An Unforgettable Anecdote
Shivachand
Kirti Nath Jha
‘Shivachand !’ The name was called.
However, before I could dispose of the previous patient the next had already occupied the vacant chair in front of my desk.
‘Shivachand?’ I enquired.
‘That’s right, Sir.’
Patient’s
face attracted my attention first, being an eye specialist. And
naturally so. For whatever reason they come, they all have some eye
disease; cataract, glaucoma, squint or, painful watering eyes.
Nonetheless, what really attracted my attention about this patient were
the crescent moon and star tattooed prominently on the right side of his
face, just below the hairline.
It was amazing, I thought. A crescent moon and star on a Hindu’s forehead! If truth be told, I could not overcome my curiosity.
‘Shivcahnd, are you a Mohammedan?’
Shivachand broke into a loud laugh. But, soon regaining his composure he remarked,
‘Sir,
I don’t really know how to answer your good self but I owe my life to
this tattoo alone’ and he lapsed into deep contemplation.
‘OK ?’ I remarked still surprised.
‘It’s
true, but difficult to believe. May be, no one will trust me with my
story now. It was hard to believe it in those turbulent times too.’
Shivchand lapsed into contemplation for a moment. Then he beagn, ‘ It’s a
long story ,but an unforgettable incident.’He began ; ‘When I was yet a
child, We lived in a small village in the present state of Haryana. An
agitation for a ‘sacred homeland for the pure- the Pakistan’ was at its
peak.Children as we were, we had no knowledge of it then. But this
story is neither about my village, nor about Pakistan.This is a story
about Farzana, my elder sister’s friend, who loved us like her own
children.Farzana was married in a Muslim dominated village, on the other
side of the present Indo-Pakistan border that did not exist then. My
elder sister too was married in a nearby village but on the Indian side.
It was usual for us to have holidays with my sister for she really
indulged us.
Farzana didi and my sister kept in touch with each other through Farzana’s didi’s husband, who was a engine driver. Since my sister and Farzana didi were very close friends. Farzana didi’s husband
often obliged us with a joyrides in his engine-cabin to his village and
back. It was on one such occasion that when I reached Farzana didi’s house
the village was engulfed in a sudden communal flare–up. Therefore, that
day, when she saw me at her doorstep a deep sense of fear and foreboding
overcame her.
‘What
brought you here, today!' -she asked me half scolding in an anguished
tone.-‘God only knows what will happen to you.’She continued shaking her
head for a while.
‘How old were you then, Shivachand?’-I interrupted.
‘Count it yourself, Sir.This year I’m fifty- three. I shall proceed on pension the next year.’
After this brief interruption, Shivachand was back to his story again:
‘Sensing the trouble erupting in the village Farzana didi immediately took me to inner precincts
of
her house and had me concealed under a heap of hay .But, Sir, it is
amazing to think of it today, how the angry villagers smelt my
presence there. In no time, large crowds of angry rioters had started
trooping to didi's house.Swearing
and abusing they all demanded, ‘hand us over the child born of an
infidel’. They all cursed her for this sacrilegious act, when their own
brethren were unsafe elsewhere. Sir, I have no words to describe her
courage. She single handedly tried to ward them all off. But when the
crowd started getting restive, she ran inside her house, brought her own son, who would be barely four then, if I remember it correctly, and
threw him to the ground in front of them and shouted ‘you need a child
to kill, alright? Take him.’
The
crowd got stunned for a moment at her audacity and retreated a few
steps. Soon, they all huddled themselves into quick confabulation and
returned immediately to warn Farzana didi’s father-in –law, who was ,so far, watching all this with equanimity from one corner of the veranda.
‘Look, enough is enough. What she is doing isn’t proper in these troubled times.’ The village headman declared.‘But what has happened has happened. Now ask Farzana to return the boy back to his village as soon as possible.’ The headman decreed.
Now
as Shivachand story was coming to a close, his voice chocked
with emotions. But he continued in the same breath, ‘Sir, that day I was
born again. Overnight Farzana didi shaved my head
off, pony and all, got my forehead tattooed with what you see here
today and she sent me off, back to my village, by the next goods train ,hidden
amongst the heaps of coal in a steam engine storage-space.’
I looked up at the clock .It was already two-thirty in
the afternoon. The OPD already wore a deserted look. I quickly disposed
Shivachand off, telling him, soon we would talk again.
His
story left a deep impression on me for a long time. I mentioned the
saga of this fearless mother to a number of my friends. A few of them, both
curious and sceptical, visited my hospital ward for Shivachand
remained there for over a month more. For those of you who would find it
hard to believe, suffice it to say that Shivachand is still serving in
his military unit cherishing the memories of his long-lost benefactor.
For one, whenever I remember Shivachand’s tattooed face, I bow in reverence and praise of that worthy mother with the shloka from Durgasaptashati:
One who permeates the universe,
And who symbolizes all women and wisdom,
O’ mother you are above all praises!
This anecdote was first published as a story in in Bharati-Mandan,a Maithili language journal, published from Bihar. It was widely acclaimed then.I thought of sharing this with a wider audience. The result is this English translation.
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