Brightest are mine...
Recently
I visited my relatives in Brahampur with family. It is a tiny hamlet in Bihar ’s Buxar
District. This area is known for its Shiva temple and people used to make a
visit during festivals and make offerings. Residents are normally calm and
hugely dependent on agriculture. Life in Brahampur starts early
morning and ends in general around 7-8 PM. Though there are nothing much to do
there for me, I normally spent my days chatting with my four years old little
daughter and answering her childlike queries. Sometimes kids throw you such
difficult question that you hardly have any answer to please them.
Nights
in Brahampur were pleasant so we usually go to the roof and look at the sky.
Except for cloudy days, sky was always full of stars. It looked so complete and
fascinating. My daughter excited as usual asked same question every night ‘why
sky in Brahampur has so many stars’ and why there are no stars in Noida (Delhi
NCR). She started counting as many as she could. After forty stars she gives
up. Oh papa, I am tired now, they are so many and they are so bright. I will
have that one which is the brightest and then she goes for sleep.
After
couple of days I came back Noida with my family. Yes, there were no stars,
hardly found one. Is this is pollution which is the main reason? It seems stars
are gone, no gazing up in the sky and no enchanting moments. I am still able to
differentiate between Saptarshi and leo there but here they are all gone, many
other stars which we used to see from our naked eyes are gone. City has become
brighter and stars are dimmer. It is the lack of growing visibility and experts
feel that the reason behind is light pollution. You go in any corner of the
city, there are so many bright lights which are dispersed in every direction
and thus obstructing the view. And to add the woes is growing air pollution
which has created a haze in the atmosphere. This haze bounces back the light
and obstructs the great view.
With
the pace of time and development our cities are getting bigger and
accommodating many and chances are less that our kids would ever be able to see
those stars, milky way and enchanting view with their naked eyes. Oh grandma’ I
am coming, I wanna see the stars, and I wanna have one, brightest are mine…
बहुत सुंदर
ReplyDeleteकहां पहुंचा दिया रजनीश जी आपने।
Oh stl rmbr it was game for us to find Saptarshi, dhruv tara & try to make other shapes from stars... i hope u r daughter will c soon lots of stars here in delhi play those games...
ReplyDeleteapna bachpan yaad aa gaya...jab hum bhi apne village jatethe aur nature ko bahut hi karib se dekhate the...
ReplyDeletean issue most people won't pay any heed to... but an alarming situation for the amateurs and astronomers... as far as i know it is the light pollution which is more responsible than the air pollution... Sadly, light pollution is taking away one of nature's most beautiful sights - the night sky.
ReplyDeleteRajnish, i suggest, whenever you wanna see and show the stars to your daughter, go to the countryside... the sky there is much clear and you won't be as disappointed...
Twinkle twinkle little stars...
ReplyDeleteOhhhh I wonder where u are ????
Beautifully written :-)
Brightest are mine...
ReplyDeleteBhai, Good One.....
You Succeeded to communicate the emotion u wanted..... but frankly..
I was expecting more at the end of it