By Srushti Mahamuni
Love Matters takes you down the memory lane with a Hindu-Christian love story that seems straight out of the Bollywood flick Ek Duje Ke Liye!
Love At First Sight
In 1981, Nancy*, a stunning, shy and a hopeless romantic was sixteen when she fell in love with Venkat, a 21-year-old daredevil, impatient adventurer from Pune. It was also the year Ek Dujey ke Liye had released.
Nancy was the only daughter of a strict middle-class devout Catholic South Indian family. She loved to sneak out to watch movies. Venkat was the middle son of a Brahmin Maharashtrian family with five children, and his favorite pastime was racing from Pune to Bombay on his turquoise blue Royal Enfield.
In the summer of 1981, Nancy was at her cousin’s house in Bombay, enjoying her summer holidays. Her cousins and their friends decided to spend the day at a pool. Venkat was already there in the pool when she arrived and lost his heart to her at first sight.
Beginning Of The Journey
Lovestruck and smitten by Nancy, who looked like her favorite actress Rekha, Venkat’s reverie was broken when someone said, “Meet my cousin from Pune, she is here for summer holidays.” They both exchanged ‘Hi’ and realised their feelings were mutual. For the entire time, they then sat with their feet in the cool swimming pool, talking like old friends!
Fast forward to 1983, they both were now madly in love with each other. For Venkat, it was his daily routine to pick Nancy up after college and take her on long drives on his Royal Enfield. Nancy was equally crazy about him. In him, she found a true lover, friend and a good listener.
Nancy’s love was the motivational force behind Venkat to start looking for a job. He wanted to make something of his life before he could ask her to spend it with him.
The Partition
Venkat did get successful in his job hunt, but there was one problem. He got a lucrative offer from a firm in Indore. However, when he told her about it, she showed her support and told him to take it up. And thus began their long-distance romance in the era where there was no internet, WhatsApp or even mobile phones!
Once a month, Nancy would go to the caller booth near her house after saving enough money to make a five-minute call to Venkat. The handwritten letters (yes they did exist) were their only saving grace back then.
Yes Or No?
In one such letter, Venkat proposed Nancy in a very casual way. “Let’s get married on the 4th of October, on your birthday, what do you say”, he wrote. Her heart let out a loud scream, “YES, YES, YES” she wanted to shout out loud, but instead, she runs to the phone booth to call him and tell him this in person.
On the way out, she gets interrupted by her mother, who had just discovered a box of love letters while cleaning her daughter’s cupboard later that evening. Not surprisingly, she was shocked and felt cheated. In a fit of rage, she locked her daughter in a room for a week.
Two weeks had gone by since Venkat sent that letter, and he had not heard back from her. He was starting to get worried. Had he said something wrong, was she not on the same page, had something terrible happened to her? He couldn’t concentrate at work, forgot all about food and sleep started to evade him as well.
The Confrontation
When Venkat did not hear from Nancy for three weeks, he got on a bus to Pune and headed straight to her house. Heart pounding, he knocked on her door and was greeted by a tall, dark man. He recognizes this man as her father. The man asked curtly what he wanted, “I love your daughter, and I want to marry her,” came the reply. SLAP! Was it the end of the love story?
“How dare you! I will never let my daughter marry some Hindu man, go away!” For the next few weeks, she was escorted to the college by her father and picked up by her mother.
Weeks went by, and he had to go back to his job. After a few weeks, things at her house seemed to settle down, and she managed to call him to reveal the truth about how badly she wanted to say yes, and how much she wanted to marry him.
DDLJ Prequel
However, her family is not the only one that needed convincing. His family didn’t want a Catholic daughter-in-law either. “What will she teach your children? How will she fit in? She doesn’t even speak Marathi, and above all, she is a Christian!”
So preempting Dilwale Dulhania le Jayenge, they decided to win over each other’s families first, but their families won’t budge.
Finally, after four years, his family agrees on one condition: she should convert to Hinduism. Her family, however, had the same idea, they would give their blessings if he converted to Christianity.
They both stood their ground; no one would convert. They chose to keep fighting and waiting, resisting the emotional torture their families put them through, bearing the distance, the pain of knowing that someone you want to spend your life with and not being able to, finally love would win.
And indeed, love did win. Our love story was special. Two more years later, their families finally gave in. Nancy and Venkat had two weddings in 1989: a Christian ceremony on the October 4, Nancy’s birthday, and a Hindu ceremony, the next day.
Seven years, 83 days after they first met, they finally sat together as a married couple, silently vowing how they will do everything differently with their children, hold each other and cry. Isn’t it a beautiful love story? A rare one indeed!
*Names have been changed.
Do you also have a #TeriMeriLoveStory that broke the barriers of caste, religion, class or sexuality? Do you have a love story? Share it with Love Matters (LM) on our Facebook page. If you have a specific question, please ask LM experts on our discussion forum