“It
says willing or not. What do I opt for?” asked my mother, a mere 18 year old
girl, to her brother who had accompanied her to the employment exchange. “Not
means no. Negative. So say yes. Choose Willing” was his advice to her and
perhaps the most valuable one that he has ever doled out to his elder sister.
‘Willing’ took her to HMT.
My
mother grew up in a village close to Bangalore. Second of the seven children
that my grand-parents bore, she was the first in her village to write a class
ten examination and clear it too. College looked bleak as staying put for three
to four years with relatives who lived in the city was not an option that
appealed to my grand-father. At the behest of my grand-mother whom I consider
to be one of the finest examples of a feminist, grandpa registered my mother at
the employment exchange. The forethought of seeing a financially independent
daughter made my grand-mother wage a battle for the same in what was
predominantly a patriarchal family. She is certainly the family’s
revolutionary.
The
good old days saw a lot of organizations run by the government and I shall not
be honest if I said that I am not envious of the jobs that my parents
held. Days after my mom and my uncle
returned from the city after having said ‘Willing’, a letter reached them and
welcomed my mother to HMT. Worried about the alien influences ofs the city
which would mar the innocence of his daughter, grandpa’s denial of sending her
to work was also nipped in the bud by my grand-mother. The deal was simple. She
would live with her aunt in Bangalore for a year and then they would see how
things would unfurl. Thus began her journey as an independent working woman.
She
still recounts the first day of joining Hindustan Machine Tools. She was
nervous and was accompanied by my grand-father. Things went smooth and she was
inducted into the system. My mother officially became a working woman and
stayed that way for four decades. Six months of living with her uncle and aunt
made her crave for her own space and that’s when she decided to move out and
timed it with my uncle’s arrival to Bangalore when he was recruited by ITI. I
am talking about the late sixties here.
From
then on, my mother never looked back. From being a trainee to a permanent
employee, mom and many other women and men made HMT their second home. They
worked from Monday to Saturday, had breakfast, lunch and tea served fresh and
hot, made friends, made best friends, met ends, ran lives and homes and of
course carved their own identities thanks to one employer who became synonymous
for quality. People back at the village would marvel at the golden dial HMT
watch that my mother wore on her wrist when she went visiting every weekend. A
few years later, she married dad, who worked for BEL and had us i.e. my brother
and I and it is me who has more memories of HMT second only to my mother.
As
a toddler, I was enrolled into the HMT crèche and around me were children whose
mothers worked with my mom. At seven in the morning, mom and I would be ready
at the bus stop waiting for the blue HMT bus to arrive and once it came, off we
went towards the enormous space whose belly housed us all for eight hours. I
still remember the steaming idlies available at the campus; with sumptuous
chutney that mom would feed me once we would get down from the bus. A kiss, a
hug and I would sulk for an hour after having watched my mom walk away from the
crèche. I wasn’t alone. Some were too little and cried a lot. The day went in
sleeping, waiting for mom, day dreaming, walking to a play home (we would stop
by a koi pond guarded by an iron gate waiting for a fish to fly out of water
but the ‘aaya’ never allowed us to view that phenomenal event), waiting for the
crèche helps to fetch our lunch from the factory canteen (I miss that food),
waiting for mom to arrive and finally getting dressed to go home. Like fish to
water, I would cling to my mom and would be rewarded with a juicy honey cake
for my day’s toil on our way back home. I am yet to taste a better honey cake
still.
We
grew, all of us. HMT, my mother, me and all the others who were a part of it;
but what grew by leaps and bounds was the confidence that the organization
restored every single morning in each of its employees. A pride that I have a
working mom engulfed me even at school and every single day I dreamt of being
fiercely independent like her and so had many other little girls whose moms
worked with my mother.
There
were ups and down, highs and lows but we bounced back and every time we did, we
prayed to God that he kept our pillar strong.
Other brands made an entry into the market and slowly, as is the law of
nature, the old was being replaced by the new. Innovation sometimes becomes the
mother of survival but where did we go wrong? That’s a story for another day. Mother
voluntarily retired from the organization and threw a huge party for all her
colleagues who had joined her in the same journey many years ago. Today, I dare
say that by the end of our tenure in one organization, we end up making more
acquaintances and fewer friends.
It
broke our hearts a few weeks ago when we read in the news paper that the last
functional fragment of HMT was being closed down forever. No one would wind the
clocks again. Never.
Whenever
I look at those marvelous three letters – HMT- my treasure trove of memories
hypnotize me with the aroma of those juicy honey cakes and the cackles of my
little friends at the crèche. Sometimes I wonder if they were surreal but I
know that they weren’t. These memories are a part of my past that makes up the
most of my present and future, making me the princess that I am, raised by a queen
who taught me that I am a woman and I am born to rule.
Thank
you HMT for without you, we wouldn’t be us.
so true Rashmi
ReplyDeleteThanks Kushal :)
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