Live Life fully alive. Be awesome. Be terrific!
My wife Vaani and
I have been telling Dasrath Manji’s story, for eight years now, in all our
workshops. We inspire and invite managers to learn from Manjhi’s tale of grit
and focus no doubt, but we also help them connect with another key learning –
living a Life of Purpose. Manjhi found his Life’s Purpose, to break down the
mountain in the Gaya district of Bihar, which separated his native Gehlaur from
the nearest town Wazirganj. Until Manjhi’s feat, his village-folk had to either
climb the 25ft-high mountain by foot to cross it or had to go around it, taking
a circuitous 55 km route. Manjhi broke down that mountain with just a hammer
and chisel – he did it alone, over 22 years! A feat that is unparalleled in
human history. The road Manjhi helped pave between Gehlaur and Wazirganj
reduced the distance between the two places to 15 km!
|
Dasrath Manjhi (left) and Nawazuddin Siddiqui as Manjhi |
So, when we saw
Ketan Mehta’s just-released biopic on Manjhi – Manjhi: The Mountain Man (Nawazuddin Siddiqui plays Manjhi
admirably) – the story wasn’t new to us. In fact, we came away thinking that
the film fails to do justice to the simple moosahar
(one who eats rats; the name of a community of rat-eaters in Bihar) who chose
to serve selflessly. His form of service was to pave a road through a mighty
mountain that caused his wife Phaguniya’s death. While the film takes, naturally
so, cinematic liberties, like the romance between Manjhi and Phaguniya or the
evil acts of the Thakurs and the mukhiya,
it somehow falls short of showcasing Manjhi’s purposefulness. He is shown as
someone who remains rooted to his cause more from his tryst with the mountain.
Perhaps that’s Mehta’s view and we must respect that. But what I liked about
the film is that it delivers two memorable messages:
1. Manjhi’s mantra of “Shaandaar! Zabardast!! Zindabad!!! –
Terrific! Awesome!! Alive!!!” is very inspiring. This what Siddiqui’s Manjhi (not
sure if Manjhi Original ever spoke those words) tells anyone who asks him how
is he doing. He is shown soldiering on against a remorseless mountain in
inhuman conditions, but every time someone stops by to ask him how’s he doing,
he has only the mantra in reply – “Shaandaar! Zabardast!! Zindabad!!!” It
is an infectious mantra no doubt. And
something we can practice in our daily lives too.
2. Mehta’s film shows us how Manjhi too faces his dark moments. When he
thinks he cannot go on. When he finds the world out there is cold, its people
beastly and inhuman and the mountain unrelenting. But then this is the time when
Manjhi dips into his inner being. This is where he meets his Phaguniya who eggs
him on to last one more day and to plough on. We too face our mountains. Our
mountains are often mere molehills, when compared to Manjhi’s, but we imagine
them to be insurmountable peaks standing obstinately in our way. So we too
crumble. We too want to badly cry out of the game. We too say we can’t go any
further. And that’s when, as this film points out, we must invest in Manjhi’s
method of looking within. When we seek within, we will find the energy, the
motivation and the reason to plough on – in any context or situation we may
find ourselves. Remember: if we listen to what the world has to say, we will
get nowhere. The world has only opinions. But the Universe is full of energy.
And it is the same energy that powers the Universe that powers you – and me –
too. So, when we dip into that energy, we will always find a way to move
forward.
I am not sure you
or I will have a chance to, or may even want to, break down a mountain like
Manjhi did. But if we can learn from the Mountain Man’s
Life to be terrific, be awesome, be alive to Life, every single day, and live a
Life of Purpose, well, we would surely have lived this lifetime more meaningfully
than we are doing just now!
No comments:
Post a Comment