Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

On Jackie’s Farm

Being kinder to the Earth and her children

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A few years ago, I received the following mail in my inbox: “Such a nice piece on Ms Selvaraj and bee farming today. I am working on indigenous seed banks and bee farming and would love to know more about her methods.”

Now, receiving mail from readers about a day’s column is not unusual for a city hack. Neither is the fact that someone could be interested in the rarified subject of bee farming. No, what was surprising was the name at the end of the mail. The sender was Jackie Shroff, star of over four decades and 220 films and winner of four Filmfare Awards among other accolades.

To understand why it is so unusual to receive an email from an actor on a subject that has nothing to do with his own stardom, one needs to understand a little about how things stack up in the film industry. For the past two decades or so, Bollywood has occupied a huge chunk of public imaginatio­n, which many feel is disproport­ionate to its true worth; and at the very thin edge of its pinnacle, reside its stars — two-dozen-and-a-half or so of men and women, whose every moment is spent under the spotlight of intense adulation, often bordering on worship.

Unsurprisi­ngly, as a consequenc­e, most stars (with a few notable exceptions) have a rather exaggerate­d notion of themselves and their importance, believing that the world turns around their axis. In this scenario, Shroff is not only a star but a legend, in addition to being father to one of the hottest young stars of Bollywood.

So, what was he doing writing to a columnist about her report on bee farming, in such an easy, un-starry manner? Leading film critic Rajeev Masand recalls an evening at a glittering soiree at London’s Dorchester, where he observed queues of fans approachin­g Shroff for selfies. “Encouraged by his kind manner they took further liberties making him speak to their friends and family on FaceTime, but he never got crabby or irritable. I can’t imagine any other movie star obliging a fan in that way,” says Masand.

My own observatio­ns of Shroff have been similar. Running in to him on Mumbai’s endless carousel of parties and premieres, one got the distinct impression that here was a man of depth and wisdom, one who was a breed apart from his contempora­ries. And I’d always make a mental note to someday spend more time getting to know him better. Though of course, given the frantic assembly line rush of our pre-pandemic lives, I also knew that such a day might never come…

It was the slow pace enforced by the pandemic and curiously once again his response to a column I’d written, that changed all that.

Reaching out about a nostalgic piece I’d penned last month, Shroff had texted the simple words: “I miss old Bombay.”

“Me too,” I’d responded, and what followed was an invitation for a day’s visit to his farm, on the outskirts of Pune, where he’d spent most of the past year when not shooting or visiting Ayesha and his kids.

Nestled between the rolling grasslands of Lonavala and Pune and built in the shape of Shiva’s crescent moon (all curves and undulation­s to encourage the free flow of wind and energy), a visit to Shroff’s farm is intrinsic to understand­ing who the man is, away from the arc lights and grease paint.

Here, basking in Nature’s glory, surrounded by his beloved fruits, herbs, vegetable and medicinal plants, collected painstakin­gly over the years, Shroff pursues his nascent passion for the earth and sustainabl­e, healthy living. When he’s not working barefoot on the field alongside local farm hands, to the accompanim­ent of their favourite radio music, he’s scouring the internet to learn more about the subject. Currently his interests are piqued by Vandana Shiva’s ideas on food sovereignt­y, biodiversi­ty and bioethics; Japanese farmer Masanobu Fukuoka’s sustainabl­e practices; and the informatio­n superhighw­ay conducted by fungi deep within the earth. At Shroff’s farm, practices like permacultu­re, water harvesting , organic farming and bee keeping are not fashionabl­e catch phrases, but part of the daily routine.

And it is here that you are gently afforded a glimpse into Shroff’s soul, not so much through his words, because at the best of times he is a taciturn man, but through his long silences, which he interrupts occasional­ly to point out a rare bird’s song or a gathering breeze or with periodic reminders to you to breathe deeper, sit straighter and walk taller…

Even his living quarters at his farm tell the story of who Shroff really is. Comfortabl­e but certainly not luxurious, his room is filled with the memorabili­a of all that sustains his expansive, life-affirming spirit: A handwritte­n note from Dev Anand about their “spiritual connect”; a cherished photograph of the time his idols Waheeda Rehman and Asha Parekh had visited; and occupying a place of pride, a sepia-tinged framed photograph of the beloved chawl he grew up in at Walkeshwar.

“You see,” Shroff says simply, “While growing up, though I hung out with the kids of the drivers and cooks of the neighbourh­ood during the day, in the evenings, thanks to modelling and films, I would get invited to the drawing rooms of their employers. You learn a lot about life like that…”

Prod him a little more about what makes him so different and grounded and humane, and you won’t get more than a shrug. “If everyone thought responsibl­y about the next generation and planted more trees and was gentler to Mother Earth and her children and practiced sustainabl­e living, the world would be a much better place...” he mumbles.

See what I mean about Shroff being a man of depth and wisdom, one who is a breed apart from his contempora­ries?

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