Pandit Jasraj

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Personal glimpses

Humanity: Singing to a 6-year-old fan

Anam Ajmal, August 19, 2020: The Times of India

A surprise visit from an unexpected person long ago still remains one of the most enduring family stories for the Khandekars. Twenty-six years ago, Pandit Jasraj came unannounced to their home in south Delhi’s Alaknanda to meet Kedar Khandekar, then six years old, who was born with cerebral palsy.

What prompted that visit in 1994 was a letter written by Kedar’s grandmother, Vijaya Khandekar, to the maestro, telling him about the boy’s obsession with Hindustani classical music in general, and Pt Jasraj’s songs in particular.


Pt Jasraj Struck The Right Notes With His Humanity

Jasraj’s music was an indispensable part of the household, with Kedar having taken a liking to it when he was just an infant. “Our son, Kedar, was born in 1988 with severe cerebral palsy – he could neither talk nor even sit without support. When he was just a couple of years old, he took great fondness to Hindustani classical music. Pt Jasraj’s numbers were his favourites,” Kedar's father, Sreekant, wrote in a tribute to the maestro.

This had led Kedar's grandmother to post a letter to the maestro's house in Mumbai about the little boy's “obsession”. In the letter, she also expressed a desire for Jasraj to drop by whenever possible and bless Kedar. “When Aai wrote that letter, we did not expect Jasraj to show up at our house. But just a few days later, the bell rang and it was Jasraj, waiting patiently at the door,” Sreekant told TOI.

“We were all out on work and Aai was alone at home. When she opened the door, there was Jasraj on the doorstep asking, ‘Where is Kedar’?” Sreekant recounted. Kedar was in school, and would have taken another half-anhour to return, but Jasraj decided to stay, and made himself comfortable in the living room. When Kedar finally returned, Jasraj greeted him warmly, asked Aai about his favourite classical numbers and proceeded to sing a few.

“Aai told us later that Kedar was mesmerised. He sat still and kept staring at Jasraj. He couldn’t fathom how the voice that used to come from the cassette player was emerging from this stranger’s mought! One of the songs, I remember, was the perennially popular Rani Tero Chirjeeyo Gopal,” Sreekant added.

The visit was a reflection of Jasraj’s humanity, said Sreekant, while narrating how his family had hosted Jasraj in their home in Maharashtra’s Amravati on a few occasions. “My grandfather, Kashinath Khandekar, was passionate about Hindustani classical music and while he was not well off, he would put up travelling musicians at his home. Jasraj was one of them,” Sreekant wrote.

But even he had not expected the legendary vocalist to turn up at their Delhi home. “My mom and dad had lost touch with Jasraj over the decades. But he remembered his beginning, even when he became famous and was traveling all over the country for his music. How many artists honour their decades-old associations?” Sreekant asked.

Kedar, who passed away at the age of 22 in 2010, continued to listen to Jasraj’s music all his life. “Kedar could not speak, so it is hard to fathom what he thought of when he listened to music. But he was bound to Jasraj’s music,” Sreekant said, while narrating how Kedar “discovered” Jasraj's music. “It had taken us some time to understand that Kedar wasn’t fond of nursery rhymes that children his age would generally listen to. We changed a lot of cassettes before we arrived at Jasraj's classical music. Once Kedar heard it, he nodded approvingly and over the next few years, we ended up playing Jasraj's songs several times a day."

“Then 64, Jasraj was at the peak of his singing career – both immensely popular and terribly busy. But he immediately made time (and missed a connecting train, by the way) to honour an old, old relationship. I can’t imagine many who would have done that. And certainly not for a sixyear-old they had not even met,” Sreekant concluded.

A few years later, Sreekant's wife ran into Jasraj's daughter Durga at an event and told her of her father's generosity. “That's baba for you,” replied Durga, affirming that the vocalist was more than just his art.

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