Medúza, the Káva Shop at
Belgická
By Kamal
Sunavala
It's as if
it is ordained that every time one forms an
opinion about something it must be subjected to change.
I was there this afternoon with my friend Lindsey from
Kansas City, Missouri which is about as far as you can
get from Prague. And there we met two old chess playing
animated
gentlemen. Both Czech and yet they completely defied the
stereotypical mould of the older Czechs which we have had
opportunity to witness so far. They smiled and asked us
where we were from. They spoke faltering English for which
we were glad for our Czech is in its neo natal stages.
One of them told us that he had a daughter in London who
was about our age and smiled reminiscently as he sipped
his káva. We smiled back, grateful for their foray
into the world of the younger generation which tends to
smile
easier.
The parlour, for one could only call it
that, had the smell and the feel of an old English tea
room complete with the
personal attention of the well mannered young proprietor
who ripped off the foil of cigarette packets before
handing them to a lady customer and smiled generously after
the
English blend had been ordered. The pictures on the wall
had everyone from the obligatory Kafka to unknown enticing
nude women and one of what looked suspiciously like an
aging Frank Sinatra at a piano, placed strategically
over an old piano. In Prague it would not be hard to believe
it.
The crockery was old, very English and terribly
mismatched. The comfortable sink in armchairs, the slightly
ratty couches,
the old scratched tables which probably belonged to his
grandmother and the faded Persian carpets gave the perfect
background for a cynical Kafka pouring his coffee into
a chipped white cup or a straying Hemingway scratching
out notes about the smooth cobblestones along Belgická.
I felt like a writer there. A writer on a well deserved
Saturday afternoon coffee break. I wanted to rush back
and write. But I resisted the urge and instead drank
in every detail with alternate sips of my English blend.
My mind wandered briefly to the coffee shops I frequented
in Singapore. The sleek polished, highly priced coffee
emporiums with modern uncomfortable furniture, tall mugs
with witty sayings on them and the breakneck speed of the
service by a waiter who believed that he was wasting his
time waiting upon you, for you should have made up your
mind before you entered his portals about whether you wanted
decaf or latte. I didn't feel inspired to write there.
I didn't feel inspired to watch people either. They were
all the same. Perfectly made up bored dolls with plastic
around them and probably inside them too.
My convent education, my teacher's profession drifted
so naturally into graciousness here, into gratitude for
the nuns who taught us about appreciating time and beauty
in the oldness of things, in the oldness of smiles wrinkled
with years of simply living. Imagine Julie Andrews being
a nun in Singapore. Imagine her being one in Prague. Actually
I think she's sitting over by that table near the window.
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