Asha Iyer Kumar

Jan 22, 20192 min

A seasonal tale

‘Tum bhi kismis rakhta hai?’ Asked my domestic help as he finished the day’s chore.
 

 
‘Kismis?’
 

 
Where did he find kismis in the kitchen? I hadn’t used raisins in my cooking recently. Or had I? I jogged my memory and concluded, almonds, yes. But raisins? No.
 

 
‘Kismis…?’ I grimaced.
 

 
‘Kismis…kismis, woh pedd,’ he said, pointing at the Christmas tree in the living room.
 

 
‘Ah!’ I exclaimed. A swift chuckle replaced the initial grimace and I fought hard to suppress it. ‘Pehli baar rakha hai. Acha hai na?’I asked.
 

 
‘Haan acha hai,’ he said casually.
 

 
His voice was devoid of any appreciation. I felt as if all the labour of putting up the table top tree had gone in vain. He must have seen bigger and better trees in other homes; this for him is piddling, I thought with dismay.
 

 
Then, after a short silence, he struck the final nail in the coffin. He asked, almost mockingly, invalidating all my education,
 

 
‘Madam, tum kismis nahi samjhtha?’
 

 
I waited for the shock of the sudden affront to pass and said firmly, as if to make a point. ‘KISMIS NAHIN, CHRISTMAS.’
 

 
‘Haan, wohi. KISMIS,’ he said with added emphasis.
 

 
A little, ornamented Xmas tree some feet away must have laughed in its sleeve at this odd, Boxing Day bout between an illiterate man’s blameless conceit and an educated woman’s bruised pride.
 

 
I am thinking of this cute confrontation now as I toss down a piece of delicious fruit cake that my neighbor gave. Christmas. Kismis. Fruit cake. Together, they seem to make some odd sense now.

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