Serampore, India – It’s a heat morning in March, and 65-year-old Ashish Bandopadhyay has cycled the ten minutes from his house to a tea store within the Chatra neighbourhood of Serampore, about 30km (19 miles) from Kolkata.
Wearing a pastel pink polo shirt, Ashish takes cost of the store, declaring it’s his “flip” to run it as we speak. “I don’t work right here,” he explains with a smile whereas tearing open a packet of milk as he prepares to brew a contemporary pot of cha (the Bengali phrase for tea). “I’m simply an old-timer and a buyer who loves volunteering.”
Positioned within the previous a part of the city, this hole-in-the-wall store is regionally referred to as Naresh Shomer cha er dokaan (Naresh Shome’s tea store). In India, the method of getting ready and sharing tea varieties an essential a part of social bonds.
And that’s what this tea store is all about. For a century, it has been an area for rest, dialog and shared moments. However it takes the social bond one step additional: prospects not solely drink tea but in addition brew and serve it.
Ashish, who has now retired from his workplace job with a building firm, has been visiting this tea store since he was 10 years previous. It’s the place he meets associates to catch up over a cup of tea.
Every weekday morning, 60-year-old proprietor Ashok Chakroborty opens the store after which leaves for his workplace job.
“One among us takes management of working the store until the time he returns within the night. At this time was my flip,” Ashish says. In all, there are 10 volunteers who take turns within the store seven days per week. None are paid – most are volunteer-customers who, like Ashish, have retired and obtain a pension from their former employers.
At this time, Ashish arrived on the store at 9am and closed for lunch at midday. He reopened at 3pm. “If not every single day, I want to remain right here for almost all of the week. After my departure, one other particular person steps into my position,” he says.
There’s no mounted rota – “whoever is free does it,” Ashish explains. “We hold the money in a picket field on the shelf after utilizing it to purchase milk or sugar. And there hasn’t been a single day with no caretaker.”
The legacy of Naresh Chandra Shome
Little has modified within the 100 years the five-by-seven-foot tea store has been going – “aside from a number of whitewashes and a ceiling restore”, Ashish notes. Regardless of the layers of paint, the partitions are stained darkish with soot and smoke from the coal-fired conventional clay range.
Tea remains to be served in clay cups in addition to paper ones, with a refill costing simply 5 rupees (roughly $0.06).
The store gives a modest tea menu with easy, easy choices. Prospects can select from milk tea – with or with out sugar – and black tea served plain or with lemon, or Kobiraji cha (black tea with spices). Jars of biscuits full the store’s choices.
Located throughout from Chatra Kali Babu’s Crematorium, members of the family usually come for tea after bidding farewell to family members.
The store was based by Naresh Chandra Shome, who labored for Brooke Bond, a tea firm that traces its roots to the colonial period in India. All Ashok, the present proprietor, is aware of about Shome from that interval is that he left his job to develop into a freedom fighter.
Following India’s independence from British rule in 1947, Shome joined the Communist Get together of India (Marxist) and remained an energetic member till his loss of life in 1995 on the age of 77. All through his life, his tea store served as a gathering place the place comrades would meet, sit and trade concepts over cups of tea.
At this time, the tea store sits subsequent door to the native CPI(M) workplace. “Shome was a useful man and was energetic in group service. His store was well-known then and now. There’s a photograph of him within the get together workplace,” says Prashanto Mondal, 54, a daily buyer on the tea store.
He remembers how he was first delivered to the store by a colleague throughout a lunch break 25 years in the past.
“There are a lot of tea stalls in Serampore, however I all the time come right here, nearly each day, due to the store’s distinctive environment and sense of camaraderie,” the LPG fuel supply agent explains.
After ending his tea, Prashanto will get as much as assist Ashish refill the coal within the oven. Like Prashanto, most prospects assist with duties resembling fetching milk from the close by store or filling water from the faucet.
“We’ve heard tales of Naresh Shome throughout his activist days,” says Ashish. “He would generally go away the store abruptly for pressing group service or be taken by the police, all the time asking his prospects to take care of the store. I consider this legacy has endured – prospects naturally take duty for the tea store within the proprietor’s absence – the check of time.”

From colonial previous to Bengali adda and cha
In about 1925, Shome opened the tea store on the bottom ground of the constructing owned by his aunt. However earlier than it was a gathering spot for tea drinkers and conversationalists, the 350-year-old constructing on the banks of the Hooghly River housed numerous varieties of retailers, together with one which bought utensils.
Uncovered picket beams on the ceiling appear to bear the load of historical past. The thick limestone partitions stand as silent witnesses to the various Bengali, Danish and English individuals who’ve handed by way of through the years. The store appears to be like out in the direction of Chatra ghat (steps main all the way down to the river), the place Hindus have cremated their lifeless for generations. Now, a contemporary electrical crematorium has taken the place of conventional wooden pyres.
The city of Serampore, house to about 200,000 folks, predates the West Bengal capital of Kolkata by a number of centuries and has been dominated at instances by each the Danes and the British. The city was a Danish buying and selling settlement named Frederiksnagore from 1755 to 1845, till the British took over, staying till independence in 1947.
As soon as, horse-driven carriages transported European officers and their households alongside the streets. At this time, the bylanes bustle with motorbikes, electrical rickshaws and vehicles. European-style buildings stand alongside the tall condo complexes in-built newer many years.

Native restoration activist Mohit Ranadip explains that the tea store holds an essential place within the cultural historical past of Serampore. Ranadip is a member of the Serampore Heritage Restoration Initiative, an area citizen-led physique devoted to preserving and selling the city’s heritage.
“Adda and para tradition are nonetheless very related within the [Chatra] locality and perhaps that’s the reason why the tea store remains to be so common,” he says.
In West Bengal, para tradition loosely refers to a neighbourhood or locality, outlined by a powerful sense of group. Every para inevitably has its adda spot – the nook of a road, park or, certainly, a tea store. Adda is a beloved pastime that’s distinctive to West Bengal. Markedly completely different from mere small discuss or chatting, it’s best described as an off-the-cuff group dialog that’s lengthy, fluid and relaxed in nature. A cup of cha invariably binds these gatherings collectively.
Within the Chatra neighbourhood, Naresh Shome’s tea store is a focus for this adda custom, attracting folks from all walks of life to converge and share their each day experiences over steaming cups of tea.
Prashanto and his colleagues, Karthick and Amal, mentioned the remaining fuel cylinders they needed to ship by the tip of the day. Some got here on their very own for a fast tea. The shoppers who dropped by within the night have been extra relaxed, like Anima Kar, who got here along with her daughter to meet up with her brother.
The state of West Bengal’s reference to tea additionally runs deep. About 600km north of Serampore, the tea business took root within the hills of Darjeeling within the mid-Nineteenth century throughout the British Raj. The primary industrial tea gardens have been established in Darjeeling and the encompassing areas. The emerald inexperienced tea estates of Darjeeling nonetheless produce among the world’s costliest tea.

At about 6pm, as night units in, Ashok returns from his clerical job. Carrying an olive inexperienced T-shirt, he takes over from Ashish, seamlessly persevering with the store’s each day rhythm.
Ashok is the son-in-law of Lakhirani Dakhi, the proprietor of the constructing. He has been answerable for the store since Shome’s loss of life.
“At this time Ashish da (brother) gave me 400 rupees ($4.65) because the day’s revenue,” says Ashok, as he poured tea into clay cups. He says he has by no means confronted any issues with prospects not paying; with out fail, they all the time go away the right amount for tea within the money field or return later to pay what they owe.
“We promote round 200 cups most days,” he provides.

‘A query mark on the long run’
“I like the tea with masala (spice combination) made by Ashok da,” says 50-year-old Anima, who has been a buyer for years. “If Kolkata has a espresso home the place folks meet for some high quality time and adda, properly, this tea store is our humble equal.”
Anima used to return along with her father when she was a toddler and remembers Shome. Now, she generally visits along with her household. “The tea store stays a permanent image of custom, group dwelling and a love for tea. Each morning and night, persons are drawn not simply by the tea, however by a profound sense of belonging and shared historical past,” Anima says.
At 9pm, Ashok pours the final pot of tea for the 4 remaining prospects and prepares to name it a day.
Previously couple of years, he has began to fret about the way forward for his iconic store.
“I doubt whether or not the youthful era will carry ahead this cherished legacy of belief. There are only a few guests from the youthful era who come and take part within the tea store,” he says.
His son, Ashok says, is an engineer and hasn’t proven a lot curiosity within the store.
Restoration activist Ranadip shares his issues: “The youthful era is so busy that they’ve little time for adda, which significantly places a query mark on the way forward for the store like this.”
Regardless of the store’s unsure future, Ashok stays hopeful that others will step ahead to protect it, simply as earlier generations have. “I select to remain optimistic that the store will proceed its legacy, because it has for thus a few years,” Ashok says.