There were times when we had vultures
in north India. Beyond their invectivized metaphorical usage in language, they
flew too high, freely in the bluish depths of skies. Floating, their wings
sprawled out, in utter piece and calm. They were too far and safe. They were
detached and landed only when there was something lying with no more life, no
more play in the hustle and bustle of things. Something beyond sweat, blood and
gore; something totally passive to the mucous gore of life.
They descended matter-of-factly. Cutting
the air with their sun-parched wings, coming to the world of we humans, to play
their part in the natural scheme of things allocated to them. Beyond the
bloody, brutal and sordid pulls of their pointed, hooked bills into the dead
innards, they appeared self-effacing, modest scavengers. Even saintly with
their sad, drooping eyes. I remember a whole fat, lifeless cattle turn into
just a skeleton in some odd hours, leaving no scrape of flesh around any bone,
and no foul, rottening odor later on. The dogs took onto the bones, lost in the
mirage of pacifying hunger from the deepest depth of a well where there might
not be any water.
Then Diclofenac, a cattle medicine,
came. The more the vulture did their duty for the dead, the more the death did
its duty on them. The vultures lost their skies. Only mankind’s steel birds
have a right to fly that high. So we don’t have vultures now. Only airplanes
can go that high. The ethereal blue is calm and steeped in history. Of course
the dead cattle need to be disposed off. The farmers bury these in shallow sand
pits. The dogs pick up the trail, dig out and chew on the sandy rot. And a huge
cumbersome cloud of foulest odor clumsily reaches human nostrils to remind them
of the species which is extinct now. Not too many mind though.
The dogs now go to the metalled road to
meet their famous death, the much anointed dialogue, kutte ki maut, which is rarely natural. Death and its agent need
not push themselves to grab their share on the road. It’s National Highway 334
B running through the densest rural and town settlements across central
Haryana, starting from Western Uttar Pradesh, crossing Yamuna and going across Haryana
from east to west. A year back it was just district road. But then they
suddenly changed it into a national highway without adding to its dimensions. It’s
just two-laned without any lane divider. Heaviest to the lightest vehicles ply
bumper to bumper day in and day out.
The truckers, otherwise forbidden by
the law to use it, have grabbed its link to Rajasthan and southern Haryana,
with even more greed than a hungry vulture of decades. There is no toll tax on
this link. It saves them 1200 rupees. This much money matters. Even the time it
saves also matters. So human safely is lost in the smoke exhaust. Overloaded
trawlers ply gleefully. It’s a journey of overs:
overload, overspeed and overgreed. Transport companies put up rewards for the
fastest drivers. In the mad rush, rules, regulations, care and concern take a
back seat. And people die in road accidents. Almost daily there is a fatality.
In a neighboring village, two brothers, one 17 and the other 19, going to their
fields to prepare for physical tests for army recruitment, were crushed to
death early one morning. The tragedy isn’t the odd one out. There are many. But
they get buried into the tar under speeding, burning wheels.
The dogs too, knowing that there are no
vultures, come under the heavy wheels to get crushed to a pulpy, well-ground meat.
Even bones get ground easily, the vehicles are so heavy after all. Years back,
when there were vultures, a dog hit by a vehicle, would be at least dragged to
the roadside trench. Vehicles were sparse, wheels were smaller, and people had
time to at least respect even a dog’s dead body to throw into the roadside pit.
Then the vultures would take up, efficiently, smoothly, surgically.
Now
right after the first hit, you cannot tell whether it was a dog, a cat or
swine. Wheels are endless. It gets crushed within minutes, first to a juicy
broth, then to dry sponge, the blood absorbed by the burning tar under hot
wheels. It’s dry before you realize. The eddies of smoky wind let loose by
tyres then puff away the last grains. It’s quicker than even the biggest horde
of vultures. No man, possibly there is no need of vultures now. Metaphorically
though vultures exist, thriving in fact, as we add to the haramzaadgi in us.
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