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November
07, 1999
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Final
Fling
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NINA
PILLAI
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It's
All In The Stars
Deep in the
Indian psyche is rooted a morbid fascination with astrology and
its influence has crept into every aspect of our lives. During the
recent elections, no leader worth his salt filed his nomination
on the day of the solar eclipse, seeing it as a bad omen. Then followed
Friday the 13th, again an inauspicious day by the western calender
so why take a chance? The Government too waited for an auspicious
date to be sworn in and though 13 is considered unlucky by some,
it has been fortunate for our Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee
who has been prime minister before for 13 days and 13 months. Again
almost all our politicians have personal astrologers and it is not
uncommon to see a yellow sapphire flash on one index finger or an
emerald on another finger, as both connote power or wealth.
Weddings in
India are rarely arranged till the horoscopes have been matched.
Even before photographs are exchanged, horoscopes are exchanged
and matched and words like manglik and dosh float about in liberal
doses. Our astrologers are adept at making not so well-matched horoscopes
match, after the families have parted with a little packet which
takes care of the upay or pujas meant to correct the small dosh.
The more critical of us can argue that it is fate or destiny and
that the astrologers can hardly play God. Most Hindu families cast
horoscopes at birth and not knowing ones time and date of
birth is sacrilegious even today.
Having been
brought up in a liberal atmosphere through my childhood, the efforts
of a family astrologer went abegging. Again, it was only at the
time of marriage that my husbands family cast and matched
my horoscope. It turned out that we had been espoused in previous
birth, joyful news at the time, but it was soon forgotten. When
my older son Krish was born, again we were told that it was a good
horoscope and that as far as we were concerned, it was the end of
the matter. Astrology started to play more of a role in my life
as things started to go wrong.
I must admit
that I was perhaps ripe for the picking and fell straight into the
astrology trap. Yet, despite the fact that I had met over a dozen
astrologers, tarot card readers, palmists and face readers between
1994 and 1995, not even one predicted that I would be a widow in
July 1995. So where did they go wrong? In the days after Rajans
death, I remember his family telling me that a certain day was auspicious
to perform a certain ceremony and another day was not, and I remember
feeling so betrayed by the whole clan of astrologers that I thought
to heck with it!
When later that
year, an astrologer in Mumbai, Panditji Gangadhar, came home unannounced
one evening, I ranted and raved at him for not having been able
to predict the obvious. He gently reminded me that he had predicted
that Rajan would be taken ill in the first week of July and would
need to be taken to the hospital and then solemnly maintained that
my chart did not show that I was meant to be widowed and that since
Rajans end was the result of a murder, no one could have predicted
it. I have since been told by other men of prominence in the field
that this theory holds true and I now believe it.
I have a clutch
of astrologers that I consult on a regular basis, but more out of
curiosity than total faith. A self-styled consultant of mine, Guptaji
from Calcutta, is an astrologer who predicts with quite a high degree
of accuracy and since he is also the personal astrologer to the
prime minister of Sri Lanka and to another prominent friend of mine,
he comes with good references. I believe him up to a point, but
then again he has always maintained that its all in my stars
and he is merely stating what is obvious. Astrology is based on
the activity of the nine grahas or planets whose effect on our life
depends on the time and date of our birth. There are believers and
non-believers alike of this ancient science but at the end of the
day as they say, it is all written in your stars!
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