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| Kathmandu, Tuesday May 07, 2002 Baishakh 24, 2059. |
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Performing rituals? Visit this
shop for all your needs
By Suvecha Pant
KATHMANDU, May 6:Be it the festival season or a
religious ceremony performed to mark birth or death in the family, it demands meticulous
preparation year after year. Women folk busy themselves preparing for marriage rituals,
rituals held to close the mourning period, function held to introduce the newly born to
solid food and so on and so forth.
Problems, for most, lie in arranging required
materials, which usually demands going for shopping over a period of time. In fact, it is
not only a time-consuming task, but also demands patience and sense of where to begin
from.
However, much of the problem stand ruled out if
the household has older members whom can tell what to do under the circumstances.
Conversely, the families, which do not have older members, have to confer with family,
that might have conducted related rituals at that point of time.
But this does not in any way avert the need to
run from shop to shop. For, once the long list of the items is drawn up, it is time to run
from one shop to another. And fast enough. Usually, one has to even book some
items a month in advance.
"I dont know if I will be able to
finish shopping on time," said a tired and frustrated shopper, Shanti Khadka, outside
a shop in busy Ason. "My nephew is getting married in a week and I have to arrange
things before that."
The fact that it is a tough task to arrange
required things becomes evident from what she said further. "I think we will have to
make do without these items
If only there was a shop which offered all the
items," Khadka said demonstrating the frustration.
There are many families taking turns of going
around the city looking for necessary items. But it is also true that there are people who
procure every item from the self-same shop whatever the occasion.
Welcome to Hem Narsingh Ko Pasal ( a shop, which
deals in everything, needed for all the rituals ( nestled in the midst of temples and
ancient monuments in Patan Durbar Square. If you did not know, the shop goes back to over
a hundred and fifty years.
Fourth generation members of the Narsingh family
run the shop. Prakash Narsingh Amatya and his wife are devoting their lives to keep up the
family tradition.
"This shop belonged to my family dating
back to generations," says Amatya, adding that the same was an ancestral heritage
rather than a shop. ""I have taken over the responsibility to keep up the
tradition."
Equally interesting aspect is that it is open
round the clock and seven days a week. Whenever anyone wants anything from the shop, he or
she can call out Amatya, who stays upstairs.
"We are ready to serve our clients at any
time, says Amatya adding, that the shop belonged to growing numbers of customers.
There ïs a long list of people who are his
regular customers by now. They range from lowly citizens to the leading lights of the
nation, including the incumbent Prime Minister. Whats more, the shop is known to
export required items to Hong Kong and London.
But this upward mobility of sorts has not set in
any sense of complacency in the family. Someone who mans the shop sitting by his wife,
Amatya offers free sweets to small children, who accompany parents to the shop. He has
personal rapport with each customer who he welcomes with a big smile on his face.
The four-room shop is full of assortment of
items. "You can get everything from rock salt from Tibet to gold," says Amatya,
which perfectly describes his shop.
Yet another feature of the shop is that one has
to just name the rituals one expects to conduct, before the required items start falling
in shopping bags. The "must list" of items, passed down from generations, has
everything under the sun in it.
"Its much like a supermarket where
you get all the items you need under one roof," said Sharada Shrestha, a customer.
"I have been buying from here for many years because the shop has everything I need
from time to time. The shopkeeper is very kind and friendly," she said in
appreciation.
There are too many like her who are known to be
buying from the shop since generations even as new customers are joining the old.
"I heard about this shop from a friend at
the time when I was busy buying things for my sons wedding," said Smita Khadka.
She has been buying from the shop ever since that memorable event in her life.
Meanwhile, the importance of the shop lies in
the fact that it is the only shop, which sells sadewa and sadewi. Both are species of
plants believed to have the power to attract the member of the opposite sex romantically.
It is believed that if one carries this plant in
his/her pocket and touches someone of the opposite sex, the one who is so touched is
likely to start dreaming of the carrier of the miraculous plant. An excellent item, for
the romantically challenged, this.
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