved a matchbox.
But he carried
something else as well.
A small,
carefully folded note.
He approached,
placed the matchbox in Sri Kanth’s hand, and with a single fluid motion added
the folded paper on top.
“A small request,
sir,” he said gently. “Please read this at your leisure. At home.”
Then he returned
to his desk.
No confrontation.
No instruction.
Only a gesture.
The room held its
breath.
Sri Kanth lit his
cigarette, glanced briefly at the note, and slipped it into his pocket.
Nothing more.
But something had
begun.
In the weeks that
followed, a subtle shift emerged.
The constant haze
began to thin.
The chain slowed.
The habit, though not gone, weakened.
No announcement
was made.
No acknowledgment
offered.
Only change.
Years later, the
truth surfaced.
At Master Ji’s
bereavement, Sri Kanth—older now, quieter—drew Master Ji's son, Sham, aside.
“Your father,” he
said, his voice low, “was a dangerous man. Not with anger—with precision.”
He spoke of the
note.
“It did not
accuse. It explained. It showed me what I was doing—clearly, calmly. I could
not ignore it.”
He paused.
“I could not even
enjoy a cigarette without remembering his handwriting.”
Then, with a
faint, reflective smile:
“He did not fight
my habit. He educated it out of me.”
That was Janki’s
method.
He did not oppose
force with force.
He introduced
clarity.
He did not curse
the darkness.
He placed a
candle quietly—exactly where it would be seen.