As a kid I found it very very difficult to understand, speak and write Hindi. We were taught Hindi from Class I and when everyone else our age in other schools were learning to read and write words, we were expected to read and write small stories! I cannot exactly remember the reason for the difficulty, but it made me miserable. I do not remember such difficulty for English or Kannada. We had a good Hindi teacher who had a good Hindi accent. I used to adore her. There are some distinct things I remember about my adventures to learn Hindi in the primary school:
1. Once we were asked to listen to the Hindi news on TV(there was only DD then) and list out some five difficult words as an assignment(We got innovative assignments!). Hindi news was telecast at 9pm if I remember, which was very late at the time for me(must have been in Class IV or V). So I had listed five words seeing a serial at 3pm(when I came home from school!). My first word was the name of the serial(ya, that was really stupid of me!). It was called "Junoon". My teacher knew instantly my source the next day when I read my list of words!
2. A Kannada actor Shankar Nag recreated R K Narayan's "Malgudi days" on the small screen with many kannada actors from the small and big screen. My dad insisted that I watch it. It was amusing to see Kannada actors speak a language I felt was very difficult, so effortlessly(Many years later I felt their Hindi was not exactly effortless, it had south Indian accent cropping up, but suited the story well - as in, the setting was in a village down south- it was fine). I did not understand much but liked watching Master Manjunath and pestering dad to tell me what was happening!
I also remember watching "Osheen", the story of a Japanese peasant girl who strives hard to become a beautician(not sure of the title or the storyline- but it was japanese for sure!)
3. At a little later point of time, in the afternoon(may be 3.30 pm) a new comedy serial started. Many of my friends came home after school as it was at a stone's throw and when we switched on the TV there was only one channel then and we happened to come across this serial called "Dekh bhai dekh". We were not a TV watching bunch but I remember clearly we loved watching this one! I must have realised it was a comedy because of the background laughing for every joke! It had Shekhar Suman, Farida Jalal and a bunch of other good actors. And I enjoyed watching this show for sure..
4. There were these Hindi exams that were popular in my school days. Mysore Hindi prachar samithi and Madras Hindi prachar samithi used to conduct exams and certify one's Hindi prowess. I happened to take(had no option, it was from school!) the first exam called "Prathama" in Class III. Given the fact that I went to school that did not have exams, exams never scared me! It did not make me anxious. I loathed the last few days when my Hindi teacher made us read and write a lot of stuff! I managed to scrape through the exam! My mom said I should be serious the next time around. My dad told me I had done a good job, as I had got more marks than him for the same exam!
I started speaking Hindi in high school - this was not due to any books, it was mostly because of TV! My Hindi even today is clichéd. Have a feeling native speakers of Hindi dont use the flamboyant phrases and words that Hindi cinema employs. I can say things like "Kaafi nek khayal he". I cannot think of another usage of the word "nek", since the TV/ films did not popularise other usages and my Hindi is not sourced from reading Hindi literature. It all seems funny. A south Indian feels I have a decently good Hindi accent, but the truth is my Hindi is very filmy and mostly grammatically incorrect. Like many things I do, I speak Hindi quite confidently and that seems to make up for the grammar (or the lack of it)! I did make some effort to read some literature in school but it seemed a lot of effort.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Must Dos to remain sane...
1. Mind your own business. You do not run the show and have no control of what happens, give your best and keep going. 2. Read books. Rea...
-
Had been to Chennai last week. I had been told about the heat and the soaring mercury levels, but my roomie had told me it would be much bet...
-
This world is a damn unfair place to be. This was what I was thinking when I my mobile beeped last evening. I felt very strongly it was from...
-
When passion becomes vocation one becomes successful… may be. Dont know what makes some people successful and some not. Other than the persp...
8 comments:
>>>As a kid I found it very very difficult to understand, speak and write Hindi.
As a kid I found it very very difficult to understand any subject that was taught at school
:D
I tried to learn Kannada after coming to Bangalore but found it was too difficult especially considering the fact that I did not watch any regional TV channel(there are a lot of TV channels to choose from today and regional channels are at the bottom of my wishlist ;) ) and had no teacher who would pester me to mug up kannada lessons for a kannada exam.(no teacher and no exam ,u see)
Eventually I gave up.Though,I did pick up some everyday-usage-words.I used them at every opportunity i could find,usually interspersed between the English ones.
I was happy that finally I was learning something.But all my efforts came to a naught when a colleague in office told me it(my kannada,when I speak it) is like a child blabbering something in sleep :(
BTW u can pass off as a northie...ur hindi is not that bad :)
-rohit
@rohit - reading your comments is always fun! The "child blabbering in sleep" part was funny, but I dont totally agree with it(LOL)! And thanks for the comment(and the compliment for my hindi)..
Reading this was a journey down the memory lane for me. Malgudi days, japanese serial, dekh bhai dekh... These are some of the things which i also remember from my stint with national television during childhood. At times, even I bask in the glory of being able to speak hindi, inspite of being a keralite. Proud moments, huh !!!! :)
But i feel i can speak hindi fluently because of the whole bunch of hindi movies that i watched :)
I learn three words in hindi and forget two words :)
If I say "Me too" will it be too cliched.
I moved to a new school in my higher primary school and there people were already reading huge chapters in Hindi when I was just starting with alphabets. I remember how my benchmate and I used to 'coordinate' during those numerous tests and exams. :-)
But I scored the highest in Hindi in 10th finals. :-D Complete credit goes to the great SRK and team. I wouldnt have learned Hindi if not for DDLJ and HAHK.
When I start my school, language classes will be held in Movie Theaters.
@guna vishwa
your idea for language classes in Movie theatres is a very good idea.
we had something like taht in our school.Our English teacher would creen some MOvie in the auditorium and later we were asked to write what we saw.
It was fun and learning but didn't last long though
hey i came across your blog when i was searching for the show osheen...i rem being completely hooked to it as a kid. i never understood what went on except that she was a lil girl like me, except she ate from a bowl and was mostly sad. but i loved it as i did the other favs. nukkad, dekh bhai dekh and zabaan sambhal ke.
thanks for jogging my memories. always enjoy a trip into the past and back.
Post a Comment