I remember the summers when days were long and the
nights were short, and life felt free
I also remember how great it felt to leave mosque at 7.30pm so
I could get home just in time for the A-team.
Not that it was good to leave mosque but give me a break.
I finished school at 3.30pm leaving me an hour and a half
before to get home and get ready before I would have to start mosque at 5pm.
Alright, I got to watch my Captain Planet during that short period but what about
Grange Hill and Blue Peter? Did i miss something important?
Whilst sitting behind my graffiti ridden bench (sorry to the mosque, i was one of the culprits) I would see
the Molvi (mosque teacher) looking around to see who was talking or sniggering.
Every now and then you would get called to the front of the class and if
you didn't know anything you got whacked on your hand (Corporal Punishment - use to happen back in the days but no longer happens). The secret to not
getting hurt was NOT to pull your hand away at the last second - take the pain
otherwise the stick will hit your finger tips and that kills.
In the winter one of my friends would come in wearing gloves
thinking the Molvi wouldn't notice. It didn't work then and doesn't today.
I got hit once because I didn't know my dad’s name. What
kind of question is that to ask anyone? Dad's name is.........dad of course.
And there was always a kid who'd call his parents in to talk
to the teachers. "Daddy, daddy the Molvi hit me because I was wearing a huge fake diamond earring in class" what a snitch (and a doofus for wearing an earring on one ear) . He'd get 'special' treatment after that
because his modern family was too good for our mosque.
There was a thief among us once. He was nicking everyone's
brand new shoes (we had a Tommy Balls style shoe rack, so it was like an open sale). Nobody ever found out who he (or she, got to be PC) was. It was only after one of the
mosque committee members 'Bata' Jhuthees (Indian branded shoes) went missing did things get out of
hand. The solution - to keep the front door shut.
Parent Teacher days were great. All the parents would come in
to see how much their sons and daughters had learnt about life and stuff.
Unfortunately some of us still hadn't mastered the 'Patee'*.
One time I was truant from mosque during the World Cup but
the Molvi sent another kid to my house to check where I was. When the S*** hit the
fan so did I, especially when they found out I'd been spending the Friday fees
on 'Fab' Ice lollies.
*Patee: A plastic A5 sheet with the alphabet on it or
'Tupti' for our Gujarati readers.
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