
Of some of the treasures Youtube has to offer, there is the storytelling channel of Deepa Kiran. And within this channel you can find this gem of a story – How a young poor girl became a snake doctor. Deepa Kiran starts us on the storytelling journey with a musical introduction. A custodian of the rare folk instruments of India, Deepa Kiran plays them with ease and finesse. Starting the story by inviting the musical storytelling spirits Deepa Kiran slowly leads our way into the story. Deepa’s storytelling style is filled with musical notes and pauses. She doesn’t rush us into the story as if she is in a speeding hurry to narrate the story and be done with it. Instead, she takes her time. She welcomes us in with a song and hasta mudras. There is a slowing down of time in Deepa Kiran’s narration. As if the space time continuum itself bends to hear her words. Time is an attribute of causation (and what are folktales if not causation). Space is created and expanded in this folktale through the use of an exquisite setting, music from rare instrument collected no doubt with difficulty and a spontaneity of telling. As Deepa Kiran starts you know you listening to teller with unique voice and a uniquer story. Deepa Kiran narrates a story that is so Indian in its ethos and motifs – use of mantras for healing snake bites, the well revered snakebite vaidyan and then makes us reflect on power and hierarchies within the folds, the encasement of a very powerful and positive story that encompasses the triumph of the young nayika Kamala. A story about perseverance and enthusiasm, a story of triumphs. What the story teaches us is that mantra Kamala uses may be useless but powers accrue to her because of her sincere belief in the act of what she is doing. This story about mantras, a fake one that becomes a real source of healing and power, makes thing about the logic of mantras and how they work. Are they a string of sounds in a particular order and of an particular inference or are they invested with the enthusiasm of the sadhaka alone and therein lies their power. This storytelling video is on the whole a meditation on sound and meaning making. Meaning making because this is a story about who makes most meaning of a particular wish – healing and curing others of snake bites. Is it Nambodari Vaidyan who as the guardian of the sacred mantra, and the revered snake doctor, bearer of a tradition that can save from venom, or is it the young girl Kamala who turns a venomous string of sounds into healing source for herself and the whole kingdom?

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