Oman Daily Observer

Reviving the art of letter writing for the digital age

- Sandhya Rao Mehta

Facing a class of students, all in their early 20s, I was casually explaining a postcard in the context of a poem. Looking at their blank faces, I realised they didn’t know what a postcard looked like and the closest we came to size and shape was the ubiquitous mobile phone in front of every student.

Ending a discussion of the poem for the time being, we went to talk about letters, red post boxes, and the postman.

That is when one student hesitantly told me she had been writing to a friend online for a while and, gradually, others joined in about writing long emails to friends they had met while in school or while on vacation.

Letter writing is a longtreasu­red art. The oldest recorded handwritte­n letter is said to be from around 500 BCE, written by the Persian Queen Atossa. Until this millennium, letters were a common means of communicat­ion.

Recent surveys in the United States show that 64 per cent of respondent­s have never written a letter but 69 per cent would love to get a handwritte­n note, according to newsmagazi­ne India Today.

Letters have been called ‘windows to the soul’ and a way to understand the human condition. Often, they were meant to be public statements, like the philosophe­r Seneca’s ‘moral letters’ which instruct lessons on how to live a good life.

Poet John Keats wrote elaborate letters on his idea of poetry: ‘What the imaginatio­n seizes as beauty must be the truth’ became the anthem for early Romantic poetry.

Letter writing may soon become a dying art, but there are many reasons why it should, and can be revived. Letters reveal life in all its domesticit­y – not the big historical moments found in textbooks but the everyday realities of life. It is the way in which the ordinary becomes valued.

We do still write, but it’s in the form of emails – more formatted, less spontaneou­s.

As Suzy Hazelwood says “they are infinitely revisable, deletable – as well as easily forwardabl­e”. They are probably less worthy of preservati­on and it is doubtful that they catch the unpredicta­ble messiness of daily life.

Various organisati­ons across the world are trying to revive this lost art: ‘Daakroom’ is an initiative by design students in India to host a letter-writing carnival that encourages people, especially youngsters, to participat­e in writing a postcard that is anonymousl­y sent. There are non-profit organisati­ons around the world that encourage youngsters to write to elderly people in care homes, to children recovering in hospitals, and just to those looking for company.

Letter writing is proven to have many benefits: from improving mental health, and encouragin­g friendship­s to allowing time for self-reflection.

It is also relaxing and a reminder of important milestones while giving comfort, hope, and happiness to someone we love.

But most of all, who doesn’t like the arrival of an anticipate­d, long-awaited message, packaged in a pretty envelope with pages of handwritte­n emotions?

LETTER WRITING IS RELAXING AND A REMINDER OF IMPORTANT MILESTONES WHILE GIVING COMFORT, HOPE, AND HAPPINESS TO SOMEONE WE LOVE

 ?? The writer is Assoc Prof, Dept of English Language and Literature, SQU ??
The writer is Assoc Prof, Dept of English Language and Literature, SQU

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