“Heyyyyyy Narrasshhhh”, screamed a raspy voice from the
other end of the telephone line. I bought time with a long, drawn out
“yeeeaasss?”, as I attempted to rapidly process and identify the owner of this
loud but not too familiar voice. Mr. Raspy-Voice at the other end did not wait
for recognition; he continued “Narraaash, this is Greg calling from the Deputy
Sheriff’s Association of California. Thanks brother for helping fellow brothers
out last year. Can I put you down for $20 this year as well?” “Aaah”, I said to
myself “this guy is selling me charitable contributions …. no ….. not this time
dude”. “Ahem, ahem..Greg”, I said, with barely a hint of familiarity. “I would
have loved to help out dude, but this year isn’t good…We've had some.....blah blah....”, I explained
with some arcane reason for not plonking another $20 down a worthless cause,
and quickly put the phone down.
I paused for a moment and then thought. Narrraashh! Nushley!
Nah-ley-aah! Norris! Gosh, how many times and how many different ways would
people mangle my name? Why can’t people get my name?
An avid sports & music buff, my dad had named me Naresh
as a tribute to the then-famous Indian tennis player Naresh Kumar (and my older
sibling Ravi Shankar was named so to honor the sitar maestro). My dad had
thoughtfully peppered my name with vowels to make pronouncing it a breeze. But
dad had only factored for Bongs and North Indians to have to deal with my name;
even in his wildest imagination, he would not have expected that, three decades
after his second born was named, that name would be on the tongues of Serbs and
Kosovans, Chinese, Malays and Indonesians, Australians, Irish, Spaniards, and
Germans, Egyptians, Iranians, and Lebanese, and by people from dozens of other
nations.
Within days of my landing in Singapore one summer day in
‘91, a commodity trader, by the name Ng Chee Song, tried to coax me into
joining a metals trading exchange. He had not bargained for a very very tough
start to our first meeting; his broad smile lasted only as long as his firm
handshake did. His misfortune began the minute he got hold of my business
card.; he stared into my card every few seconds hoping for some divine
intervention. After several failed attempts, and equal number of furtive glances
at my card, he cleared his throat and began yet another attempt at getting my
first name right “Na…na..na..sha ….. Nah..sha ……. Na…ley….” trying every
permutation and combination of the syllables that made up my name. And then he
nailed it…. or so he thought. He took a deep breath, wore a victorious smile,
and said emphatically “NA-SH-LEY”, completely certain that he had got it right
to the T. Convinced that he had gone past the first significant hurdle, he
decided on some small talk regarding names, with an aim to warm up the
atmosphere that had frozen still for several minutes as he was working on my
name. “Alamak!”, he exclaimed. “Your name one …aaah, vely vely diff-curt one
…aaah. Why you Indian people so diff-curt name one…aaah?” he enquired, with a pretty
preposterous look. Of course, he neither had much interest in my response, not
cared much for diction or grammar, as he continued his victory speech “See lah.
My Chinese name one …aaah….. simper one, lah. So easy one aaah, even aaah, you
Indian people asso can say onny. Vey-lee vey-lee simple one righ?” Basically,
he implied that “we Chinese” have dumbed down our names to make even “you
Indians” pronounce it easily. So I asked him how his name was to be pronounced.
“Vely eeasy lah”, he helpfully explained “My Chinese name
aaah…is Chee Song ….meh. And my last name is Ng”. And as he said his last name,
he let out a sound that seemed to emerge from some place between the stomach
and the bottom of the throat - a sound, rather than a word. I nodded sagely,
told him I got it, and that it was indeed simple. Wow! He had a sound for a
last name! It took me another two years to get Chinese surnames like “Ng”,
“Chng”, and “Sng” right. Oh yeah, what’s in a name. Indeed!
If the Chinese did this to my name, others were not far off.
The sophistication might have been different, but maul they did. More stories
on names of course on yet another blog, some other day.
Comments
Enjoyed thoroughly..
Thank you Noresh....lol..