Thursday, June 21, 2007

USTAD BISMILLAH KHAN

Shehnai maestro Ustad Bismillah Khan died of cardiac arrest in the wee hours on Monday. The 91-year-old Bharat Ratna awardee, who had been admitted to Heritage hospital here on August 17 with age- related health problems, passed away at 2:20 am. Khan was born on March 21, 1916 into a family of court musicians and later trained under his uncle, the late Ali Bux 'Vilayatu,' a shehnai player at Varanasi's Vishwanath temple. During his long and fruitful career as an artiste, Khan enthralled audiences at performances across the globe. He was bequeathed the Sangeet Natak Akademi award, the Tansen award as well as the Padma Vibhushan. In 2001, Khan became the third classical musician after Pt Ravi Shankar and M S Subbulakshmi to be awarded the Bharat Ratna, India's highest civilian honour. Despite his fame, Khan's lifestyle retained its old world charm and he continued to use the cycle rickshaw as his chief mode of transport till his deathPerhaps we were one of the luckiest family comprising me (Shivnath Jha), my wife (Mrs Neena Jha) and my nine-year-old son Master Akash Jha) of the world who met Bharat Ratna Ustad Bismillah Khan more than dozen times during the past four years. Reason-We have compiled, edited and published a 200-page monograph on Ustad Bismillah Khan to take care him at the winter of his life.After forwarding the ornamental issue of the monograph to the President of India Dr APJ Abdul Kalam to mark the 90th birthday of Ustad Sahib on March 21, 2005, we moved pillar to post to get it printed at any cost. On January 26 when we went to visit Ustad at his Sarai Harha house to show the ornamental issue (before it goes for final printing) he told us "Alham-Dil-Lillah (God be praised)". He blessed us and said "Allah ney tumsey achcha kaam karwa hi liya. Then he autographed on the cover page of the monograph, which was released by Ustadji on his 91st birthday (four days later) on March 25th, 2006. We have presented him a three-kg silver shehnai, Rs 1.5 lakh cash and a 91 kilogram birthday cake to celebrate his 91st birthday. He was very happy. He had never celebrated such type of birth day in his life. On that very day he expressed his desire to play shehnai and fulfill his lifetime desire at India Gate. We took up the matter with the Government of India and within 10 minute got government's nod to invite him for shehnai rendition at India Gate to pay his homage, respect and regards to the warriors and soldiers who sacrificed their lives for the motherland. When we visited him in May, 2006 to invite to play shehnai at India Gate on July 15, 2006 he was very happy and told us "aakhir tumney meri khwaes pura kar hi diya". We strictly advised him and his family members not to leave Benaras and stop performance anywhere he plays his shehnai at India Gate. He had agreed to comply our requests. But, we don't know under what circumstances he went to Jaipur in the month of June 2006 and fallen ill. This led to extension of the programme from July 15 to August 9. In the meantime, when we again visited him in July, his condition started deteriorating. On August 16, we received a call from his sons, grand-daughters and other family members that he was looking for us, my wife and son, Aakash. We immediately rushed to Benaras by then he was hospitalised at Heritage hospital.We went to Herigate and spent more than 16 hours during my three day stay in Benaras. We were optimistic. He talked a length with my wife and my son Aakash and said: "Thora kamjor ho gaya hun....lekin tumharey saath India Gate tak jaunga...tum mere paas baithna..."When we inquired about his shehnai, which hypnotized the world for more than eight decades, he told us "beum ghar par hain...akeli hongi...jaunga to hal puchunga..."At about 5 in the evening when we told him that we are leaving for Delhi, he told my wife "tum gari lekar jaldi aana...hum tumharey saath India Gate chalengey....Shehnai bajayengey...." We left at 7 in the evening for Delhi. At about five in the morning when we were in train, we got a call on our mobile. We just can not believe this. We had no option. When we call back to his place in Benaras at 6 in the morning, when we were crossing Ghaziabad, till then we were late. He died of cardiac arrest.Back to home in Indiarapuram, my wife fallen ill and my son started vomiting.A man with whom the name of an instrument has been so inevitably identified as to become synonymous died without the instrument. And, the man was no other than Shehnai maestro Bharat Ratna Ustad Bismillah Khan. He died without his ‘begum’ (Shehnai).We have launched a programme Bismillah-The Beginning to protect musicians, academicians and artists who brought pride and laurels to the nation, an also authored a monograph on the life and art of the Ustad to extend financial support to him.“The death of his wife decade ago had left the Shehnai maestro, shattered and inconsolable, but he came to terms with the tragedy by treating 'shehnai' as his 'begum' and used to keep it on his bed and under his pillow. It inspired him. It gave him power to think about 'ragas' and music.At last, after struggling for life for more than 96 hours, the master who took his last breath without his ‘begum’ in the wee hours on August 21, exactly five months later when he had celebrated his 91st birthday after cutting a 91 kilogram cake. Hardly two feet long instrument, Shehnai, after getting touch with the lips of Ustad Bismillah Khan had hypnotized the world for more than eight decades.In the last half a century or more, no one could think of shehnai without Bismillah Khan or vice versa. It is he who, in fact, gave a popular folk instrument the capacity and courage to rise to be admitted to the hoary company of instruments of Hindustani classical music globally.A man of tenderness, a man who believed in remaining private and who believed that musicians were supposed to be heard and not seen died without his Shehnai.We appeal people across the world, and more importantly the music lovers and youth to buy a monograph, join our movement to protect others and fulfill their wishes.

You may contact us at the following address:

SHIVNATH JHA & NEENA JHA
BISMILLAH:THE BEGINNING FOUNDATION
SRB-124D, SHIPRA REVEIRA,
GYAN KHAND-III,
INDIRAPURAM, GHAZIABAD (UP), INDIA.
Mobile: 09810246536/TEL-FAX: 0120-2605503
or mail us at shehnaimaestro@gmail.com/jshivnath@gmail.com/shivnath@journalist.com

1 comment:

आन्दोलन:एक पुस्तक से said...

In the last half a century or more, no one could think of shehnai without Bismillah Khan or vice-versa. It is he, who, in fact, gave a popular instrument the capacity and courage to raise to be admitted to the hoary company instruments of Hisndustani classical music globally.

A humble man, he believed that musicians were supposed to be heard and not seen. For him, the shehnai was his begum and he had made this a known fact after the death of his wife almost 14 years back. But his begum was not there at his bed side when he breathed his last at the Heritage Hospital in the wee hours of August 21, after struggling for life for more than 96 hours, exactly five months after after when he had celebrated his 91st birthday after cutting a 91 kg cake.

He died of cardiac arrest. The government announced a one-day national mourning in honour of the legend who had the rare distinction of playing the shehnai as the Indian flag was unfurled at the historic Red Fort in New Delhi to mark the country’s independence from Britain on August 15, 1947. He died without his shehnai.

But he indeed wanted his shehnai to be kept next to him. On August 18, when I along with my wife Neena and my nine-year-old son Aakash visited him at abpout 10 in the morning and enquired about his “begum”, the maestro with tears in his eyes said: Begum ghar par hain, mein yahan akela hun…

The legendary Ustad was born on 21 March 1916. His ancestors were court musicians in the princely state of Dumraon in Bihar and he was trained under his maternal uncle, the late Ali Bux “vilayatu”. He spent his child hood in the holy city of Varanasi, on the bank of the Ganga, where his maternal uncle was the official shehnai player in the famous Vishwanath temple.

It was due to this that Bismillah Khan became interested in playing the shehnai. At an early age, he familiarized himself with various forms of the music of Uttar Pradesh, such as thumri, chaiti, swanti etc. Later he studied Khayal music and mastered a large number of ragas.

For the Ustad, music, sur and namaz were the same thing. His namaz was the seventh suddh and five komal surs. Even as devout Shia, khan sahib was a staunch devotee of Saraswati, the hindu goddess of music.

For the man who took the shehnai out of the wedding pro¬cessions and naubat-khaanaas - as he brought it to the centre-stage of classical respectability, his instrument was also his Quran. Where others see conflicts and contradictions between music and religion, he saw only a divine unity.

Once Ustad had said “We reach Allah in different ways. A musician can learn. He can play beautifully. But unless he can mix his music with religion, unless he strives to meet God, he will only have kalaa (art) but no assar (mystical union). He will always stand at the ocean and never reach the heights of purity.”

During the compilation of a book -Monograph On Ustad Bismillah Khan - we met several times and spent several hours with him, his family members at his house and also on the bank of the river Ganga. He had a strong feeling and regard for the people, especially the women of Mithila (north Bihar) region.

On January 26, 2006 when we met him to show the ornamental issue of the monograph (brought out to financially protect the musicians and artists) he said; “Alham Dullillah (Allah at last inspired you to accomplish a good work.)” and asked our son to give a pen. Then he wrote: ‘Alham Dullillah, Bismillah Khan” and asked us to publish it on the cover page of the monograph.

Bismillah Khan had played his shehnai in Afghanistan. Europe, Iran, Iraq, Canada, USA, USSR, Japan, Hong Kong and almost every capital city across the world. The Government of India bestowed on him the title Padmashri, Padma Bhushan, Padma Vibhushan and Bharat Ratna for promotion of shehnai globally. He though felt that he had barely reached the shore after 91 years and his search was still incomplete.

On March 25, 2006 for the first time, he had celebrated his birthday with such fanfare four days after his actual birthday due to serial blasts in Benaras. He had then said “Meri antim khwahish aap log pura karen. Mujhe India Gate par bajana hai. India Gate hamara hai. Jab India Gate par Bismillah Khan ki Shehnai bajegi to puri Dilli ruk jayegi. (You will fulfil my last wish of perform¬ing at India Gate where Bismillah Khan will play Shehnai and the whole Delhi will stop to listen).”

A month later, we got the permission of the Government of India and went to his place to invite him. By that time he had fallen ill. We had to extend the date from July 15 to August 9, 2006. But he was still unwell. When we reached Heritage hos¬pital on August 18, he inquired about the programme and said: “Thora kamzor ho gaya hun….dekho in logon ney kya kar diya hai…..mein jald theek ho jata hun phir tumharey sath Dilli chalunga aur India Gate par shehnai bajaunga. (I have become weak…see what these people have done…I will get well and will accompany you to India Gate.)” Alas!

Until Ustad Bismillah Khan burst upon the center-stage of Indian music with his strange little instrument at the All-India Music Conference in Calcutta in 1937 at the age of 20, the shehnai was considered an instrument reserved for wedding processions or Hindu religious rit¬uals.

“I was never interested in studies. While others were at their books. I used to sneak out and play marbles or blow on Mamu’s shehnai. He always knew I would be a shehnai-player,” the Ustad had said.

Many people say Bismillah Khan did not groom a disciple although he taught students when he had the time but there was no special heir. But, of his six sons (Mehtab, Nayyar. Hussein, Famin, Kazim, and Nazim) Mehtab and Nayyar play good shehnai. It may be mentioned that when Ustad Bismillah Khan played shehnai with his elder brother Samsuddin Khan, he always played down his own part as he did not wish to overshadow his brother. “Even though I have the ability, I must always remember that he is my elder brother,” he had said with humility and modesty.

On August 19. when I inquired who will continue the tradi¬tion of shehnai, Ustad smiled lying on his hospital bed and said: “Mehtab aur Nayyar bahut achcha bajatey hain…… riyaaz karna hoga…. dam aur shudh dono sadhna hoga…… Insha Allah. (Mehtab and Nayyar play very well… they must do prac¬tice…breath and purity has to be attained… Inshallah).”

We pray his legacy lives on.

Shivnath Jha is a journalist who has compiled a monograph on Ustad Bismillah Khan. He also helped found a trust to carry the legacy of Ustad and runs a blog on his life.