So what is a boy to do?
Eight months in Kolkata yielded a few defensive phrases in Bengali and the ability to know when people were talking about me, but in no way it allowed me to actually communicate. Now I am in Mumbai, a city which has no use whatsoever for Bengali (money well spent on that Bengali tutor, eh?). Now I am back to the same sense of loss as the beginning. I am not imperialist enough to believe that everyone in the world should speak English; my mother tongue is Spanish after all. But I just wish that language learning wasn’t so difficult. Ugh!
I readily admit that I am lazy and require instant gratification. Hence, my little book-on-tape of “Teach Yourself Hindi” lays gathering dust on the side of my bed. I know that one-year in a country does not yield proficiency, but for god’s sake I just don’t want to be ripped off at the market.
Luckily I have a knack for pretending that I know what people are saying and looking convincing while I do it. It’s amazing how far into a conversation you can go with some smiling, nodding, and throwing in the occasional perfectly pronounce word of agreement. If that fails just giving a disinterested aloof look helps also. And if pushed into a corner just shrug your shoulders and put on your iPod (thank god for, and Chris for gifting it to me, isolationist technology). I guess it could be worse I could be in
But I do give it to Indians, significant numbers of people speak a minimum of two languages. A lot even speak three or more. Granted these are languages spoken only in
3 comments:
You're so right about the Americans! And bombay's a great place but my grouse is that people here dont read :( And pulp-fiction is NOT reading!
We're neighbors, you know? Why dont you drop in sometime to practice hindi with us?
:)
When in doubt - use the fabulous Indian invention also known as the rocking head shake. It's a multipurpose gesture that conveys agreement, non-confrontation, unconditional surrender, may-I-bend-over-now-?, or just a fuck-off, or any combination of the above.
Unfortunately, those "Teach Yourself Hindi" tapes aren't going to help you much in Mumbai, which speaks a unique dialect of Hindi known as Bambaiya. It's a bastardized soup of Hindi, Marathi and ghetto gangsta-speak.
Arre andy-bhai, abhi bhi hindi nahi sikhey? :) j/k:) I bet in a month, you'll be "abayy, kya bolti tu?"-ing everyone around; hindi is way easier to learn than bengali, I think. Especially Mumbai Hindi, if you don't remember a word, just drop it and say something else. If you don't remember subject-verb, male-female agreement, doesn't matter, no one will notice. It's a beautiful thing.
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