Monday, December 5, 2011

Dev Anand’s village has hazy memories of the star


Dev Anand
The last time Bollywood actor Dev Anand visited his hometown was to attend the last rites of his brother in October 1971

Gharota (Gurdaspur), December 5
Not many in Gharota, where Dev Anand was born as Dharam Dev Pishori Anand on September 26, 1923, remember the legend. The village elders have but hazy memories of the actor. However, septuagenarian Sadhu Ram, who remained in touch with the film icon till a decade ago, was a picture of melancholy.
“Dev Sahib, like a falling star, has disappeared into the darkness forever,” he said, his voice quivering.
Locals said the ancestral house of the Anand family in this hamlet, 22 km from Gurdaspur, was sold for a pittance by the film icon’s father, the affluent advocate Pishori Lal, several decades ago.
The family then moved to nearby Gurdaspur where they lived on rent at the busy Amaamvara Chowk in the heart of the city. Senior Advocate Balraj Mohan, a close friends of Dev Anand’s father, said: “Dev was a reticent person. He studied at the government boys’ school near the old bus stand. His mother was a dignified and deeply religious lady. His father was a leading lawyer of Gurdaspur, whose sole endeavour in life was to provide first-grade education to his children. “I started my practice in 1968 and it was then when I first met Pishori Lal. He was fond of cigarettes and had a good command over Persian and Arabic. He was fond of reciting Urdu poetry to his sons Manmohan Anand, Chetan Anand, Dev Anand and Vijay Anand. Barring the eldest Manmohan, who became an advocate, the other three went on to make a name for themselves in tinsel town.”
Said lawyer Pushkar Nand, Dev Anand’s distant kin: “During the summer vacations, Pishori Lal would rent a small cottage owned by an Englishman (Robinson) in Dalhousie and the family would stay there.”
Dev Anand did his FSc from Government College, Dharamsala, and his graduation from Government College, Lahore, with English Honours.
The actor was very close to his mother, recalled a Gharota resident. “Once she developed TB and Dev, accompanied by a friend, would daily travel to Amritsar, 40 km away, on a bus to buy medicines for her till she finally recovered.”
Local residents said the last time Dev Anand visited Gurdaspur was to attend the last rites of Manmohan, then chairman of the Punjab Khadi Board, in October 1971. After that the actor severed all ties with his native town.
One of the actor’s best friends, 90-year-old advocate Sukhdev Aggarwal, tried to speak about him but was overcome by emotion.

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