Swathanthryam Ardharathriyil 'link' -
“You left a boy,” Kunjipilla said, his voice cracking. “You come back a stranger. A stranger who has seen more of India than I have of my own backyard. I do not know if I can forgive you for the pain you gave your mother.”
“At the stroke of the midnight hour, when the world sleeps, India will awake to life and freedom…” swathanthryam ardharathriyil
Kunjipilla walked to the wooden pillar where a urlan (a long, bronze measuring vessel) stood—a symbol of their trade. He picked it up, and for a terrifying second, everyone thought he would strike Unni. Instead, he poured a measure of fresh coconut water into a brass tumbler and walked toward his son. “You left a boy,” Kunjipilla said, his voice cracking
Outside, in the village, torches were lit. Men were shouting, “Jai Hind!” Women were coming out of their homes, crying and laughing. But inside the Tharavad, there was a quieter revolution. The midnight hour had not just given India its freedom. It had given Kunjipilla back his son, and it had given Unnikrishnan permission to finally be a child again—if only for one night. I do not know if I can forgive
The family wept. The servants peeped from the kitchen. The old grandmother, deaf for a decade, suddenly looked up and whispered, “Is it over?”
It was August 14, 1947. The air in Puthuvype, a sleepy island off the coast of Cochin, was thick with the smell of brine, fish, and a new, unnamed hope. For fifty-two-year-old Kunjipilla, the Pradhan of the house, the day had been one of agonizing silence. He had shaved meticulously, worn a crisp white mundu , and sat by the wireless radio since dusk. Around him, the family gathered—his wife, his three sons back from various corners of British-controlled Burma and Malaya, and their wide-eyed children.
For seven years, the only news came in smuggled letters and whispered rumors. He was in the INA with Netaji. He was in a Bombay jail. He was dead. His mother lit a lamp every evening, refusing to believe the last one.