Monday, July 31, 2017

MY SHORT STORY "TARAWATI "


                                                                       
                                        ( A Kashmiri Pandit  exiled family in a Tent in Jammu's Muthi area )
                             ( A Kashmiri Pandit woman Outside Muthi  Tent .. Photo Dr Kavita Suri )
                                                                                  
                                                     ( An elderly Kashmiri Pandit woman )


                    ( Muthi Jammu ..  1990 Tented accommodation for Kashmiri Pandits   )
                                                                               
                          ( A KASHMIRI PANDIT WOMAN  IN EXILE )
                                                ( A KASHMIRI PANDIT WOMAN  IN EXILE )
( MISHRIWALA JAMMU TENTED ACCOMMODATION OF EXILED PANDITS )

                                                                                    
 
 ( PURKHU TENTED ACCOMMODATION AT JAMMU FOR KASHMIRI PANDIT REFUGEES )
                    ( kashmiri Pandit Refugees / exiles living in a Hall in Delhi )

                                                                          
                                         ( Kashmiri Pandit Ladies in a tent at  Muthi  camp )

                                                                           
                                                        ( A kashmiri Pandit woman )
                                                                              
       ( A kashmiri Pandit family camping inside Geeta Bhawan Jammu Feb 1990 )
                                                                            
                                  ( A kashmiri pandit woman in a Refugee camp at jammu )
                                                                               
                                          ( A kashmiri pandit  Refugee camp at jammu)

                               

                                      

















                         
                               ( Kashmiri Pandit children outside a refugee camp at Muthi  Jammu 1991 )
 
                                                                               

   ( A Kashmiri Pandit woman outside a refugee camp in Jammu. Photo courtesy ..Shailaendra Aima )
                                                                                      


                           My short Story ' TARAWATI ' 
   

                                                              (TARAWATI )

 

After Ramesh Kumar, the youngest son of  Tarawati was killed by  armed terrorists in Kupwara Bazaar, her family felt frightened. Except Ismail Gujri, no neighbour or fellow Pandit visited their house to sympathize with them and offer their condolences. They could not weep or wail over this tragedy. Except for six families, almost entire Kashmiri Pandit population of the town and adjoining villages had left in panic when the armed  terrorists started killing innocent  Pandits as their soft targets.

Ismail Gujri visited their house at night to offer his condolences. That night he appeared a changed man. No smile or the usual casual talk. In a hushed tone, he had said this :-

" I have grown up with your family. To me, Tarawati is like a mother . Late Bobju Ji ( Tarawati’s husband ) always treated me like his son. I need to tell you the truth. I have heard in the mosque that Ramesh Kumar was working as informant for the army and  that is why he was killed.  Pushker Nath and Makhan Lal could be the next targets. Why don’t you people leave this place to save your lives. Pandits started leaving in January and hardly six families reside in this area now. It is May now and things are going from bad to worst. Our children are moving with strangers now. We have no hold over these young boys who  hold a gun in their hands. They say all Pandits are Indian agents and work as army informants or Mukhbirs. I can believe that all the Pandits  who were  killed over here by these gun wielding boys  were innocent. I know Ramesh Kumar had nothing to do with the army but who will tell them. Better you leave this place as early as possible. Forget this house, the orchard ,  the walnut trees ,the cows and all  the material belongings. Save your life first . I will take care of your property. I didn’t come during the day time because we are under scrutiny ”

That was sufficient for Tarawati’s family to feel frightened .  Next morning, they left at 4 a.m. in a truck that Ismail Gujri arranged for them. The truck had two more Pandit families who boarded at Handwara town. The three families sat along with their luggage on the backside of the open truck. All along the road right up to the  Banihal tunnel, the truck was subjected to frequent checking  by men in uniform deployed at many Nakaas.

“ Who are you? “

"Kashmiri Pandits “

" Where are you going?"

“ Jammu “

" Move “

At Udhampur, the driver stopped the truck near a tea stall and suggested to the occupants on the backside to have tea or snacks and go for the toilet or washroom if they so desired. No one dared to come down from the truck. They remained huddled with their paltry luggage. None sitting on the backside of the truck knew where to go in Jammu. The tea stall owner brought some tea for the shell shocked families and suggested them to go straight to Geeta Bhawan  in Jammu.

At about 7.30 p.m., they reached Geeta Bhawan . Jammu was hot even at that time. Tarawati understood how hot it would have been during  the daytime. She was tired, hungry and disturbed. Death of a young son, leaving everything behind and then landing in uncertainty made her terrible. She had once been to Jammu on way to Haridwar. Jammu was a pleasant stop at that time. But now, Jammu appeared a place of embarrassment and suffering to her.

Geeta Bhawan was crowded with many families using it as a makeshift/temporary accommodation. Tales of pain and suffering were being narrated  everywhere. One could see Kashmiri Pandit leaders managing the  cries and the  queues. These leaders were flooded with requests for accommodation by hapless Pandit families pouring into Jammu from various corners of the Kashmir valley. Tales of killings, curfews, hunger and want could be heard  all over. At Geeta Bhawan , a hall  had been partitioned with bed sheets and Saris to create temporary privacy for the refugees arriving from the Kashmir valley. One could see  kerosene stoves in the makeshift kitchens, whistling pressure cookers in open, men in sleep under ceiling fans, discussions, noise , news and leaders helping people to get themselves registered as migrants to avail relief and rations . For Tarawati, uncertainty hung on all sides.

After their arrival in Jammu, Tarawati had suddenly turned a recluse. Her world shrank to her sitting space inside the Geeta Bhawan hall. Sometimes she looked towards the ceiling fan and sometimes towards the crowds around her. Unable to relate to the changed environment, she felt as if she was a prisoner or even worst than that. In Kupwara, her day started at 5 a.m. and she slept at 11 p.m. Everything in her family was under her command and control that included the kitchen,  the kitchen garden, the  mustard crops,  the fruit orchard,  the walnut trees, the cows and the paddy storeroom. In Jammu, she had nothing to do yet her sleep had vanished . She had lost her authority and identity. It was Pushker Nath’s wife, her daughter in law, who took major decisions the day Tarawati’s family landed at Geeta Bhawan in Jammu.

At Geeta Bhawan, the family had to stand in a queue for use of the  washroom. And the only privacy the family had created in Geeta Bhawan hall was a cloth partition. The mattresses, the kerosene stoves, buckets and some bedding provided by some social organization were prized possession for Pushker Nath’s family now. Aashoo and Dimpy, his children, were more than happy in the openness of the  Geeta Bhawan compound. Jammu meant lack of restrictions for them. They were delighted to see busy Raghu Nath Bazaar, Parade Ground, Jain Bazaar, Raj Tilak Road and Sabzi Mandi. Cheerful faces on the roads were something unusual for them . Quite often, Dimpy would pose strange questions to Krishna Ji, her mother :

" Mummy! why don’t people keep quiet on roads? They are always talking and smiling. Why are they talking in matadors? Aren’t they afraid of the Mujahids? When shall we go to school? Who lives in our Kupwara house now? Why didn’t you bring Lil ( fond name of the cow that the family had in Kupwara ) and Nika ( calf ) to Jammu? We have no cow here. Why don’t people wear Pherans over here? I will also not wear it now. Please tell Papa to bring Amroodh ( Guava ) from Subzi Mandi. Why didn’t you get it in Kupwara for us? Mummy, Aashoo is eating Moongfali (groundnut ) that he buys from Reddiwala on the road. See his pocket. He will again get  fever ."

After migration, Pushker Nath wanted that all the family members stayed together at one place in Jammu. He desired to take a two-room set on rent so that his mother and Makhan Lal (his unmarried brother ) could use one room while the other could be used by his family. This proposal was summarily rejected by his wife when he tried to seek her concurrence. She  told him  this:-

"Why do you oppose Amar Nath Vaishnavi Ji’s suggestion. Vaishnavi Ji knows many influential and helpful persons. He is, after all, a selfless leader of our community. He has already found a job for Makhan Lal at Kathua. Let Mata Ji and Makhan Lal go to Kathua. They will get monetary relief and rations from the government. And then Vaishnavi Ji has already got both the nephews of Mata Ji adjusted at Pathankote and Amritsar. He has provided them with free accommodation. I have heard all that he was suggesting about Makhan Lal to you. At Kathua, he was assuring you about some rent-free factory accommodation. Why do you oppose? You are not a gazetted officer. You are a peon. You have your own family. You have to educate two children. That should be your priority now. Our life is over. How many mouths shall you feed with your salary? You will not get any government relief. It was a different story in Kupwara. Here in Jammu, you don’t own an orchard. You don’t grow vegetables. You don’t grow rice in your fields. You don’t get firewood or kitchen fuel free. You don’t get edible oil from your crop. You don’t have your cows to give you free milk. Think something about your children now. I will manage in one room. Look for a single room at the moment. No one can come to live with us if we have one room. How much rent you will pay and then what shall you give to your family? Let Mata Ji look after Makhan Lal. Say yes to Vaishnavi Ji. Follow my suggestions else throw your own family in Tawi river .”

A search for a suitable room had begun. Pushker Nath visited many localities in Jammu but nothing materialised. Getting accommodation was a tough job those days. More than fifty thousand families had suddenly come to Jammu from the  Kashmir valley after the selective killings of  the Kashmiri Pandits by  the armed terrorists. When he saw a 12 by 10 feet room at Paloura top, he was more than satisfied. For his family, this 12 by 10 feet room was a future bedroom, living room, kitchen and lobby , all in one. The room had one window (2 feet by 4 feet ) and one door ( 3 feet by 6 feet ). An old  fan hung from the ceiling. Pushker Nath’s family was required to share the toilet in the courtyard with the landlord’s family. That was more than sufficient for Pushker Nath at that moment. He immediately gave an advance of rupees five hundred to the landlord,  Balbir Singh Manhas. Balbir Singh Manhas had removed all the broken furniture from this room that was being used as store . Had not Kashmiri Pandits arrived in Jammu, Balbir Singh planned to make it a cowshed.

After Pushker Nath moved to the rented room, Tarawati went to live with Makhan Lal, the younger brother of Pushker Nath. At Amar Nath Vaishnavi’s intervention, a social organization had secured a salesman’s job for Makhan Lal at a shop in Kathua market on a monthly salary of rupees seven hundred. Makhan Lal now lived in an abandoned industrial shed ( number 33 ) in the Kathua Industrial Estate. Two more Kashmiri Pandit families from Mattan were living in this abandoned structure that had three rooms and a small hall. Tarawati and Makhan Lal moved to the vacant room that must have been used as a godown. The hall had some rusted old machinery , old tin boxes , dusty cardboard boxes and some old unused wax candles. It appeared that shed no 33 had been a candle manufacturing unit. Everything was full of dirt and dust now. Khem Raj Gupta, a social activist  from Kathua had built a makeshift toilet cum washroom near this structure and restored temporary electric connection for use by the newly arrived Kashmiri Pandit families. For cooking and washing, the inmates of shed no 33 used a nearby  hand pump . The families lived free in this shed.

It was June and unbearably hot. Despite that, Tarawati cooked food for Makhan Lal and washed his clothes. Quite often, she felt dire need to drink some cold water but there was no way out. Makhan Lal had purchased an earthenware pitcher for cooling drinking water .

Tarawati  kept herself busy by cooking food and washing clothes at the hand pump. Two sets of Pherans, a PVC sandal and a photograph of goddess  Sharika  was all that Tarawati possessed at her new shelter. At daytime, the asbestos sheets over shed no 33 brought all the heat down into the room. At night they had to bolt their room door from inside. The lone door of their room could not be kept open for fear of snakes. Ventilation was poor. Shed number 33 was never built for human habitation. Tarawati could hardly sleep for a single day in this shed.

In the shed, Tarawati’s new neighbours were from Mattan. One family consisted of a father and son who were always on the move. This family had no female with them. Their room was locked for about 20 or 25 days in a month. They were Purohits ( priests ) who kept visiting their Yajmaans ( patrons ) in Himachal Pradesh and Punjab. The other family consisted of a husband and wife and a disabled child. The husband had been a peon in some private school at Mattan while his wife was a non-Kashmiri , a Thakkar Rajput from Paddar, Kishtawar. Her name was Pushpa. Pushpa understood Kashmiri words but could not converse in Kashmiri language . No family had a refrigerator or a cooler to beat the intense heat of June in Kathua region of Jammu.

And then one day Makhan Lal told his mother that he had seen Monji / Kadam ( Kohlrabi ) in  Kathua vegetable  Mandi.Tarawati was delighted to know it. It connected her immediately with her roots. She remembered how she would go to her kitchen garden in Kupwara and pull out five or six fresh leafy Monji / Kadams ( Kohlrabi ) and cook them for the family. Every member of the family relished dishes cooked by her. She thought of her lost authority. She thought of her closely-knit family at Kupwara. She thought of Ramesh Kumar her youngest child who fell to the bullets of some cruel gunmen for no-fault. And Ramesh Kumar was fond of Kohlrabi and rice cooked by his Mother.

" I must cook Kohlrabi for Makhan Lal. I will also give it to the family living in the adjacent room. They will relish it ." This thought suddenly cropped up in her mind and she decided to go to vegetable  Mandi herself.

The Gorkha Chowkidar of the nearby ice factory in the Industrial Estate was known to  the Kashmiri Pandit families living in shed 33. He lived inside the ice factory along with his wife. Sometimes, he would give some ice to the inmates of shed no 33 during  and that created a strong bond of goodwill between him and the Kashmiri Pandit families. This Gorkha Chowkidar was fondly known as Bahadur by many locals. None knew his real name. Tarawati decided to seek help from Bahadur for buying Kohlrabi from vegetable Mandi , Kathua. When she saw Bahadur, she told him:

" Bodhur , monjji sabzi mandi kothva me laata. Vathh na pataa “

( Bahadur, I want to buy some kohlrabi from Sabzi Mandi but don’t know how to go there )

Bahadur didn’t follow what Tarawati wanted to convey. It was Pushpa who intervened and explained to Bahadur what exactly Tarawati wanted to buy.

Next day Bahadur sent his wife along with Tarawati to Kathua in the auto-rickshaw that had come to collect ice slabs from the factory. Bahadur and his wife would also go to Kathua Bazaar for purchasing vegetables once a week. Any auto-rickshaw or load carrier carrying the ice slabs from the factory to the market would drop them in the main Bazaar.

Inside vegetable  Mandi, Tarawati was delighted to see green leafy Kohlrabi. She bought 2 Kg. She also bought some Pudina ( mint leaves ), green chillies, half a litre of curd and some bananas. Bahadur’s wife suggested that they return on foot taking a short cut via Parliwand as no direct transport service was available to the industrial estate. It was hot and the midday sun was just sending fireballs down from all sides. Bahadur’s wife and Tarawati walked about 4 Km in the open sun through dusty roads that had no shady tree. She felt an acute headache and got tired by this journey.

Entering her room, Tarawati drank some glasses of water as she had been feeling a little thirsty and uneasy. Somehow, she managed to cook Kohlrabi and made Chutney from the mint leaves adding some crushed green chillies and curd to it. It was 3 p.m.. She had no energy to cook rice or have her lunch. She felt her throat turning dry and decided to lie down and sleep. She could neither sleep nor stay awake comfortably. With a rapid pulse, she thought she had a fever . Her body turned hot and her face red. She felt like vomiting and experienced a strange numbness in her arms and legs. She had often experienced headaches that resolved with a tablet of Paracetamol. But this time it was something different and her headache did not recede with Paracetamol tablet that she swallowed. She felt a state of confusion and tried to eat a banana but had difficulty in swallowing.

When Pushpa saw Tarawati, she understood that something was wrong with her. She told her husband who went to Bahadur’s room and sought his help. When Bahadur, his wife and Pushpa’s husband came, Tarawati had fainted on ground .She was breathing rapidly. Her entire body was red and dry.

" Mata Ji ko loo laga hai . Hospital jaldi lena hai. “

( Mata Ji has a heat stroke, she has to be rushed to hospital.)

That was what Bahadur said when he rushed out and brought his factory’s load carrier. Supported by Pushpa’s husband, he took Tarawati to District Hospital, Kathua and got her admitted in the ‘Emergency Ward’.

Makhan Lal was normally expected to return to shed no 33  by 8 p.m.  ,so Pushpa’s husband went to his shop and informed him about this sudden development. Makhan Lal immediately rushed to the hospital. By then Tarawati had been examined by the doctors who diagnosed her problem as a serious case of heatstroke. Makhan Lal was confused to see his mother with minimum clothes on her body. She was lying unconscious. She was being given water sprays under a full blowing air fan. Dr Gupta, the attending physician took Makhan Lal to a corner of the ward and said :

" Are you her son? "

"Yes sir "

"Your mother is in a critical condition. A miracle should happen for her to recover. Her brain, kidneys and muscles are involved. Her body temperature is 107 degrees Fahrenheit at the moment. We are giving her intravenous fluids. We are trying our best to lower her body temperature by fans and cold water sprays. She is dehydrated. Yesterday only, four elderly Kashmiri Pandits died in Jammu Medical College, hospital from this fatal heatstroke. You should not have allowed her to move out in heat especially at midday time. I believe our  Health Department needs to come out with an advisory in local newspapers to protect ignorant people from heatstroke ."

Makhan Lal felt sad and gloomy with what the doctor had told him. He passed on this message to his brother from the hospital’s landline telephone and Pushker Nath also rushed to Kathua hospital. Tarawati died next day early at 8 a.m.The brothers brought her body to shed No 33. Bahadur informed his factory owner about what had happened who in turn organized Tarawati’s cremation through some Kathua based social organisation. Tarawati’s nephews at Pathankote and Amritsar were also informed from the ice factory’s telephone.

Before cremation, Pushker Nath had spoken to his wife and advised her to inform her brother Omkar Nath about what had suddenly happened in the family. He expected some help from Omkar Nath at that critical juncture. Omkar Nath was a semi-literate young man who had secured the job of a caretaker in some newly constructed religious Ashram at Dumana on the outskirts of Jammu city. He was also provided with a room to stay by the Ashram management.

After the cremation of Tarawati was over, the brothers left for Jammu boarding a Punjab Roadways bus outside the gate of Industrial Estate complex, Kathua . Inside the bus, Pushker Nath felt sleepy but some thoughts kept disturbing him. Where shall he immerse the ashes of his mother that were required to be collected after two days ? Where shall he perform the  day today mourning? Where shall his relatives come for the  mourning as his 10 x 12 feet room was not sufficient even for his own family? Where shall he perform 11th  day and 12th day rituals of his deceased  mother?

All along the journey, Pushkar Nath felt miserable. He kept cursing his fate and also the gunmen who drove them out and put them in this great misery. He was hungry and exhausted.

Next day many relatives of Tarawati read about her demise in “The Daily Excelsior” that carried an obituary like this :

                                                                OBITUARY

Smt. Tarawati Pandita wife of late Dina Nath Pandita originally a resident of Kupwara presently Shed No 33 ( old candle factory ), Industrial Estate, Kathua left for her heavenly abode. She breathed her last in the District Hospital, Kathua on June 17, 1990.

The tenth day Kriya shall be performed on June 26, 1990, at Canal Road Park ( opposite Labhu Shah's milk shop ) at 8.30 a.m. Mourning shall be held at Nirankari Ashram, Dumana Jammu (near Petrol Pump ). Mourning from Maluen ( parental ) side at Ashok Kumar Dass Care Royal Medical Hall, Dangu Road, Pathankot and Pran Nath Dass Care Kashmiri Shivala, Katra Sher Singh, Amritsar.

Krishna Ji and Pushker Nath Pandita

( Daughter in law and Son )

Care Balbir Singh Manhas, Paloura Top, Jammu.

Makhan Lal Pandita

(Son )

Care Shed no 33, Industrial Estate, Kathua .

Ashok Kumar Dass

Pran Nath Dass

( Nephews )

 

( Avtar Mota..Jammu ..1991 )



                        


                         
                                         


                                                                

PS 



( This  short story stands translated into Bengali  and is included in the Bangla compilation  of "Modern Kashmiri  Short Stories"  , a book that has  introduction  by Dr. Sugata Bose , Professor of  History , Harvard University , USA .)

   


                                                                          



                                             
 



Creative Commons License 
CHINAR SHADE by Autarmota is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.5 India License.
Based on a work at http:\\autarmota.blogspot.com\.

3 comments:

  1. Heart touching blog on our plight

    ReplyDelete
  2. It has all the shades of the post migration aftermaths papaji...my soul is touched..god bless you..

    -sunny

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.