53 long years ago, Ruskin Bond made Mussoorie his home

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53 long years ago, Ruskin Bond made Mussoorie his home

Tuesday, 10 May 2016 | JASKIRAN CHOPRA | Mussoorie

More than half a century has gone by since the time when renowned author Ruskin Bond chose to settle down in Mussoorie after realising that  life in big cities was not his cup of tea.

After fulfilling his dream of  becoming a writer, twenty- nine-year old Bond was clear that it was now time to fulfill his other dream-that of living in the hills. In 2011, Bond completed sixty years of writing and in 2013, he completed fifty years of being in landour, Mussoorie. Mussoorie would never be the same without his  benevolent presence.

“It is really amazing. I was thirty when I came to landour, following my dream of being a resident of this Himalayan town,” said Bond while speaking to The Pioneer. Bond’s  name has become synonymous with Mussoorie and Dehradun, with stories of simple people, told tongue-in–cheek and with an all–embracing warmth and candour.

Ruskin Bond is no longer just a writer. He means many things to many people. An icon of excellence for some, an inspiration for others, a symbol of simplicity and good humour for many and a weaver of exquisite tales for a lot of his admirers and fans.

This  grand old “writer on the hill” believes that he is fortunate that God gave him a long writing life. “I have been writing for sixty five years and making a living out of it! I really feel blessed as I have lived the life I wanted to. Not all people can claim to have done that. I consider myself very fortunate and blessed by the gods to have had a life without too much distress and disappointment. I have followed my instinct more than intelligence.”

“I made Mussoorie my home more than half a century ago and for me the prospect of having to leave the hills for more than a couple of days brings discomfort. The mountains are in my blood. The birds and trees, the flowers and even the little insects in the wilderness near my home in landour Cantonment are close to my heart. It is among them that I like to spend most of the time which I get when I am not doing what I love doing best-writing.”

Ivy Cottage is his little haven in the hills. He has always loved mountains. In “Kim”, Kipling wrote-Who goes to the hills, goes to his mother.

“living in the hills is like living in the bosom of a strong, sometimes proud, but always comforting mother. Every time I go away from here the homecoming is warmer and sweeter,” says Bond.

He says had he not decided to make Mussoorie his home he  may have been a different person today. “There’s nature all around me. My shrubbery is my favourite place. Watching nature change its colours with the changing seasons enchants me. The sparrows are here all the year round. And so are the thrushes. It is summer and fruit-eating birds have arrived. The presence of these birds adds tranquility to my life.”

The writer-in-residence in this hill town, Bond wrote his first book The Room on the Roof at the age of sixteen. The work has the Doon valley as its backdrop and paints an endearing picture of the pristine beauty of the valley in the 1950s. Generations of children have been studying the book as a text in school.

Ruskin Bond has a gentle charm. It has kept him going even as he wanders around the hill side identifying wildflowers for children or just listening patiently to the local baker’s complaint of poor yeast and as the years have gone by, he has become a living legend, an institution.

Having long ago, effortlessly, crossed his ‘century’ of published titles, Ruskin Bond has maintained his integrity as a writer and has worked towards his goals with single-minded devotion. Perhaps his greatest achievement is that he has persevered in his dream of becoming a full-time writer. And he writes for those ‘gentle readers’ who are interested in the beauty of nature and the dignity in the lives of ordinary people rather than in stormy events.

His stories achieve a universal quality that transcends the regional locale and endorses the human endeavor to survive against odds and to preserve what is beautiful and meaningful.

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