Class 9 English Chapter 6 NCERT Solutions | My Childhood Class 9 English Beehive
Question 1:
Answer these questions in one or two sentences each.
1. Where was Abdul Kalam’s house?
ANSWER: Abdul Kalam’s house was on the Mosque Street in Rameswaram in the former Madras
state.
2. What do you think Dinamani is
the name of? Give a reason for your answer.
ANSWER: Dinamani could be the
name of a newspaper
because Abdul Kalam used to try to trace the stories of the Second World War,
which his brother-in-law told him, in the headlines in Dinamani.
3. Who were Abdul Kalam’s school
friends? What did they later become?
ANSWER: Abdul Kalam had three close friends in school – Ramanandha Sastry, Aravindan and Sivaprakasan.
Ramanandha Sastry took over the priesthood of the Rameswaram temple from his
father; Aravindan started a business of arranging transport for visiting
pilgrims; and Sivaprakasan became a catering contractor for the Southern
Railways.
4. How did Abdul Kalam earn his first
wages?
ANSWER: During the Second World War, the newspapers were bundled and thrown out
of a moving train. Abdul Kalam earned his first wages by helping his cousin,
who distributed newspapers in Rameswaram, to catch these bundles.
5. Had he earned any money before that?
In what way?
ANSWER: Yes, Abdul Kalam had earned some money before he
started helping his cousin. He used to collect and sell tamarind seeds at a
provision shop, during the Second World War, earning one anna for a day’s
collection.
Question 2:
Answer each of these questions
in a short paragraph (about 30 words).
1. How does the author describe: (i)
his father, (ii) his mother, (iii) himself?
ANSWER: (i) Kalam’s father, Jainulabdeen was not a
wealthy or educated person. However, he was an honest and generous man, who
possessed great innate wisdom. He was self-disciplined and avoided all
inessential luxuries.
(ii) Kalam’s mother, Ashiamma was an ideal helpmate to her husband. She believed in
goodness and profound kindness, and fed many people everyday.
(iii) The author describes himself as a short boy with undistinguished
looks, who had a secure childhood. He is an honest and self-disciplined person,
who believes in goodness and deep kindness.
2. What characteristics does he say he
inherited from his parents?
ANSWER: The author inherited honesty and
self-discipline from his father, and faith in goodness and deep kindness from
his mother.
Question 3:
Discuss
these questions in class with your teacher and then write down your answers in
two or three paragraphs each.
1. “On the whole, the small society of
Rameswaram was very rigid in terms of the segregation of different social
groups,” says the author.
(i) Which social groups does he
mention? Were these groups easily identifiable (for example, by the way they
dressed)?
ANSWER: (i) The author mentions the two major
religious groups of India—Hindus and Muslims—as the social groups predominant
in Rameswaram.
Yes, these groups were easily identifiable. The factors that demarcated
these groups from one another were their dressing sense and the place they
lived in. Abdul Kalam wore a cap, which marked him as a Muslim. Besides, he
lived on the Mosque Street. On the other hand, his friend, Ramanandha Sastry,
wore the sacred thread as he belonged to an orthodox Hindu Brahmin family.
(ii) Were they aware only of their
differences or did they also naturally share friendships and experiences?
(Think of the bedtime stories in Kalam’s house; of who his friends were; and of
what used to take place in the pond near his house.)
ANSWER: They naturally shared friendships and
experiences. Abdul Kalam was a Muslim while his friends were from orthodox
Hindu Brahmin families. However, they were tied with a strong bond of
friendship. Besides this friendship, during the annual Shri Sita Rama Kalyanam
ceremony, Kalam’s family arranged boats with a special platform for carrying
idols of the Lord from the temple to the marriage site. Moreover, events from
the Ramayana and from the life of the Prophet were the bedtime stories his
mother and grandmother would tell the children of their family. All these
incidents show that different social groups co-inhabited in Rameswaram.
(iii) The author speaks both of people
who were very aware of the differences among them and those who tried to bridge
these differences. Can you identify such people in the text?
ANSWER: Kalam mentions two people who were
very aware of the differences among the two religious groups. One of them was
the new teacher of Abdul Kalam’s school, who did not let Abdul Kalam and his
friend, Ramanadha Sastry, sit together.
The second person was the wife of Sivasubramania Iyer (Abdul Kalam’s
science teacher). She was very conservative and did not want Kalam to eat in
her pure Hindu kitchen.
The people who tried to bridge these differences were Lakshmana Sastry
(Ramanadha’s father) and Sivasubramania Iyer (his science teacher).
(iv) Narrate two incidents that show
how differences can be created, and also how they can be resolved. How can
people change their attitudes?
ANSWER: When Kalam was in the fifth standard,
a new teacher came to his class. The teacher was a bigot and could not tolerate
Kalam, who was a Muslim, to sit with Ramanandha Sastry, who was a Hindu
priest’s son. Thus, he changed Kalam's seat. This broke the heart of the two
boys. When Ramanandha Sastry’s father came to know about it, he rebuked the
teacher for spreading communal intolerance in the minds of innocent children.
The teacher apologized and regretted his behaviour.
In another incident, Kalam’s science teacher, Sivasubramania Iyer,
invited Kalam for a meal to his house. But his conservative wife refused to
serve a Muslim in her pure Hindu kitchen.
The unperturbed teacher, served Kalam himself and even invited him for
another meal the next weekend. Iyer believed that once a person has decided to
change the system, such problems have to be confronted. However, by Kalam's
next visit, Iyer’s wife’s views had changed. She took Kalam inside her kitchen
and served him food with her own hands.
Hence, attitudes can
change if we take initiative to resolve the differences and be the change we
want to see.
2. (i) Why did Abdul Kalam want to
leave Rameswaram?
ANSWER: Kalam wanted to leave Rameswaram for
further studies. He wanted to study at the district headquarters in
Ramanathapuram.
(ii) What did his father say to this?
ANSWER: After giving his consent to Kalam for
pursuing his higher studies in Ramanathapuram, Kalam’s father said that he knew
Kalam had to go away to “grow” and follow his dreams.
He gave the analogy of a seagull that flies across the sun alone,
without a nest. He then quoted Khalil Gibran to Kalam’s mother, saying that
their children were not their own. They were the “sons and daughters of Life’s
longing for itself”. They “come through” their parents, “but not from” them.
Parents may give love to their children, but not their “thoughts”, as children
have “their own thoughts”.
(iii) What do you think his words mean?
Why do you think he spoke those words?
ANSWER: The words he spoke reveal his
viewpoint. He believed that at some point of time, children will leave their
home and parents, to follow their dreams and to grow as an individual. Just
like a seagull flies away alone and finds its own food and nest, children will
leave their parents to make their own life and family. Parents can merely
nurture their children with love. They cannot give them their thoughts. The
children have their own opinions and beliefs.
He spoke these words to comfort Kalam’s mother, who was probably
hesitant to let Kalam leave Rameswaram. Besides, he could also be consoling his
own self for the same.
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