10 March,2009 08:49 AM IST | | Agencies
He was only 10 when he garlanded Mahatma Gandhi in Assam. More than six decades later, Canada-based Himadri Shekhar Roy hasn't forgotten that fleeting moment and was one of those who last week bid for Gandhi's possessions.
With tears in his eyes, the disappointed 72-year-old looked at Gandhi's possessions, happy only in the knowledge that another Indian had bought it and the Mahatma's possessions would be back where they truly belonged.
Roy said, "When I read about the auction I just had to go and was determined to bid till the very end. Although Mallya beat us, I am happy I went to New York and did my bit to retrieve Gandhi's possessions. My memory of him when I met him as a child is still fresh in my mind."
Gandhi's steel-rimmed spectacles (pic above), a pair of sandals, a Zenith pocket watch, an eating bowl and a plate were put under the hammer by Antiquorum Auctioneers in New York last week despite an outcry by Indians, mounting Indian government pressure and even a reported change of heart on the part of the US owner James Otis.
Himadri had been in the news earlier when he became the youngest person to attempt to swim the English Channel. He was feted by Mihir Sen, who had swum the channel.