The day of the journey dawned
finally. We went to Begumpet airport. The luggage was quite heavy and after all
we were four people. We were given vegetable biryani by Dr. M. Uma. Being practicality
personalised, she packed it in reusable containers!
We landed in Mumbai and immediately
moved from the Domestic to the International terminus. My children were unusually subdued. Pranav being
a seven-year-old could understand but Sahithi was too small. We waited in the
airport and it was interesting to see the tapestry of foreign visitors leaving India.
There was a panorama of facial expressions on display. Some happy, some sad and
some pensive.
I could make out many Indians also
waiting like me. Then the check-in announcement was made and we finished all
the formalities. Then the actual boarding started. There were many Indians and an
equal number of Ethiopians. The Ethiopians appeared to be bemused at the number
of Indians. But there were knowing nods and smiles. The Indian diaspora is well
famed in the world for their ability to travel, adapt and make themselves comfortable
in any country of the world.
Edmund
Hillary was the first man to climb Everest. He was bubbling with excitement and
was overcome with the adrenaline rush. First man, First man he kept muttering
to himself. “Enna sir, ninnalkk teyila venam?” Translated it means “sir, do you want tea?”. Flummoxed
and flabbergasted he jerked around. It was a humble Malayalee, he not only reached
mount Everest much before him, he started and was running a flourishing tea business!
Even though said in jest, it is typical of the Indians’ urge to travel and make
themselves name and fame in even the remotest parts of the world.
India
has the world’s largest diaspora. Diaspora is the number of Citizens of a country
living in other countries. Over 1.55 crore Indians live and work outside India,
a number greater than the combined population of Zimbabwe and Kuwait. Mexico
has a Diaspora of 1.23 crores and Russia has a diaspora of 1.06 crores. Truly
amazing!
We were flying Ethiopian airlines. We were warmly
greeted by the Ethiopian air hostess. Standing next to her and wearing a
beautiful Ethiopian dress was another girl. Both of them were strikingly beautiful.
They did not look like the typical Africans that we see in the popular media.
We were seated and one of the air hostess came and
said “fasting or non-fasting”. I was taken back ‘what does she mean?’. Understanding
my confusion, she corrected herself “Vegetarian or non-vegetarian meals?”. I
told her three non-vegetarian meals and one Vegetarian meal. An Ethiopian sitting
next to me explained “Ethiopians love meat and meat products. So not eating meat
products and having only vegetables and Injira (Ethiopian staple food) is allowed
during fasting time. So all vegetarian food in Ethiopia is called fasting food”.
I don’t know how the vegetarians would react! If veg food is fasting food, what
is Vegan food? starving food! Your guess is as good as mine.
The Airplane was a wide bodied 787. Very spacious and
very wide. I could make out a smattering of kids, most of them Ethiopians. It
was a five-hour journey and we started making friends. A young man, Mr. Bala
Krishna came up and introduced himself. Bala said “Sir, this is a very big contingent
of Indian teachers. We are as many as 78 (including spouses and children). With you there are ten from Andhra Pradesh. Four from your family, me and
my wife, Dr. Srinivas Inguva, Dr. T. N. Murthy, Mrs. Tasleem and her daughter”.
I was thunder struck at his networking ability and ability to get data. “This
man would be a great researcher” I told myself.
He also told me that he belongs
to POLY (the engineering division of BDU) and that the rest of us will be reporting
to PEDA (Pedagogy Academy, the division for all other departments excluding engineering).
I thought PEDA was a quite an interesting name, It means a sweet in Northern
India!
Mr. Bala Krishna was a
teacher from the Electrical department, Me and Dr. T. N. Murthy from the Management
department, Dr. Srinivas Inguva was from the accounting department and Mrs. Tasneem
was from the Law department. The five-hour journey was over in a jiffy and before
we knew we were taxing down on the run way of Addis Ababa. We have arrived!!!
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