And the Lord God commanded the man, saying, Of every tree of the garden thou mayest freely eat: But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die. Genesis 2:16:
The moony naked couple in the Garden of Eden has been a
curious and interesting subject and so are the paintings and caricatures of the first
couple as scriptures tell us. It is curious and interesting because of the
dress code they followed in the early stages and in due course of their
evolutionary process and damnation. The serenity of the Garden itself with the
sole exception of the serpent was wondrous and ran pleasantly in the
imagination.
As a child of about eight, I was taken to the cinema to see
the film, “The Bible”, directed by John Huston. The film recounted from the
times of genesis to Adam & Eve, Moses, Abraham, Noah, tower of Bable and
almost a good number of chapters from the Old Testament. Honestly, the
serenading nude couple did not titillate my imaginations as perhaps I was too
young to decipher and provide attributes. However the film invoked a spark of fire
that in later times proved to be exasperatingly inquisitive to some but a means
of immense acquisition for me and my thought process. (Later in my teens, I
sneaked into watch a film of the same name produced by some non-entity in
Malayalam knowing well it was much sleazy and titillating is another matter
held secret).
Exiting the cinema after watching John Huston’s Bible, the
questions that I asked myself and some other elders were not answered. One such
incertitude was about the great deluge and Noah’s ark. A naturalist of sorts
and a conservationist, his love for animals and other living things was app laudable. But I wondered why did he leave out the dinosaurs from having refuge in
his ark? And there seemed to be all possible beasts of the wilderness in the Garden
of Eden but dinosaurs was nowhere to be seen. Did the great flood precede the
prehistoric times when those beasts roamed in abundance? Or was creation as
laid out in the Genesis precede the advent of the dinosaurs? Well those were
too impertinent asking by an adolescent. And later I found to my amusement the
answers!
It is indeed matters of food for thought that we seek, read,
and spend considerable time of our short life to learn and acquire knowledge or
information on matters that do not concern us, affect us or about people whom
we may not even ever meet in life; of people dead and alive we have no business
to learn and know about. We go to many frontiers to know about matters that are
hypothesis, conjunctions and those that may be probable in the future, by when
we would be dead and gone, to be recycled back into a pinch of stardust. We
often show childish curiosity in many matters that are around- a “neotenic”
trait that baffles. And as some would argue, should not be cared a hoot as it
is not pertinent to our living. But then why do we go about ravenous, hunt and
devour knowledge that may in fact be insignificant or of no use to our living?
Old Testament mentions the decree of God that Adam & Eve
desist from eating the fruit from the tree of knowledge- the forbidden fruit.
Clearly God’s way of telling that he shall rather not have his creation
enlightened and acquire ideas that can also be used to usurp his position. He did
admit to his jealous nature when he without mincing words said, “I forbid you
from worshiping any other Gods, for I, your God is a jealous God”( Exodus). This
is precisely what we hear and see politicians and authority go about desperately
trying in their vile and cunning ways to enforce- proscribing books and
banishing artists, their creations, snuffing opinions and expressions. The
officialdom and the seat of authority have always been wary of acquisition of
knowledge and ideas by the masses. The diktat Catholic Church pronounced
against the fairytale of “Harry Potter” is one among the many recent examples.
All of us have been fed with fairy tales and stories of witches
and sorcerers in our formative age. I wonder if that have in any way distorted
our character, inhibited our intellectual growth or displaced our moral values.
It is in us that we have to seek knowledge. It is in the acquisition of
knowledge and information with the naughty intensity of a child that makes us
human beings. It is perhaps that what has aided in distancing us from our
primordial cousins’ the apes and primates. It is in us, that juvenile
characteristics are continued by the adults of our species. And it is that
which keep us from plummeting into an insipid and inodorous life, where
skepticism and hunger for knowledge is banished, muffled, and is nonexistent.
The aphorism that there is enough in the world for man’s needs
but not for his wants is true and if man can substitute the seamless material bounty
he seeks unashamedly and greedily with hunger for knowledge, then, that would
make life a splendid dream to live.