October, 2006 Archive

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Finally, I managed to get through to my photographs on Flickr (for those not in the loop, Flickr along with youtube were blocked in the United Arab Emirates). 

If you want to know what a Syro Malabar wedding looks like, you can find it here.

Also, I came across a few pictures I took on my trip to Greece last year:

boat

rocks

breakfast

Kunju Mary

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I’m going to be a father soon. Technology has been kind enough to inform us that our child is going to be a girl. Honey and I will be keeping the Syrian Christian tradition alive by naming her Mary - my mother’s name. At home she will be called Kunju Mary.

The prefix Kunju - which means little - is added to most names to elimnate confusion. On my mother’s side, there are about two dozen Rose. My sister - Rosemol at home and Rosamma officially is one of them.

Over the years family names seem to disappearing from Syrian Christian names. This time when I renewed my passport I made it a point to place Puthenparambil as my surname and Jacob Joseph as my new double barreled first name. When I take up my new assignment (will update you guys soon) I’m going to have my cards printed Jacob Puthenparambil.

The reason I didn’t have Puthenparambil in the first place is two fold. One I (and my parents) thought it was perhaps too long. And since we were abroad most of the time, why bother explaining and spelling Puthenparambil is every-time we had to fill a form or state our names?

Even in India, my uncles initialised their names. PC Thomas, PC Chacko, PJ Kurian etc. Around the time I was born, a new trend in naming starting is my community, although we were baptised with Christian names, officially kids started to me named…. how do I put it…. hmm…. bharatiya generic?

For example I have cousins named Babu, Lakshmi, Ajit, Anju, Lulu, Meetu etc. I too flirted with the idea of giving my children (If and when I had them) Sanskrit names but decided against it as I felt the Syrian Christian identity has to be revived. There is something that moves me when I hear or see the name Kuruvilla, Chacko, Thomachan, etc.

My concern that Puthenparambil might be too long far practical use in the modren world quickly vanished when I saw the visiting card of my good friend Adam. He was from Poland and his surname was Skyprkskck. Shorter than my surname but still at-least mine had vowels :)
So there you have it, Kunju Mary will be Mary Puthenparambil.