A few days ago, the results of Departmental Exams of IPS officers appeared in the Whatsapp IPS West Bengal Group of my phone. From Pankaj Dwivedi to Harikrishna Pathak. Two officers had passed completely, for the others a few remained to be cleared.The message just took me back to days over twenty five years ago, of writing those exams in alternate cycles of Calcutta’s muggy May and wonderful winter. The exams were held biannually at the WBPSC Bhavan which had been recently constructed - old timers talked about sitting in dimly lit halls somewhere near Sealdah for those departmentals.



The departmentals did not affect the inter se seniority,that is the seniority within the same batch like the exams at NPA, Hyderabad, and so were not taken up that seriously, but since failure could push back promotion for upto an year if not cleared within the five- six times, they were not ignored either. It meant not being promoted as an additional SP from SDPO after completion of four years of service ( and in my batch two out of seven , or was it three, had an extended six months as SDPO). No less important was the fact passing meant a jump from Basic Rs 2200/- scale to the Senior Scale of Rs. 3000/- scale , a very handsome, eagerly awaited pay rise in those difficult days.
The exams consisted of papers in Accounts and Law ( with books and without books) and a language paper, and it was compulsory for non- Bengali officers to pass in Bengali which consisted of three parts- Written, Oral or Viva and Dictation. Officers who passed all papers at one go were also rewarded with an extra increment, like the ones who underwent a vasectomy after two children. The Bengali paper for abanagalis deserves a separate narration, and I would do it shortly.
It was on a warm July in 1990, just after the taxing Passing Out Parade practice session at the National Police Academy, Hyderabad when I opened a mail my batchmate Zulfi had received from Government of West Bengal informing about the results of our first departmental held the previous December. We were a batch of seven from West Bengal cadre , and there were results of six of us. But surprisingly there was no mention of my name. I thought there has been an oversight, and I would chase it up once I returned to Bengal after finishing the second phase of training at Hyderabad.

'Boshun,' he offered me a chair, and went to open a dull green coloured almirah from which he took out a file and a register and started looking up for my results, turning the over pages with his spit coated middle finger. I also craned my neck to offer help. After sometime, he located the relevant page, read something with furrowed eyebrows, then looked at me deeply , asked me to settle back in my chair, rubbed his eyes, and after allowing for the phosphenes to fade, exhaled . I thought he was going to tender some apology for an oversight which he had just detected. I prepared myself to be magnanimously forgiving, straightened the creases of my frown and promptly wore a smile.
'Mishter Sho Hai, the results are sent to candidates who have either passed completely or partially, but as per the rule, no communication is required to be made with candidates who have not cleared a single paper, ' he started to explain the rule position, as most clerks do before they deliver the punch. But for people who are used to deliver the punch through the impersonal letters and telegraphic signals, the sudden emergency to deliver it personally to an agitated and flustered IPS officer in ceremonial uniform was too much, and Malakar Babu waited for me to infer and grasp the enormity of the mishap.
'So I have failed in all the papers?' I asked, betraying no emotion of my disbelief. He nodded, words failed him at my quick realization, and in sheer gratitude for my composure , he drew up a long and sad face to join me in my personal grief.
'Mishter Sho Hai,' he said in a voice brimming with sympathy and encouragement,' chinta korben na, if this time you have failed subjectively, next time you will pass subjectively '. I got up as I felt no need to discuss the subject anymore, and it was just as well as I could see from the corner of my eyes that some other clerks were walking towards us, and would probably subject me to more ridicule.
I ran down the six floors without waiting for the lift, and, shelved my plan to visit New Market, and instead asked Barrister Singh to drive straight to Barrackpur and look up my friend Sanjay Chander who was recuperating with a long plaster over a leg fractured in a law and order situation which had turned violent at Gourisankar Jute Mills.
He was delighted to see me, and as I narrated the PSC experience, his pain considerably lessened, as pains normally do in the face of bigger pains. I cleared all my papers except written Bengali in the second attempt, and passed Written Bengali even before Bankim Chandra Ramesh. But for quite some time , my wonder had not diminished even one bit as to how I managed to flunk each of the papers till my my first Superintendent of Police enlightened me , a year later, with a sublime piece of truth - Je kono ghatna ghot te par e or any thing can happen. But about that Mahabodhi session some other time.
Heard this from Mr. SHO HAI so many times with proper articulation and action yet this running down the stairs without waiting for the lift is hilarious every single time!! Black humour at its best when the subject subjects himself to a situation of subjective fail /pass !!
ReplyDeleteOnly some people can consciously make fun of themselves and enjoy it!
But eagerly waiting for the phony thing that got you going there in the first place!
Frankly, even that Malakar Babu was way too zapped!
DeleteWhat a diary of thoughts shared here Vivek Bhaiya ...
DeleteI can imagine yur expression on malakars reconfirmation as these most malakars r anti SOHAI most times at least in giving favourable news ...got rid of my uber Malakar couple of days back.....😟😟😊😃.
Did U over step the flight of stairs while coming down 😃 .
Love these short narratives ...U got a loyal pen for sure .
Excellent write up .So you can write in Bengali great.
ReplyDeleteSir
ReplyDeleteGrt summing up of a never ending phenomenon. It reborns every year dispelling a variety of feelings among aspirants. For some it has been ranked above UPSC as it demands more attempts to clear.
Khoob bhalo!!
ReplyDeleteI was in love with Calcutta right from the day we came to know that Sho Hai babu had been allotted Bengal cadre. It was like a vacation trip for me to come over to Calcutta those days-from Burdwan and then Tamluk . We ladywives would explore New Market, the streets and restaurants of Calcutta. Portions of city looked as if some excavation was in progress - some stretches of Metro were still under construction. There were more trams and handpulled rickshaws. The written Bengali paper ensured that we got such breaks numerous times:)
ReplyDeleteI remember, one or two lady wives who were so keen types that they took tuitions for Bengali alongwith their husbands....so dedicated they were ;)
Papa Sho Hai, a whirlwind of a write up! I have got to learn the tricks of narration and subtle humor from you!
ReplyDeleteNot fair this blog. Too short. Not used to such short spurt of blogotainment from you. But the narrative was so typical of you Sho Hai. Your experience of course in contrast to mine with the Gujarati Exam where I topped a batch of two officers!!
ReplyDeleteGood to see you join the litterati who 'make them(the readers)laugh and then think'.Retaining the signature detailing of self deprecation,witty elaboration,empathy with a wink--and commenting on the contemporary environ at the same time.
ReplyDeleteNice piece. Waiting for the master piece which I know WILL come.
Wah! Too good.
ReplyDeleteKi darun self-deprecating misti article - kintu finally how many attempts Sho Hai Babur holo?
ReplyDeleteHebby
ReplyDeleteInteresting reading. But I am still trying to figure out the meaning of "Mishter Sho Hai".
ReplyDeleteAn interesting read, Sho hai sir. It took us back to those days when we used to visit PSC to write the notorious departmental exam. On an average, AIS officers took more number of attempts to clear this exam than the UPSC one.
ReplyDeleteVivek ...couldn't have been written better by anyone I know of. ...
ReplyDeleteAh! I can understand your pain of missing that feel the excitement of increment post vasectomy, err i mean the similar feel after clearing all papers in one go. Trust the Humour Master, Vivek Sahay to compare the Uncomparable. I know why you flunked, it was the Vishwa Hindu Hotel ;-)
ReplyDeleteBTW, it was damn hilarious, you know how to tickle. enjoyed it thoroughly.
A great memory well recounted. I also remember that decrepit first story hall in the midst of Sealdah chaos at the corner of MG Road where i wrote my bengali exam sternly supervised by a highly oiled back brushed hirsute bengali invigilator who had rings on all his fingers and his shirt pocket swollen with god knows what stuff. He was pacing up and down my isle only because in the other one a serving SDPO in his full regalia and carrying his service revolver dangling by his waist was appearing for the third time determined to clear the exam. He eventually cleared it this time.Uniform does wonders! And not to miss those passages from Kapal Kundala that one was supposed to translate. Indeed the small joys we savoured those days...
ReplyDeleteThe Departmentals must have been a torture and learning the local language a big challenge. Your 'graphic memory, pacy delivery of y'years memories & the Bong tongue with its love for 'O' was great fun to read MISHTER SHO HAI. Enjoyed , Truly ��
ReplyDelete😊😀😃😆
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