Tau Tarif Singh, drawing lineage from my great granduncle, was a
small man with a huge well-composed demeanor. Very gentle in behavior, soft
with words and peaceful in movements, he hardly created any ripples on the
stage of life with his presence. There was an exception though. There would be
a complete reversal of his persona at the sight of a snake. He would be filled
with lightening agility and within the flash of a second he would run after the
helpless reptile, hold it by the tail, swing it around in a highly technical
way and bang it on the ground with such force that it would make a second
strike almost redundant.
Let him see a snake at his house,
in the locality, in the village, in the fields or open grounds or even a
forests, he won’t miss an opportunity to culminate its journey on earth. His
biggest feat was holding two snakes by their tails simultaneously and swinging in
his special way and banging them on the ground to finish their journey.
Surprisingly he was never bitten in the task. To this day I wonder why would
such a peaceful and calm person turn into a snake-annihilator at the mere sight
of the poor reptile. Maybe some karmic entanglement with snakes; possibly uncle
was a mongoose, a peacock or a garuda
in his previous birth and his evolution into a different species still retained
the predominant animosity against the snakes.
From the village standards,
Grandfather was a reasonably educated man. He was in love with mathematics and
that helped him in calculating things with logic without getting clouded by
unnecessary emotions. Grandmother was very tart with her tongue and he matched
her in the matrimonial equation with the agility of his hardworking hand. Their
domestic life, like any other farmer couple, was defined by these skirmishes
between the female tongue and the male hand. But she died quite young leaving
Grandfather’s hands free to engage in more suitable occupations. Grandfather
was neutral to snakes. ‘One has to kill them if they sneak into the house, but
one shouldn’t bother about them in the open,’ he maintained. His closest
encounter with a snake happened when he was around eighty. He was still active
in farming till then. It was evening and he was lying in the field, his
headgear bunched under his head and one leg raised in the middle and the other
supported on the raised knee. He was smoking a little hookah, his head tilted
to one side to draw smoke. Another farmer was sitting nearby. A black snake
chose to keep its way straight, instead of taking a detour. Grandfather’s head
was tilted in the other direction. The other farmer saw it when it had already
crept up to Grandfather’s stomach. Then Grandfather’s mathematical logic worked
to save him from a snakebite. He turned a stone, didn’t move at all and allowed
the entire length of the fearsome snake to creep over him. After that
Grandfather took the longest draught at hookah in his life. ‘I have never seen
so much of smoke coming out of me in my entire life,’ he told me later. ‘She
was your wife who came to scare you for all your agility with your hands,’ the
other farmer joked.
Father was a philosophical man.
He could talk better than anyone I have ever heard in my life. His was a world
of books. He wasn’t bothered much about worldly affairs. He was an athletic man
and could have been at least a national level player if things had gone well.
He was brainy enough to be a senior bureaucrat if things had taken a
sympathetic turn for him. His oratory would have made him a famous politician
if things had happened as they usually happen in the life of a successful man.
But none of these happened and he was contended to be a government servant with
hundreds of books and a philosophical mind. As the family patriarch he had to
take the responsibility of killing a big-hooded cobra that had crept into the
cattle barn. Mother raised a hue and cry and before Father could realize
anything she had handed him a stick to make him realize his worldly duties. Father
killed that big snake. I was very small at that time. And the very next day as
I scampered around to play in the street, I feel headlong and my forehead hit
the sharp edge of a brick leaving me all bloody. I still carry the mark. ‘I hit
the cobra’s hood and see the karma comes back in the form of this injury on my
son’s forehead,’ Father drew his philosophical reasoning.
The biggest cobra that I have
ever seen being killed also needs an account here. It was a moonlit night and a
majestic cobra sneaked into the locality. The village was pretty open till
then. A horse panicked and neighed a warning. The dogs barked. By chance, there
were all children and female onlookers at that time. The stick was handed over
to the only grown up male available. Dheere cowered with the stick. He
was—sadly—nicknamed langda because
his one leg was incapacitated because of polio. Dheere struck quite forcefully,
missed the mark and his crippled leg lost footing and he fell down with the
strike. But after that he regained composure and somehow managed to beat the
entire ground with almost a hundred strikes in rapid-fire and by chance one of
the strikes hit the cobra in the middle injuring it, cutting its movements and
then the striker had it easy.
My own quota in the sins against
the snakes involves killing two harmless little common wolf snakes that had
entered our house and my panicked mother handed over the responsibility to me
as the new family patriarch. I performed the job with shaking legs. The other
partnership in crime occurred when I held the torch and my uncle pounded a
harmless rat snake. Other battles against snakes involved throwing pebbles at
the harmless water sakes in the village pond. They would dive playfully and
would emerge at a distance. That was quite a fun for both the parties. I
remember once I was walking on my little legs in the playground outside the
village. It was a faint foot trail in the little grass. A cobra was also
enjoying its walk on the same trail from the opposite direction. It stood its
ground, maybe finding me small enough to turn a bully. It stood its ground,
raised it hood to full spread and warned me to get off the way from a distance.
I took to my heels and watched from a distance. Male cobra is arrogant I have
heard. There it passed following the foot trail.
Now I’m more balanced and logical
in my approach to snakes. I can at least marvel at the crawling majesty of
snakes that I come across in my solitary walks in the countryside. They are
just creatures like any other creature. In the Delhi NCR there are just two
poisonous snakes—out of the forty species found in the area—named Indian cobra
and krait. The rest are harmless long earthworms and get unnecessarily killed
because of our natural instinctive fears. Knowledge is empowering. It dispels
darkness. So now I am more adjusting to their presence.
Kaka Maharaj, who stays in a hut
by the canal outside the village, has so many snakes around but this isn’t an
issue at all with him. There is a clump of banana trees just by his hut. Once
as I approached to pay him a visit I saw a cobra basking in the sun. It
scampered into the clump of trees when I arrived. I told about the naga to Kaka Maharaj. ‘This land is for
all and everything,’ is all he said. After our talks on the matters of
spirituality I saw him stepping into the clump of banana trees to take out a
basket he had hung on a frond. He went in quite naturally. He had even
forgotten that I had told him about a snake there.
There is mother nature’s little
air purifier just in front of our place. It’s a dense clump of trees and vines with
lots of undergrowth. Aren’t these green leaves an extension of our lungs? But
people take nature for granted and hardly anyone speaks in favor of these green
tissues of our lungs. People usually complain of a couple of cobras that stay
here. A few sightings and people go paranoid. Almost every other day someone is
raising a hue and cry about their sighting by our yard walls. The gate is open
with grilled portion on the underside. They can easily creep in. The night is
theirs to creep. They are all welcome. But the day is mine. They have no
business to be in during the day. They haven’t bothered me so far, so why
should I bother about them. Why stretch your fears beyond a point. Just be
careful a bit more, that’s all. Use torch while moving in the dark. Walk gently
to allow them to creep away as you approach. And they eat rats and mice with
relish. The area is almost mouse-free. And mother nature knows more than us.
There were mice that’s why there are snakes. And to ensure that the snakes
don't crawl at each human step, there are plenty of peacocks doing the rounds.
They must be eating many little snake hatchlings to keep the number finely
balanced. But who is there to keep a check on us? In our case only we can do
it, individually and collectively.
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