Wednesday, June 10, 2026

The Unbreakable Spirit

 The Unbreakable Spirit

The name Janki Nath Misri was not just known—it was spoken with reverence across Srinagar. His reputation as an extraordinary teacher had spread far and wide. If a family sought the best private tutor for their child, it was Misri they approached. His wisdom, dedication, and ability to transform mischievous students into scholars were legendary.

One such request came from Sadiq’s uncle, an influential man who lived in Batmaloo, Srinagar. He had heard of Misri’s brilliance and wanted him to tutor Sadiq, his nephew, whom he had promised his dying brother to educate well.

On the appointed day, as the evening sun cast long shadows, Misri cycled his way from Karan Nagar to Batmaloo. Arriving at the house at precisely 6 PM, he was led into a lavishly decorated room, its floor covered in a fine Persian carpet. In one corner, a young boy sat with a desk before him, wearing dark goggles—his posture casual, but his eyes sharp.

Sadiq’s uncle leaned toward Misri and whispered, “This boy is full of mischief. I want him to be well-educated. Money is no constraint.”

Misri, studying the sincerity in the uncle’s eyes, nodded. “Haji Sahib, leave him to me.”

From that day on, Sadiq’s life changed. Under Misri’s strict yet nurturing guidance, the once-mischievous boy found discipline, focus, and knowledge. He passed his matriculation with flying colors, astonishing those who had doubted his abilities.

When the results were declared, Misri visited Sadiq’s family to congratulate them. Gratitude filled the household, but Sadiq’s uncle was overwhelmed. “How can I ever repay you, Mr Misri?” he asked.

With a knowing smile, Misri simply said, “May Sadiq become the Chief Minister one day.”

As if destiny had heard his words, Sadiq did rise to become the Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir. Misri’s prophecy had come true.

In celebration, Sadiq’s family showered Misri with shreen, coconut curls, and peanuts, a gesture of immense respect from his Muslim brothers.

But fate has its own way of testing those who dedicate their lives to others.

The Dark Night of Injustice

Years later, during Sadiq’s rule, tensions arose, and Pandits were being arrested without warrants. A wave of panic spread through the community as men were picked up without explanation.

One night, around 3 AM, a loud, urgent cry shattered the silence outside the Misri household.

“DINA NATH! DINA NATH!”

The sound of fists pounding the door echoed through the walls.

Inside, I was preparing for my M.Sc. exams, sleeping beside my father, Janki Nath Misri. He woke me and said, “Someone is banging on the door.”

I rushed outside, barely awake, and firmly told the intruders that no Dina Nath lived there.

But they did not listen.

Suddenly, I felt a rough hand grab my hair—they pulled so violently that thousands of follicles were ripped from my scalp. My long, curly hair fell to the ground like discarded threads of fate.

The commotion awakened the entire household. My father, seeing me being dragged away, stepped forward.

“He is my son!” he pleaded.

But his words meant nothing to them. They seized him too, forcing him into the police truck. The vehicle was already crammed with detainees, their faces etched with fear and confusion.

“Where are they taking us?” my father whispered.

“I don’t know,” I replied.

Minutes later, we arrived at Kothi Bagh Police Station. Names were to be recorded before imprisonment.

“Your name?” they asked my father.

Calmly, he did not give his own name. Instead, he said, “Write down the name of the person on whom you have issued the warrant.”

The officer frowned. “But we haven’t issued a warrant against you.”

Yet the injustice continued. In their register, they wrote:

“Pandit Ji, S/o Unknown.”

From there, we were herded into a large, overcrowded hall, its air thick with tension and disbelief. The next morning at 6 AM, we were transferred again—this time, to Central Jail.

A Teacher Among Prisoners

As we stepped into Central Jail, weary and uncertain, a wave of recognition spread through the inmates.

Someone shouted, “MISRI? They arrested Pandit Janki Nath Misri?!”

A murmur of disbelief rippled through the prison yard.

“How can they imprison a man who has dedicated his life to education?”

In an extraordinary display of solidarity, the prisoners stripped off their sweaters and blankets, offering them to Misri, who stood in nothing but an undershirt and underwear, his feet bare on the cold ground.

But Misri did not break.

Instead, with his usual composed dignity, he stepped onto a boulder in the courtyard and spoke gently, but powerfully:

“When Gandhiji and Nehru were arrested, they were at least allowed their clothes. But I, an educator, have been brought here with nothing.”

Then, his words struck like lightning:

“Perhaps this is the reward I receive for teaching the Chief Minister.”

Silence fell over the prison. The guards exchanged nervous glances. The news spread like wildfire.

Janki Nath Misri’s arrest made national headlines.

The midday sun bore down upon the prison yard, casting harsh shadows on the cold stone walls. A restless murmur spread through the corridors of Central Jail. Prisoners whispered among themselves, their voices tinged with disbelief and outrage. Janki Nath Misri, the revered teacher, had been imprisoned.

Some of the inmates, hardened by time and misfortune, had resigned themselves to their fate. But today, something felt different. The arrest of a man who had spent his life educating and uplifting society struck a nerve. It was no ordinary injustice—it was a betrayal of wisdom itself.

Barefoot, shivering in his thin undershirt and underwear, Misri did not shrink in despair. He had always believed in the power of knowledge, in the righteousness of truth, and in the dignity of a teacher. Even here, surrounded by despair, he knew that his duty was not over. A teacher does not abandon his principles, no matter where fate takes him.

He spotted a large boulder in the centre of the prison yard. With a quiet resolve, he stepped onto it, his bare feet pressing into the rough stone. The murmurs hushed. Eyes turned toward him. The prison guards stiffened. Even those who had never known him instinctively felt that this was a man whose words carried weight.

With a voice calm yet resonant, he addressed the gathering:

“When Mahatma Gandhi and Pandit Nehru were arrested, they were at least perhaps allowed to wear their clothes. But I, a humble teacher, have been thrown here half-naked, without even my dignity.”

A ripple of discomfort ran through the jailers standing at a distance. The injustice had been spoken aloud, laid bare before all.

Then, his words took a sharper turn—a statement that sent shivers down the spines of both prisoners and captors alike.

“Perhaps this is the reward I receive for teaching the Chief Minister.”

A stunned silence fell over the yard. Some inmates gasped. The guards exchanged uneasy glances. Did they hear correctly? Could it be that the very man they had arrested, stripped of his dignity, was once the teacher of the most powerful man in the state?

For a moment, time stood still.

Then, someone shouted from among the prisoners:

“Shame! Shame on those who imprison their own teachers!”

The cry was soon echoed by others. The indignation in their voices grew, rolling like a wave across the prison yard. For the first time, the lines between prisoner and jailer blurred. Even the guards shifted uncomfortably, as if questioning their own actions.

The news spread like wildfire. The whispers turned into headlines. By that very afternoon, the newspapers across the region carried the shocking report:

“Sadiq’s Old Teacher Writes to Him from Prison!”

It was a blow to the government, one that could not be ignored. The Chief Minister’s own teacher—a man who had once guided him, moulded his intellect, and perhaps even shaped his destiny—was now languishing in a jail cell without a warrant, without a crime.

The public backlash was swift. Pressure mounted from the highest circles.

And then, the moment of reckoning arrived.

By noon, a message arrived at the prison gates—an order for Misri’s immediate release.

But it didn’t stop there.

By the afternoon, every detainee who had been arrested in the agitation was released. The movement, which had shaken the city and led to countless arrests, came to an abrupt and decisive end.

One man. One voice. One unshakable belief in truth had triumphed.

As Janki Nath Misri stepped out of the prison gates, the very men who had arrested him now stood at attention. Some lowered their eyes, ashamed. Others dared not speak.

But Misri did not gloat. He did not utter words of anger. He simply walked out, his head held high, as a teacher who had taught the greatest lesson of all—that knowledge, dignity, and truth can never be imprisoned.

It was a victory not just for him, but for every soul who believed in justice.

His feet, bare just hours ago in the cold halls of the prison, now stepped onto the sunlit road with the weight of a legacy.

The Enduring Lesson

It was a moment of supreme, almost poetic, irony that lay bare the unassailable power of a teacher’s legacy. As Janki Nath Misri, the architect of a generation’s intellect, stepped from the cold shadows of imprisonment into the sunlit road, he was met by a silent, shame-faced guard of honour composed of the very authorities who had jailed him. Among them, though unmentioned, stood the living proof of his life’s work: the Chief Minister of the State, the Deputy Commissioner, and the daughter of the jail’s own Superintendent—each once a student shaped by his lessons in Standard English Translation. This was no mere coincidence; it was a testament to an influence so deep it had permeated the highest echelons of power. The man who had been wrongly arrested for his voice was now freed by the weight of his own unparalleled legacy. He did not gloat or utter a word of anger; his silent, dignified walk taught them all one final, unforgettable lesson—that while a man can be imprisoned, the knowledge, dignity, and truth he imparts become immortal, forever holding the key to his own cell.

A Legacy That Lives On

The story of Pandit Janki Nath Misri is not just a tale of a teacher. It is the story of a man who lived with courage, dignity, and an unwavering commitment to education.

He transformed students into leaders.
He faced injustice with unshaken resolve.
And in the end, his principles triumphed over tyranny.

Even today, his name echoes in the memories of those who knew him—a man whose life proved that knowledge is the greatest power of all.

Janki: The Lamp of Learning

Janki came like a lamp at dusk,
not loud, not grand, but steady.
He lit the rough, unready mind
and made it see its own dawn.

He did not teach as one who commands,
But as one who opens a door.
With patient hands and watchful eyes,
he turned ignorance into hunger.

A book in his hand became a bridge,
A question in his mouth became a key.
He knew that learning was not a race,
but a river finding the sea.

He saw in every child a future
hidden beneath dust and doubt.
So he spoke with discipline,
but also with faith.

O Janki, educationist of quiet fire,
You built no palaces of stone—
You built minds that could stand upright,
and hearts that could think, and care.

Even now, in the rooms you left behind,
Your voice still moves like morning light:
gentle, exact, and impossible to forget.

Monday, June 8, 2026

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.

 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.

Sunday, June 7, 2026

Charles Chaplin and Einstein

I have tried to set the scene with care: Hollywood, 1931. Flashing cameras. Elegant crowds. The greatest scientific mind of the age, standing beside the most beloved silent actor in the world. One man carried the equations of the cosmos in his head; the other carried the laughter and sorrow of humanity in his walk. 

“Einstein,” “looked at Charles Chaplin and told him, ‘What I admire most about your art is its universality. You do not say a word, and yet the whole world understands you.’”

Then came the pause.

“And Chaplin,” he would continue, eyes brightening, “replied, ‘That is true. But your fame is even greater. The whole world admires you, even though no one understands you.’”

The children would burst into laughter.

Even Soma, who sometimes pretended not to encourage too much cleverness at the table, would smile. It was impossible not to. Chaplin’s reply had mischief, humility, and truth all packed into one sentence—exactly the kind of wit I cherished.

But for him, the anecdote was more than cleverness. It carried a complete philosophy.

“Chaplin needed no words,” I would explain. “That is the power of art. A hungry man, a proud man, a foolish man, a lonely man—everyone could recognise himself in Chaplin. The heart understood before the mind had time to interfere.”

Then, to turn to Einstein.

“And Einstein was different. People did not understand his equations, but they sensed that he had touched something vast. They felt there was a hidden order behind the visible world, and here was a man who had glimpsed it.”


Saturday, June 6, 2026

Mohan — The First Light

 Mohan — The First Light

Mohan’s birth came like a quiet blessing into a household already shaped by discipline and hope.

Born in the crisp air of Baramulla, he was Soma’s firstborn—a child of radiance and promise (“spun from sunlight”. Fair, robust, and full of restless energy, he seemed to carry movement within him. The compound of their home became his kingdom, and he its laughing, tireless ruler.

Soma watched him often from the window, her heart swelling with pride so intense it bordered on fear. He ran faster than the other children, led their games, and invented their mischief.

The mohalla knew him well.

“Soma-ji, your Mohan is the ringleader again!” the aunties would call.

“He has them all climbing trees!”

She would apologise, but never quite hide her smile.

These were no complaints. They were confirmations of life.

Mohan’s birth? "Soma's Shock."

To her, their complaints were just another verse in the song of her son’s vibrant, healthy life.

Then, the music stopped.

It began not with a crash, but with a whisper. A slight fever, an unusual lethargy that dimmed his bright energy. Soma tucked him into bed, murmuring assurances, blaming the changing season. But the fever did not break. It clung to him, a malevolent fog, and when it finally receded, it stole something essential in its retreat.

The first time he tried to get out of bed and his legs buckled beneath him, a cold knot tightened in Soma’s stomach. The second time, a silent scream began to build in her throat. The vibrant little boy who ran was gone, replaced by a child who could only drag himself across the floor, his legs trailing behind him like forgotten things. His small face, once creased with laughter, was now etched with a confusion so profound it shattered Soma’s world.

“What happened?” The question became a desperate mantra, echoing off the walls of their suddenly silent home. It was asked of local hakims, of travelling doctors, of elders who came with remedies and prayers. The answers were shrugs, shaken heads, and fearful glances. Nobody knew. It was a curse, some whispered. A twist of fate said others. A great, suffocating shock settled over the family, a pall of grief for a loss they could not name or understand. The house compound, once filled with the echoes of his play, was now a vast, aching emptiness.

xxx

Soma’s Shock

Then, without warning, the music stopped.

It began quietly—a fever, a strange stillness in a child who had never known how to be still. Soma dismissed it at first, as mothers often do, blaming the season, the air, the change.

But the fever lingered.

And when it finally left, it took something with it.

The first time Mohan tried to stand and fell, a cold unease gripped him. The second time, fear took form. The third time, truth arrived.

The boy who had run now dragged himself across the floor, his legs trailing behind him. His laughter faded into confusion—an expression no mother is prepared to meet.

“What has happened?” became the question that filled the house.

Hakims were called. Doctors consulted. Elders offered remedies and prayers. But answers did not come—only silence, speculation, and dread.

Then came the word.

Polio.

It arrived not as an explanation, but as judgment. A disease barely understood in their world, cruel in its randomness, final in its effect.

For Soma, the shock did not pass—it settled. The memory of Mohan running became a ghost she carried daily.

Her son would not walk again.

And in that realization, something in her broke—and something else hardened.

 

Friday, June 5, 2026

Alexander’s Magnanimous Conduct

 Alexander’s Magnanimous Conduct

Once, when the army marched across burning sand under a fierce sun, water was far away, and the soldiers were weak with thirst. Alexander, though just as tired, chose to walk on foot with his men so they would not feel alone in their suffering.

A few light-armed soldiers went in search of water. After a long effort, they found a small, shallow spring. It gave only a little water, and even that was hard to collect. Carefully, they filled in a helmet and hurried back, hoping to help their king.

They offered the water to Alexander. He thanked them and praised their effort. Then, in front of the entire army, he poured the water onto the ground.

For a moment, everyone was shocked. But then something changed. The soldiers felt stronger, as if each of them had taken a drink. Seeing their leader refuse water when they had none gave them the courage to go on.

Not long after, the army faced another danger. The guides could no longer find the way. The wind had blown away all tracks in the sand. There were no trees, no hills, and the guides did not know how to use the sun or stars to guide them.

Alexander decided to lead the way himself. He took a group of horsemen and rode ahead of the army. The heat was so great that many horses grew too tired to continue, and he had to leave most of the men behind. At last, with only five companions, he pushed forward.

Then, at last, they reached the sea.

Alexander dug into the pebbled shore and found fresh, clean water beneath. He quickly returned and led his army to the coast. For seven days, they marched along the shoreline, drinking water and regaining their strength. After that, they turned inland again, where the guides finally recognized the path.

Through courage, self-control, and care for his men, Alexander led his army safely through great danger.