Siraj Ahmed Taher (1942–2010).
President Emeritus, Birdwatchers' Society of Andhra Pradesh.
Portrait courtesy the Taher family.
In 2010 I lost
two people who were very dear to me. They had studied in the same school, lived
out their lives in the same city, had many common friends, at least one common
hobby, and both died, within two months of each other, in the same hospital. Both
were paterfamilias of more than one ‘family’—philately, and ornithology. Both
had a tremendous impact on my life. Their journey into the sun was uphill.
Siraj sahib was passionate about birds. That is how we met the first
time, at a meeting of the fledgling Birdwatcher’s Club of Andhra Pradesh [BCAP].
The fact that he was a generation older than me was never discussed between us,
while everything else was. The Hyderabad he grew up in, the social culture of tehzeeb that made him what he was, has
now vanished. He came to birds in the best way possible: First, pursuing them
for sport, once a gentlemanly pastime, played to exacting rules; then swerving
towards conservation, like so many of his enlightened contemporaries. I pressed
him once, to tell me why he gave up his gun. He’d shot a sambhar once, a poor
shot, he confessed. The injured stag blundered off into the forest. Raised in a
tradition that valued a pricked conscience, he decided to follow the stricken
animal and put out its agony. But the sambhar fought the inevitable for several
hours, staying either unsighted, or out of range from its pursuer. When finally
he caught up with it, the profusely bleeding animal was finished. The sight of
the dead animal, and the realization that here was a living being that need not
have died, had indeed tried to escape death, moved him immensely. With the
bursting of its heart, that sambhar converted its nemesis forever towards
conservation.
After a couple of outings together as part of the BCAP, we began to
hit it off. To this too, there was a quirky angle, which showed the apnapan of those days.
One evening he met an old school friend of his in Riyazath Husain’s
iconic bookshop on Abid Road, A. A. Husain & Co. After the pleasantries and
backslapping subsided, under the convivial eye of the senior Mr Husain, Siraj
sahib asked him, “Arre, ek bachcha ata
hai hamare chidiyon ke club mein. Tu
jaanta kya?” In a city steeped in social niceties, the use of the “tu” was reserved for those that were dear
to one; unlike the rough meaning it is ascribed today.
“Apna hi bachcha hai, Siraj,”
chuckled my father. Again that tehzeeb—not
the grasping “mera bachcha”, but the
inclusive, “apna”.
In the next outing, he stumped me with a loud, “Arrey, tum bolaich nahin ki Murari ke bete hain”. Seeing me taken aback, he chortled the bookshop
episode. After that, my birding outings had no querulous or disapproving looks
at home. I was going out with shareef log.
Thus began a life-long association with one of the finest people I’ve known. In
some matters he took me under his wing, in some we did things together.
That shareef quality of the
man, I think, was ultimately what drew so many people to the BCAP, which was
rechristened the Birdwatchers’ Society of Andhra Pradesh [BSAP] upon its
registration. The hierarchy of the organization was never apparent to any of
the participants. Except for Mr Pushp Kumar, top gun in the Andhra Pradesh
Forest Department, who was thus accorded a genteel deference by the elderly
birders, the subtle unsavouriness of implied superiority, whether of rank, or
knowledge, never left its residue on any of us youngsters. Everyone travelled
together in the forest department’s jeeps, all walked to where the birds were,
victuals were mutually partaken, and the day’s count discussed later in a much-anticipated
circle of friendship. Topical and irreverent banter, and repartee, were the
norm. This was an exceptional illustration of the altruistic spirit of those
who planned, promoted, popularized, and participated in this pastime. And to my
mind, the single factor that contributed to the organisation’s successful
promotion of an undoubtedly new concept of outdoor activity for the citizenry
of Hyderabad. Plus, who could deny that element of thrill, shrouded in the past
of fondly recalled boyhood days, of a Boy Scout’s revving adrenalin, of a golden
nostalgia that tugs adults to another shot at nirvana? The wilderness, and its
wildlings, does such things to men.
Every specialized activity has its own terminology, and ornithology
was replete with enough to confound a polyglot; its lexicon spanned classical
European languages, English, Sanskrit, and the immense mythologies of the
world’s cultures! This hurdle notwithstanding, our motley group soon cobbled
together a bristling argot of nicknames, abbreviated codes, hand and eye
signage, and often, a whistled mimicry of surprising drollness, pulsating with
distinct onomatopoeic bemusement. Newcomers stood stupefied by this bunch of
loonies telling time on a tree while trying to locate a bird! Siraj sahib was privy
to this notorious gang, and thoroughly enjoyed the perplexity of the
uninitiated. Being accepted into the group was considered a rite of passage.
His sense of fun was legendary. It often kept in good humour a tired,
flagging group returning after a day of slim pickings. A master raconteur, he spiced
tea breaks with stories from vintage days. In turns becoming
moist-eyed-sentimental for the Days of
the Beloved, or rasping street-slang Hyderabadi
in his baritone.
The
BSAP ‘pavilion’ at the first Pan-Asian Ornithological Conference in Coimbatore,
9–16 November 1996. L to R: Siraj Taher, M. S. Kulkarni, Noritaka Ichida
(Vice-President of BirdLife International, and Chairman, BirdLife Asia Council),
Tim Inskipp, and Maj. Ahmed Abdul Aziz. Photo: Aasheesh Pittie.
For Siraj sahib, every birder was special, and welcome to his home. I
met many heavyweights of the birding world there, and cannot recall even one
person who was not at as much ease, as he would be in his own drawing room. The
city’s birding lads walked in and out as if they were visiting their own homes.
To me it was always a special place. I went there for all the reasons that a
deepening friendship draws two people to spend time together. Our discussions
ranged from ornithology, to social behavior, politics, the philosophy of
morality, and ethics; the nuances of Urdu shayari;
the importance of art in comprehending the world; the unceasing turmoil that
was the status of our environment; the way to take the Society forward—several
ideas springing up spontaneously during conversation, which we worked on and
made something of. But the deepest moments were the silences we lapsed into
between words, ruminating, pondering, or simply savouring thoughts that rush in
at the end of a satisfying flow of words. I always took away the comforting
thought that here was someone who I could speak with about subjects that shone
with clarity once the polishing strokes of give and take had burnished their
cantankerous edges.
L
to R: Siraj Taher, Richard Grimmett, and Aasheesh Pittie (1996). Photo:
Aasheesh Pittie
The heady plan of collating our own checklist of the birds of Andhra
Pradesh was cast during one such evening. Why could we not do it? It was the
first step to more comprehensive ornithologies—but this was achievable by just
the two of us. As often happens, the force with which an idea hits one, it also
pushes out and lays bare methodologies for fructifying it in the same instant.
I do not think it took us more than half an hour to decide our workflow and
apportion our responsibilities. Subsequently, there must have been innumerable meetings
to iron out creases, to enjoy quaint discoveries in published accounts from the
past, to streamline every step so that both were on the same page with regard
to content, presentation, citation, taxonomy, etc. But there was no major
change; no rollback of methods; no U-turn on our road map.
Release
of the Checklist in 1989, in the
corridor of the A. P. Forest Dept., building. L to R: Maj. Ahmed Abdul Aziz,
Pushp Kumar IFS, S. Ashok Kumar. I am talking about the work, a stack of which
can be seen on the bottom left of the picture. Photo: Aasheesh Pittie.
Comparatively, the translation of the Birds of southern India, by Richard Grimmett and Tim Inskipp (2005),
into Telugu, was a minefield. Collaborations were imperative because he only
had a good working knowledge of the language, could be the ideal
Telugu-speaking ornithologist, but was not proficient enough to take on the entire
work himself. Translating the extensive lexicon of birding, into a language
that seemed to have no specific, definitive words to suit scientific
interpretations, had to be executed by a twin-nibbed pen: One, that wrote with
bold hearty strokes, delineating the work; the other, with the fine point,
working in all the telling details that illuminated the manuscript. I was the
troubleshooter who tried to unclog detritus in the workflow, to ensure smooth
progress. Not least of these was dealing with the names for the colours of
plumage, “brownish-yellow,” “blue-green”, etc. Ultimately we did get our own
Telugu colour palette! Siraj sahib worked hard and long at the manuscript, and
may have taken it through at least six proofs, after, often nerve-wracking
meetings with the translators. The fine pointed pens scratched away day and night,
and I would notice fresh stacks of papers during our daily meetings. He had
this thing for coloured inks and would mark up his sheets with differently
coloured inks, each colour linking a unique chain of thought. He wrestled with
extant Telugu bird names, which were invariably of a generic nature, and had
the distinction of coining dozens of new ones. But it was mighty frustrating
work, and often did I catch him in a reverie, absentmindedly sucking at the end
of a pencil. The lack of a consensus, the engine that could have driven this naming
work, rankled him. Invitees never bothered to respond, except a few, for which
he was so grateful. Dialect, that verbal filigree of distinctiveness within a
language, a culture, tortured him, till one day he realized the only way
forward was to ignore it. One could not please everyone. When published (2007),
it was a work that justified his sense of achievement, in that of his team, and
in his pride that the Society was a co-author.
Siraj
Taher speaking at the release function of the Telugu translation of Birds of southern India (2005) L to R:
A. K. Malhotra IFS PCCF APFD, Asad R. Rahmani (Director, Bombay Natural History
Society), and Shafaat Ulla. Photo: Aasheesh Pittie.
Siraj sahib, and indeed, Pushp Kumar, worked with an extraordinary
zeal to promote an awareness of birds among Hyderabad’s citizenry, and as a
consequence, highlighted the environment we collectively belong to. The media,
both print, and radio, smelled the potential of an unique angle to pitch
stories, and people began to discuss birds, the urban environment, and even the
activities of the BSAP! Birds have always attracted mankind, and when brought
out from the realms of literature, poetry, art, or even mythology, into the
ambit of casual conversation, they ushered delight, rekindled memory, nudged
people to look around and notice the natural world. The quiddity of our
surroundings during our growing up years is deeply ingrained in our bones,
recumbent though it may lie as we rush about our busy days. But comes a moment
when memory stirs, awakened by a petrichor sprinkled upon our passivity by
people like Siraj sahib, and a delightful facet of the natural world is
miraculously visible to us. Birds can charm the most indifferent of people!
If passion fuels altruism, the result is joyous. Siraj sahib’s
involvement with BSAP was such a phase of his life. Whether he was organizing a
field outing; writing in long hand the next month’s programme on all the post cards that he would himself
mail at the post office; correcting proofs of the Society’s publications;
sitting with the patience of a Buddha for various permissions from a forest
official; answering media persons, even when they came unprepared and posed
prosaic queries; preparing environmental assessment reports of places he deeply
cared about, like Kolleru Lake, and sending them to the concerned authorities
on behalf of the Society; speaking to students; chairing symposia—it was all
“for the birds”, as though he had an oath in heaven!
Siraj
Taher being honoured as the first President Emeritus of the Birdwatchers’
Society of Andhra Pradesh (30 August 2009). Standing L to R: K. Nanda Kumar,
Umesh Mani, Shanti Mani, Siraj Taher, K. Bhardwaj, and Shafaat Ulla. Seated L
to R: Aasheesh Pittie, J. V. D. Moorty, Sushil Kapadia, and M. S. Kulkarni.
Photo: Aasheesh Pittie.
And when his penchant for the living bird needed a rest, out would
come his philatelic collection, with birds
as its theme! He worked on it whenever he found time, and even displayed it
successfully (winning competitions) in several philatelic exhibitions. The
forest department regularly petitioned him to display it during their annual
Wildlife Week celebrations, and he would willingly oblige. After all, it
presented a fantastic opportunity to convert the visiting school kids to a
lifetime love of birds, and philately!
He took great pleasure in the company of life-long friends, in the
earthy delight of seasonal fruit, in the song of garden birds, in the pressure
of his granddaughter’s tiny hand around his finger. In a sense, he did see that
world in a grain of sand. And when the end came in the month of January of that
fateful year, he had a befitting farewell. A gentle evening descended; the
annual numaish that he enjoyed with
his dear Ayesha flung high its illuminated, rotating, giant-wheel; Mukesh’s poignant,
pathos-filled, “Jeena yahan, marna yahan”,
wafted from that direction; and as clods of his hometown earth sprinkled the
path of his onward journey, a pair of spotted owlets, his endearingly named Chakwa-Chakwi, exchanged yarns inside a
dusty tamarind.
Two months later, that other person, his friend, my father, too
passed away.
[1] The title is a reflection of Helen
Macdonald’s visceral account of coming to terms with her father’s death,
through the numbing ordeal of training a Goshawk. I’ve borrowed and changed her
book’s title, here, for recalling my time with Siraj sahib has been no less wrenching.
Too, he celebrated the shikra.