Hindidk -
That night, Maya sat with a notebook and began writing down every word Amma said— dabba, mithai, chachi, gussa, khwab (box, sweets, aunt, anger, dream). She drew little pictures next to them. She texted friends for translations. She watched old movies with subtitles off.
On her last night in Delhi, Amma held her hand. “ Tumhari Hindidk… bahut acchi hai. ” (Your Hindidk… is very good.) hindidk
By the end of the month, she wasn’t fluent. But she could ask Amma, “ Chai chahiye? ” and bring her the right cup. She could listen to her stories without needing every word explained. That night, Maya sat with a notebook and
Frustration swelled. Then Amma laughed, a weak but warm sound. “ Tujhe Hindi nahin aati, na? ” (You don’t know Hindi, do you?) She watched old movies with subtitles off
Maya had grown up hearing Hindi in fragments—her mother’s lullabies, her father’s exasperated “Arre yaar!” during cricket matches, and the distant echo of Bollywood songs from her grandmother’s room. But when anyone asked, “Do you speak Hindi?” she shrugged. “Hindidk,” she’d say. Hindi, I don’t know.