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Hi, this is somebody who has taken the quieter by-lane to be happy. The hustle and bustle of the big, booming main street was too intimidating. Passing through the quieter by-lane I intend to reach a solitary path, laid out just for me, to reach my destiny, to be happy primarily, and enjoy the fruits of being happy. (www.sandeepdahiya.com)

Sunday, April 17, 2022

A Hybrid Dream

 He was in the seventh standard in the nondescript village school. One sultry afternoon, the class was yawning over the dead leaves on the sprawling ground surrounded by one-storeyed building around. The air was still, and so was time. The social science teacher was perhaps the only one to hear the sagging voice of a standing student as he tried to go through the chapter as well as the period. He was reading aloud a chapter from the political science book.

“Civil Services!” the burly teacher stomped his stick onto the ground, and many a student came out of the siesta, especially those at the far end of the rows.

The students came to their senses. “It’s the highest job in the country!” he informed. “You can become one!” he accusingly pointed towards the one who was reading out the chapter in his moderately shrill voice.

Nobody in the classroom raised a suspicious eyebrow. Why? He after all had been the class topper since they remembered. Shackled by the ignorance and absence of real competition, they thought this ‘intelligent one’ could outwit anyone with as much ease as he did in class.

That was the first time he heard about the much coveted civil services. Sometimes he had heard his father, a government employee, referring to words like IAS. However, his teacher’s proclamation did not leave a significant mark on his student soul. He was just a good student, nice and obedient, who at least would not prioritise wallowing in the pond with buffalos over doing his homework. Only this much! He simply knew that good students sit over their books more than they play errant after the school hours. They work really hard and cram up homework—even sometimes not understanding any bit of it—in order to keep people labelling them as the first student. In fact, they are extra eager to carry that tag at the cost of cut in their childhood fun and floridity.

Without much trouble to his numero uno status in the class comprising farmer’s children, who cared more for anything else in the world except studies, he cleared matriculation. It was a very good first division and top position in the school with a percentage of 78. He was surprised when most of the villagers said resignedly he is good enough for a top position in the district. But then he will do better at the next level, they concurred. In that small world, they had come to believe in his numero uno position at any level, irrespective of the bitter realities of the harsh competition in the larger world.

His teachers liked him, so did most of the people around. The reason? He was thin, docile, slightly better than average looking, and enclosing himself in these boundaries—almost never allowing himself the littlest transgressions like many others of his age—he just crammed what the teachers demanded. Looking at the standard of the rest of the students, even the teachers’ demand from him was not that high. They just expected him to stand first in the class, because to them he was an ideal student ready to take up the simple challenges thrown at him in that small almost uncompetitive world.

However, studying non-medical at the senior secondary school at the district city, he found himself continuously slipping down from his former position. It was a bigger and more competitive world. Reason? The unmindful and ever-relaxing science teacher at the village school hadn’t taken the trouble to load their (and his) young minds with anything related to science. All they had done was to be asked to read the next chapter by themselves and learn the solutions to the problems all by themselves, no explanation whatsoever. Starting from a scratch and still cramming and not knowing many things, he managed to pass senior secondary with a good first division. He had not scored any position in class and there were many who had scored over him.

Much to his surprise, again those who knew him said the score did not showcase his true potential. Reason? They never found him doing anything un-studently.

“Science is too limiting!” some luminaries came forward with their protective suggestion. “Open him to the vast vistas of arts and humanities where 2+2 is not always equal to 4.”

He thus did his graduation from a college where everything went right except for education; a place where only a decent studently behaviour could fetch the honour of a topper.

Again the teachers and fellow students provided him his favourite position. Somehow, he was always far from the real big bad competitive word. So always, some way or the other, came to occupy a position that made him the darling prince of the little dimly lit cave. Beyond was the bigger world with its higher parameters of excellence. Alongside, he had an interview for the NDA, the patriotic National Defence Academy. He had crammed well to clear the written part, but thanks to all his limitations, he was totally out of wits during the four-day gruelling session including psychological and physical tests to access the personality. Returning as a loser and still confounded over the ways of sophistication in the bigger world, they still patted with sympathy, “It’s due to the corruption that prevails in the selection process!” “Army job is just for average students. He’s an excellent student. A cut above the ones who just serve in the army. He is brand cut for the civil services,” others concurred.

His father, who had spent more time in reading books than anything else he had done, was a big fan of his habit of sitting over books for long hours. Similar were the proud sentiments of his grandfather, a former teacher. “Failure does not count much, as far as you are working to the farthest limit of your sincerity,” the wise old man told him many times. Being a good student was more important to them than succeeding every time. So it did not create much ripples when he fell short of good two percentage marks off first division in graduation. People simply had not lost faith in him. He had come to be taken as beyond all such little considerations of just marks and all.

“Forget about your marks! The IAS does not require you to score first division at the graduation level,” the whole lot around him egged on the sulking student. So without knowing much about the nitty-gritty of the toughest battle ahead, over-confident and a bit diffident by now due to excessive confidence put by others and lack of knowledge of the real ground position, he declared from the tiny study room on the upper storey in the village that he will clear the IAS from there itself; without equipping himself with an MA degree or coaching from one of the so many institutions in Delhi.

Optional subjects were to be chosen for the toughest exam in the country. He mulled over his level of calibre and intellect, and Philosophy stood out to be the natural choice as one of the optional subjects. The funny limitation of his perception came to surface an year later when he fell headlong at the first hurdles and lost one precious (out of the four) chance in the bargain. It was simply as good as fighting for just three chances as a general category candidate. They sympathised, “You failure does not mean your unsuitability for the job. It’s just that you missed coaching. That’s it!”

The moment others showed confidence in him and there he was involuntarily being drawn into another misstep. The reason? He thought that there is always one sure way to reach the next sub-target. However, the modern times are such that each and every step needs coolest of a smart calculation, objective deliberations and consultations from as large a group of well-wishers as possible. Cocooned in a lonely world, basking in self-inflicted glory, he rarely consulted anybody to expose any bit of ignorance he was wallowing in. So of course, quite naturally, he did not know the ground realities of the coaching quagmire spread out in Delhi. He simply read an advertisement in a newspaper and like a lamb walked into the den of some academic lion, who easily decided that he should take history as optional for the prelims, simply because the teacher himself specialised in history, apart from his repertoire of most of the subjects falling in the humanities domain.

Later, cramming historical facts in a class of 20 odd students, he and another fellow from Assam were the only two who qualified for the gruesome mains stage. Preparations for the mains involved another optional subject, general studies and essay. The teacher too liked his spirit, but despite best of his intentions the old man could not help him except boosting his already full quota of confidence. Still against all odds, it was a good performance. He just fell a whisker short of qualifying for the interview.

“You have definitely all that needs to be a civil servant. It was just that bloody coaching institute’s resources were not enough to guide you properly. Go to such and such institute, they churn out IAS like you have the chaff cut from the cutter,” the educated lot from among the little world of farmers suggested.

The coaching was expensive though. Then there was lodging and other little expenses. He was thus furiously drawing into the not-so-deep pockets of his father. His father was retired from the services as he slogged it out for the third time in Delhi. The lump-sum cheques did not stay in the family patriarch’s pockets for too long. He remoulded the house; married the eldest daughter who had reached marriageable age long time back; another daughter waiting for marriage; younger son doing graduation; and the pride of the family having a go at the UPSC in Delhi. It was their little world and he the pole star of all their expectations, the panacea for his father’s disappointments in his utopian world. The family patriarch sincerely believed the lives of all siblings will change for the better forever if his elder son became an IAS. He was preparing himself to forego thousand other miseries in life so far, only if this success landed up in the family.

It was his third attempt in as many years. This time he stood up to the people’s expectations and qualified for the interview for the most coveted job in the country. The surrounding countryside in a diameter of 10–15 kilometres around his village gave a rapturous applaud like a deciding goal had been scored in a football world cup final. It was the last year of the old millennium, and the world in that countryside was famished for such academic glories, so people were very much eager to grab whatever landed up in their poor plates. A good proportion of these illiterate, semi-literate peasants, low clerical job holders, and police and military people believed he had already become a District Collector.

The last but the most crucial hurdle was still upface. The chairperson of his interview board was a former defence secretary, TK Banerjee. The five-member panel was surprised to find so much of confidence in this rustic guy. So in their subtly invasive ways, they tried to gauze the depth of his confidence. It was just a thin layer that he had forced upon himself and like a pack of cards he gave in. The qualities for the coveted post involve maturity of opinion, diplomatic conversation, behavioural sophistication, and so on. So once dislodged from the safe scaffolding of his confidence, he babbled miserably and gave shaking, stuttering one-sided imbalanced views to the burning issues of the day. The result was that again he had taken a longer, tiresome circuit to his failure. All this against some pinching facts: He had scored 53.4% in the written (a very decent score) and just 38% in the interview. But then failure too has bitter-sweet rewards, especially in the UPSC. It carries such a big name that even interview discards are taken with some respect of sorts. He too had many that came his way except the selection. “Don’t forget that you are still left with one more chance!” people just won’t lose hope in him. Needs are multi-fold in the countryside. People just look with the reverence of a devotee, if there is a chance for somebody to hit big and rid them off the rural miserable shackles. Everybody had his or her share of expectations from the lucky go guy. He was simply supposed to be a panacea for all the maladies.

This time he took a break in the sequence of years after three years of slog out. He tired himself out amongst the big heap of exam material collected over the years. Now it was a multi-pronged strategy keeping in mind all the three stages of the examination. Having crammed syllabus many times, he felt like a master of his subjects. The risk at the prelims stage did not occur to him even once. Life is all about the jolts that we get when we least expect. Shock exploded on the family’s head. They had almost mortgaged their well-being against their civil services expectations. Now the full-stop had been slammed against their flowery sentence. It ended up meaning a big tragedy. His father could have literally died of the shock. It was unbelievable. Failure at the first stage and that too in the all crucial last chance! Unbelievable! Too cruel on God’s part! The mourning lasted for weeks.

As they say nothing goes waste, the failure this time brought many tragic sufferings and songs from his sensitive heart. Of and on he had been writing poetry during the grind and grill of the exams. The predominant element was of loss, deprivation, failure, tears, and still more. He showed these suffering cooings to his father. His father still wanted to stick to his dream of his son making big. The father’s literature-loving soul that considered the artistry of the written world to be the highest in the universe went gaga over these outpours. He declared that India was full of civil servants and every year they churned out more. How many poets and artists it produced? It can be counted on fingers. Poets and writers were thus more esteemed, loftier species. They thus again salvaged their next dream. Perhaps we have to set up and improvise our dreams; otherwise it becomes difficult to survive.

“Your failures have squeezed your soul to draw out creative juices!” his crestfallen frail figure tried to pump courage in his weak body and the son as well.

Poetry is too soft and wispy for the modern time’s cackling phonetics. An endangered form, it needs to be supported by the poet’s own vocal cords and pockets. The father thus did not dither from contributing a significant amount from his own pockets on the publication of his son’s book of verses. Again these disjointed English words created huge ripples in the countryside pond. A book and that too in English! Well that was too much for the simple farmers around who croaked endless accolades like frenzied frogs in monsoon-fed pond. Eulogies did not stop pouring in for months. If we put the economics of the venture out of the way, he got everything out of the investment. Illiterate people just gleamed over the glossy cover page of the thin volume, holding it like a precious diamond carved by somebody whom they always expected to hit the top. Those who could join letters to make words, meaningful or otherwise, termed it as the work of a genius. Hardly anyone could draw out meaning of these utterly subjective and mournfully abstract, reflective outpours. The more they could not understand it, the more he earned laurels! So the next target was well set up for him to become at least a nationally recognised writer.  

His fourth and final attempt to breach the impregnable fort of the civil services having been turned a disaster, it was a veritable anti-climax to the historic struggle. The indefatigable academician in him was blown off its feet by the shock waves. He still could not believe that he had fallen at the first hurdle after reaching the interview stage in the previous attempt. Despite all reasoning, it was inexplicable and not acceptable at all. Still the chapter had to be closed now. Countless times the family was lost in the sea of gloom whenever the thought raised it head. And it did quite often. The more his sulking silhouette found him in a pensive, suffering trance, the more he wrote poems. However, very soon he realised the commercial unreliability of this panacea to his soul, his escape route from the deadly reality that was still too close to his sensitive heart.

“Try more, you have it in you to be a writer!” his father’s ever-supporting baritone voice was like silver lining to the darkest cloud he had ever encountered.

Now when the glorious sun of the civil services had set for the first time, the people, at long last, seemed to be getting rid of their obsession of their big dream about him. He even felt that they were ignoring him with his failure. Far from the limelight, and slogging out like a sullen donkey, he wrote a big one, a work of fiction. The typeset itself hurt his father’s financial interests still further, but given his taste he bore this literary bruise quite happily. Very soon he realised that finding a publisher is far onerous than writing the best book in the world. Within a couple of years, the enterprising and proud search turned into a desperate scramble.

However, the doors to the civil services had not been tight-bolted completely. Just a couple of lucky days from the final date of submission, some well-wisher told him about his home state PCS examination. Like a weary veteran, he cleared both stages of the written test. Nonetheless, at the interview stage the board’s constitutional discretion ensured that nobody got selected except for the ones who managed to walk the political path of seeking blessings. The range of marks from as low as 5/75 to as high as 72/75 did not leave anything in the candidates’ hands and made it an all about manoeuvre of those sitting in the corridors of power. This stage was ‘make or break’.

The PCS is such a muddy river ridden with mighty crocodiles, putting one at risk—while seeking selection—whichever way one might decide to place an escaping foot to reach the opposite shore. Given his studious ways and almost nil political manoeuvring, he got minimum possible marks in the viva voce despite being one of the toppers in the written examination. People condemned his apolitical approach in not placating the bigwigs at the helm of affairs.

“Seeking political blessings for selection to the PCS is also a part of the examination,” they tried to put some smartness into his dull hardworking head.

“From interview to the final selection you require the best of your 99% effort, and 99% of this 99% is political lobbying,” a successful candidate from the previous batch tried some prudence with him. “Since they gave you almost fail marks in the interview, you need to work double hard to muster up pass marks on the loyalty chart of those in power!” he was soundly advised.

He did not get his mark-sheet of the failed attempt for the next six months. During this period the newly selected batch was consolidated and cemented into legitimacy. He meanwhile again rummaged through the syllabus because the notification for the next year’s examination had already appeared in the newspapers. Then one day his mark-sheet stealthily crept in. Twenty out of seventy-five in the interview. Even twenty-five would have fetched him at least an HCS allied post. Taking lessons, now more than his studies he was thinking about the invisible manoeuvring to pile up his score in the viva voce column. Appeasing the CM was the easiest way out. The literary purpose arose to draw out again from his father’s famished pockets who was by now nursing his conscience against him for the old pensioner had been forced to beg a private loan to get his second daughter married a few months ago.

With cooing literary stars in their eyes they self-published a book. It was a political dedication and it worked more than his studies across endless hours into the depth of nights. However, the favour by luck in one compartment was undone by a mis-stroke in another. Before they could join the state assembly was dissolved and elections were announced. When the opposition formed the next government with unbound vigour, it got busy in whitewashing all the rights and wrongs of the past government. The last government had been doling out jobs in thousands. “They are cheating the youth!” the present destiny-makers had shouted from their opposition benches. Now was the time to undo the former’s doings. Many recruitments were scrapped and quashed. Like a cowering herd of goats the PCS batch took shelter in the judicial precincts. They pooled money to engage the best lawyers in practice. At considerable costs to their struggling resources they just got dates after dates. Who stands a chance against a belligerent government in such a high-profile case!? Nothing was progressing. Their fates had been sealed in some unknown invisible judicial quagmire. Every new dawn brought new rumours. Everything changed except for their fate. Even standing against the rumours became a gross challenge. It was a terrible vacillation between hope and desperation.

They didn’t know that High Court functions as part and parcel of the state government’s machinations. This reality was to unfold slowly over the coming months and then years. The government supported some disgruntled unsuccessful candidate in filing writ against the recruitment. The selected candidates were made a party to the case. Like a petty criminal he got his summons for being selected to the PCS. It had started as a tragedy and was now turning farcical. He celebrated his thirtieth birthday as a ‘would be junior civil servant’ as still the most optimistic of those around him continued to believe in the goal. For months he had been explaining that they were on a constitutional safe-footing. However, as the spool of law kept on upturning the endless thread for months and then years he had to stop this explanation.

“We’ll surely be called for the job! But when? Even God does not seem to have a clue to it!” was his favourite refrain now.

Yes, we missed something! During the time he was waiting for his appointment, he was still writing. Nursing his injured conscience, subduing impotent anger, trying to escape the stranglehold of helplessness and consequent depression, he would say, “But I cannot waste any time. I have to utilise every moment!”

As the months piled up into years again people forgot him and his civil-servantship. It had been years now and in between they raked up memories sometimes. The case was as good as forgotten. It was better to forget it. The long wish seemed to have been buried very deep in the ruff and gruff of circumstances.

“Well son, here it might come at last!” his father seemed to say sometimes through the fading zeal of ill health and broken dreams.

Providence had not been kind to the old man. He had numerous memories to feel beaten by the greater forces beyond his control.

The fallen prince of the village was ultimately forced by failing financial resources and creeping requirements to take up the job of a content writer in a company in Noida. Past thirty and as part of the team of fresh graduates, he sometimes wished for the stroke of luck in the form of positive order from the court, or call it the government’s nod explicitly or implicitly. He was in a lonely corner suitable to reflect over success and failure. He had a sour trail of experience behind him that allowed him to reflect over things, particularly the topic of success and failure, from different aspects and angles. The perennial query staring the face of humankind, the question of our role in shaping our destiny, or fate’s invisible tentacles moulding us like a lump of clay into something predetermined, pricked him in its irritating acrimony.

“Whether we create circumstances; or circumstances create us?” he was mulling over the question, after being tossed by incidental waves and his particular efforts to reach a specific destination, and now churning out mundane words for online marketing portals and websites as a content writer.

A corporate job requires you to be a mini-politician. You have to manage the affairs. Just sincere hard work can put you in a tougher situation than the circumstances born of almost no work. Despite his tireless efforts, because he was just master of written words and worked hard, he had a long trail of failures. He now had this hesitatingly vouchsafed assurance that he would get his appointment later or sooner in life. Looking at that would-be-success he found himself in a twilight zone where the paradoxes intermingled like day and night; where contradictions seemed mixed up in a vague, mysterious but somehow explicable mixture. He kept his PCS hope alive while busy in the rote rut of churning out as many similar-sounding words as possible from 10 to 5 in the office. The dream drew inspiration from another dream his younger brother had while the initial setbacks to the PCS were shaking the ship of his destiny. His brother dreamt that he, the family prince, was standing in a row of PCS officers and when he saw the profile he could see him as a grey-haired, middle-aged man. Jokingly, they used to say that he will be a PCS officer well past 40 years of age.

His brother, in the eyes of their father had destroyed his career. There were enough chinks in his armour of careership that seemingly bore witness against him during charges and counter-charges.

“Despite being decently talented—he had scored 77% in B.Sc.—you are utterly, callously careless, complacent, uncompetitive that ruined your career even before it started!” the frustrated father voiced his agony, trying to latch onto some hope at the younger son’s end, while the elder one seemed to have been taken in by the mundane forces of survival.

His younger brother bore all the best habits of a decent boy, had not picked up any wrong manner, strictly moral in all senses of the term, but surprisingly landed in a cocoon of impassivity after graduation. Right after graduation he had cleared the entrance examination for Masters in Information Technology from a prestigious university, but was lethargic to go for counselling for he simply had not checked about the results. At the turn of the century when the IT sector was a hatchling to become the behemoth that it later became, it would have been a fine start to career in the IT during the boom and bust that followed. He had asked his friends to find out about the results which they never did and he missed the bus. Of nice stature and fine height he was drawn to a career in the army; and appeared nine times for the SSB interview. All retired army officers concurred he had all it requires to be a commissioned army officer. Success however mysteriously eluded.

And here they were, the brothers, in a position to talk about luck, fate, destiny, and hard work. Talks can bury the deepest scars. These can even make life appear purposeful even in the face of endless gloom. These can even raise hope for the future. Talks help life in moving on. Talks are rewards sometime. 

S:The mystery defies all explanation. Do we create circumstances that in turn prepare the outcome for us, or are we just poor products of our circumstances?

A:I think it’s we who create the circumstances. Good or bad one must have the honesty and guts to own up the bouquets and bricks with equanimity. The logic is as simple as this: you get flowers if you sow them, and prickles if you plant thorny seeds.

The younger brother started from the assumption of himself believing in the doctrine of ‘man creates circumstances’ because the little negatives of the charges against him regarding career stood self-explained. Everybody knew he had the talent, but just had been strangely complacent, almost criminally negligent—as his father often accused him of—in not using it. These bitter accusations and chidings of the near and dear ones made the point clear that he had almost destroyed his career.

S: No, no it simply can’t be that simple. If it was that simple then the world would have been either turned into heaven or burnt in hellish fire. Why? Because we have either good or bad plans. But it’s not so. Life as a whole belonging to the whole humanity seems grinding in a paradox. And while it gasps in its multifarious ways we get an open-ended riddle. The very reason that the world is neither heaven not hell proves that we are not the makers of our circumstances in all our sovereignty. There are some factors. Human destiny does not operate on the physical science principle of input of energy and output in some form. Between our endeavours (good, bad, whatever) there is a zone of inexplicable circumstances that most of the time mould our effort, or influence in such a way that the outcome is sometimes good, bad, inexplicably tragic, tragically tormenting or heartfully ecstatic, and so forth.

A: I just give 10% to this so-called unseen hand in moulding our destinies. But for 90% of the rest we are responsible.

S: It’s not the question of quantifying it. We can’t compartmentalise circumstances and efforts separately, for these operate in a single field, in an inseparable domain. It’s just like putting 10% ink in 90% of water. The combination changes the colour. I’m not for the one or the other. I just look at them working concurrently, simultaneously, still retaining their separate identities. It is simply a great mystery. Take for example, how many things are under our control in pursuit of a goal and how many aren’t that either help us or let us down. Suppose you are preparing for the civil services. Even the very act of preparation is bound by certain conditions that could have very easily been otherwise. After all not all of us prepare for this examination. A particular set of circumstances guides and motivates us. Who knows a different set of circumstances would have motivated us to become a doctor, an engineer, or not any of these at all, like you have chosen not to be any of these. Even one’s birth in a particular set of circumstances is beyond our choosing and is quite inexplicable. Let’s come back to the preparations for the civil services. Guided by some chance idea, some intuition, some calculation either in your own mind or some of your peers, you choose 2/3 of syllabus and focus on it, considering it to be most important. Now whether you get topics from this chunk or not isn’t in your control. Suppose you get the topics that you had prepared well, what you write during those three hours would be still bound by certain external forces beyond your control. Given the same information level, you might write at different levels of legibility and level of expression. It we move further into the incidental play of circumstances, I’d prefer to call it beautiful or chaotic interplay of incidental hits of various factors. The chance factor predominates visibly, invisibly. It arises at the time of evaluation of the answer sheets. I’m more particularly taking the example of social sciences (for in physical science there is 2 + 2=4, but even without this factual parameter there is great scope for subjectivity), there are chances that the write up might or might not match the evaluator’s frequency. His mood—destructive, constructive, positive, negative, happy, sullen, and many other swings—are the externalities that decide your fate.

A: At least in my case I’m thoroughly convinced that I mis-planned or didn’t plan my career. That was the blunder I committed in cold blood. Earlier I used to think that it was unfair on their part not to select me in the SSB, but now when I come to recall all those blunders I committed during the interviews my rejection appears credible to me.

S: These were no blunders at that time. These were just limitations bound to you by your circumstances. These might have been blunders in the eyes of the selection panel just as you consider them to be now. Had you known these, you would have definitely avoided them. But you didn’t know. Do you think, you are solely and wholly responsible for your blunders that I term as simple limitations imposed on you by the circumstances beyond your control? No, because it was not you who committed these mistakes. It was a young human being—a product of circumstances—styled by your schooling, the environment you lived in, the foundation that these factors have provided you, and these in turn depend on varying circumstances, and this goes on and on linking perhaps all of us on earth in a mysterious shackle of circumstances. A giant rippling wave carrying causes, effects, good and bad in it, crests and troughs of shaping destinies, highs and lows. You were circumcised by your limited, mediocre schooling, carefree rustic society, and family where expectations seem to fulfil the job of career development.

A: It’s a horrible theory. By this logic even the most heinous crimes do stand free, for it’s not he who commits a crime but the circumstances that made him such stand accused in the dock.

S: Well, in a generalised form, good circumstances and good effort if happen to meet at a good time, at the cusp of productive chance, results are good. And if the reverse or the combination isn’t right we see a struggle; as for the crime, hasn’t somebody well said, “More than the sinner the sin is abominable!” This sin here is not only a noun; it is a whole phenomenon of negative circumstances linked in an interminable chain of cause and effect across globe or perhaps beyond. So more than the sinner, I pity the circumstances and the pathological agents that create such circumstances.

A: It means you purely support the idea that we are the products of circumstances.

S: Helpless puppets...made to dance on the stage of life! No, no! I didn’t say that either. I just realise that there are enough examples to substantiate both assumptions. Quantity-wise one outshines, but quality wise the other inspires further. Furthermore, if the cords of circumstances had been totally under predetermined hands, we would have either reached the goal of universe or God would not have needed to create us at all.

A: But there can be two ways. Either the circumstances are fixed as per a pattern of premeditated destiny, or these occur haphazardly. The latter would rule out the possibility of the existence of God. Well, returning to the question. I think these are just opinions and analyses of success and failure. The victorious, in order to increase the stature and sheen of his achievement, will say that tiresome and unflinching effort definitely fetches good results; we are the makers of our destiny. The failed ones, on the other hand, will try to repaint the black colour on his face, blaming it on the adverse circumstances, luck or bad luck as you have it.

S: No, we just can’t confine these two tormenting facts to mere reactions of two particular set of people on the outcomes of their efforts. In that case you forget to mention the people who have experienced both. In fact most of us face the fluctuation of both things in life. It only means these coexist in some mysterious combination. My initial effort to prove the existence of uncontrolled circumstances was just to bring you down from the singular stance of ‘man creates circumstances’; it was not even to nullify your hypothesis. It was just to convince you that the thing is open-ended both ways. Both things do intermingle in such a manner to turn it sweet-sour and sour-sweet game that life is.

A: Then what is the way left out for us stuck up between these two incalculably heavy grinding stones?

S: Hope, expectations and desire of some favourable draw in your favour shouldn’t hinder your practical, labouring foot on the path of your goal; while the tireless, sweating, heartful slogging on the path of your goal shouldn’t make your eyes dreamless of good luck as well.

A: Just like you! Kept on slogging, walling up one breach after another of your limitations and flaws. But this toil didn’t stop you from pulling at God’s apron whenever you found time for rituals through your hymn-reciting entreaties! Luck! Both ends achieved. Well, maybe you are right. Life is too broad a thing to be underlined by one statement or the other. Maybe both provide us a track of existence on which we can chug ahead. Well, wish you all luck for your final set of circumstances! Wish the circumstances take such a draw in your batch’s favour that your earlier result declared by the State Public Service Commission is authenticated by the court!

S: I have done my lot as circumstances allowed me to. With my limitations and capabilities, I’ve just tried to improve while furtively trying to draw from the pool of my efforts and the binding sinews of circumstances around.

Mr. K arrived on the scene. A silent slogger, he had lugubriously moved ahead on the path of his career without hurrying and without facing any perceptible troubles. In a cool and simply calculating manner he had become a software engineer. A man of moderate and amazingly balanced calibre, most of his finely pulled out cards had fallen in his favour. He had just moved ahead without any dissipation and burning of unnecessary energy.

A: What do you say of him? Did circumstances bless him, or he stoically went on creating them?

S: Oh...my? As many stories as there are people on earth. All with their varying interpretations. Just to keep the sanctity of what we have agreed upon, let’s please close the chapter; otherwise it’ll boom out of proportions. It has taken a lot of work by our tongues to fish out some meaning of the riddle. Now involve someone else with his own specific story and it will again change colours. The chameleon!

K:A... you have done that course in software science.

A: But who cares for distance courses?

K: I’ve just got a promotion. Now I’m in a position to recruit you as a paid apprentice in my company. Within a couple of years you will be earning a decent salary...if you work hard!

S: Here he arrives with a load of good circumstances for you.

And they laughed heartily.

That’s life is. A string of fragmented dreams, falls, runs, talks, agreements and disagreements. It goes on. Unmindful of victories and failures. In its constant, permanent swipe, it takes away the varied, impermanent dust scattered around. Under the broom we rumble and tumble and make noise. Of agonies more often. Of happiness sometimes.

A Nightmare Devouring a Dream

 It was not that late on this Sunday morning as usually it is for the school going children on a holiday. Madhavan was peacefully asleep in his tiny bedstead in the small room of their semi-concrete little house, situated in a little fishing hamlet off the coast, about two kilometres from Velanganni near Nagapattinam in Tamil Nadu.

His sister Jayachitra appeared even more angelic in her sleep. She carried a smile while sleeping, as if an ever-persistent sweet dream safely blanketed her. It was about 8:30 a.m. Their father, a moderately well-off fisherman from the tiny settlement, had left for fishing in his fibre catamaran. Their mother, not expecting the children to wake up for another hour and half, had left for Velanganni about half an hour ago.

Madhavan’s house, a little semi-concrete hutment with whitewashed walls and red sloping roof could well have been called a small fisherman’s pride. A safe cosy world; an axis of long-cherished dreams; a small world inside the bigger world of the quiet fishing village, the latter still boxed up in the larger world of the houses on the shorefront. At a short distance, light blue waves gently surged and receded. The sea all welcoming and friendly, except on occasions when there were storms.

Life as usual, mundane life dragging with surety, keeping routine, maintaining hope, retaining society yoked in practised roles and responsibilities. Beach sand, mud, masonry, planks, boats, jetties, and beach huts. A fishing world. Sea and fish rule the air. Menfolk going into the sea. Women taking fish to the market. A slightly boasting air sailing over the wealthy fishermen’s small villas with their red-tiled roofs, fluted columns, verandah, and tiled floor. Golden sand ready to simmer under the sun, like any other day, waiting for the sun to add to its elevation. In the background, the bluish calm of the sea looking meditatively into the Bay of Bengal. A morning as vivacious like any other, so dreamy that a passing angel might have been struck by the majestic calm and languorous beauty of this unit of the world. Specks of grey white clouds in bluish expanses of the sky. Greenish black silhouette of the fishing trawlers moving on the watery bosom. Even the celestial flier may not have an inkling of what lay ahead within a time-span of just fifteen minutes.

It was the fateful morning of December 26, 2004 when a Tsunami wreaked death and destruction across coastal areas in the whole region. When hurtling waves swallowed many a dream. The times when the nature forgot its objectivity to turn furious. Boxing Day Tragedy: a frightful gift of death, doom, and destruction by the sea as it opened its Christmas Box. A black Sunday when white silvery sandy beaches were spattered with calamitous mud wherein rolled the boats, fishing trawlers, and bungalows. The day when cars, buses, and trucks were washed away like toys in a miniaturised play-act of flooding by the children on the beach on normal days. When even mighty bridges and sturdy railway lines collapsed like pack of cards under the monster wave.

So the fate of this little hamlet appeared sealed for the wrong, just at the moment the first tidal wave came silently wreaking havoc like a poisonous snake.

Madhavan’s sleep was broken by an angry shake of the tiny house. A boat’s bow came in splintering away the feeble resistance of the door, the very same door that their mother closed behind her every night, leaving her two children in the warmly protecting air of the little room. Before he could make out what had happened, water was greedily coming up the little height of his bed. Was it a bad dream? No, it was something worse.

Their house was at the outer fringe of the high-tide mark of the first wave. So giving them first hurried warning, the water swashed back even more dangerously than it had arrived. Elsewhere lower down the coast, the waves swept defenceless people desperately trying to reach higher ground. The things that had been done in years were undone in a momentary swash. In Nagapattinam, Nagore and Velanganni vehicles, boats, humans, animals and houses were converted into a tangled mass of wood, metal, and bodies.

As the next wave came upon their palm-fringed little hamlet, proudly holding its settlement-lore for the sake of these simple fishermen, all structures were razed to the ground. The boat came dangerously smashing in and hit the wall. The evil progeny of the submarine slumping flooded the room in all its muddy flurry.

“The sea has gone mad!” Madavan’s death-stricken voice cut across the roaring rage and reached his younger sister’s ears.

On many occasions in the crowded bazaars, his mother had left them alone in the past, instructing him to take care of his little sister. Even in the face of this terrible moment, the instruction overcame his danger-struck senses. Jumping into the boat’s bow, he dragged Jayachitra safely into his brotherly arms. Just a few seconds later, the house was blown away and the boat was lifted to the level of the top palm branches, whose height once filled him with curiosity, awe and surprise. He was grasping his sister as strongly as he could manage. Luck throws a tiny handful of survival chance in such chaos. Who gets it is beyond the comprehension of any law of determination.

A motley crowd was running futilely away from the sea, unmindful of a costly car turned upside down right in the middle of their path. Nets, masts, fishing trawlers, canoes and mechanised boats lay in a tangled mass. Water muffled the breaking and snapping sounds of the world built with so much of focussed passion. Only the sea roared, subduing all other lesser noises. A young man was running away from the beach with a young girl’s body in his supposedly protecting hands. However, the monster was grinning instead of grieving over the massive loss of lives and property around. Plants, wood, and damaged boats lay over dead fish. In just a few minutes it was a changed world; the world which was almost the same with its mundane routines over the years.

We have been running miles ahead of our dreams. As concrete buildings cluttered the seafront, fisherfolk moved within perilous vicinity of even storms, not to mention a Tsunami. The angry sea rebuked: destroyed communities, vandalised beaches, mutilated bodies, and twisted boats. It simply pushed the table, scattering everything like broken crockery. The beachfront engulfed by the disaster, there was only one anatomy recognisable. Disaster’s. The massive keel and hull of a ship that moved proudly, smoothly, for fish, money and life, now stuck up, torn and bruised, among coastline rocks. Water is generous to fish and ships. A liveable world to the former, to flap, to swim; a soft road for the latter, to move, to almost run on an even keel. The sea had perhaps momentarily abandoned the customary role. The fish lay dead, hurled inland and left to die muddy death in the world outside. The ship lying on the rocks, tilted to its right on its keel.

A crushed world. Fear hung in the air over the debris. Rumours did perilous rounds. Every now and then people, like tiny insects, began running helter-skelter, away and further away from the sea. The sea that spawned death and destruction. The gigantic seismic waves unleashed by the super-massive undersea earthquake loomed large in panicked air. Buildings, huts, fishermen and tourists became just tiny testimonials to the wanton destructive power of the massive geological plates pushing against each other with demonic pressure.

Fractured images in a broken mirror. Fragments and pieces of broken dreams. Lorries, pushcarts, and pilgrims to the seashore on the full moon day were mercilessly moulded into a muddy slush. The twenty-thirty feet sea wall smacked two kilometres inland, destroying secluded mangrove paradises, people working in salt pans, breakfasters, as well as fishermen out in the sea for catching fish and prawns. Decimated coastal fishing hamlets and battered fishing canoes, torn-apart beach front and an incontrollable mother crying over the shirtless dead body of her daughter of Jayachitra’s age, bore mournful testimony to the madness of the killer wave. People were happy in their  varied ways, now they cried for the same loss, a monotonous line of loss of relatives, family, and houses.

Hundreds of bodies were lying in the sand. Holding his sister’s hand, he passed by the body of Kittoo, her eyes half-closed and her mother, robbed of the diamond of her maternity, crying so loud that Madhavan dragged his sister away from the scene, horribly terrified. The dead little girl had been friendly enough to offer him a lollipop as their mothers introduced them at a local thoroughfare a few months back. He still recalled that particular taste as he moved away. However bitter the life around, a child but has an innocent little world of sweetness. He carried that little world in his mouth. There in the dangerous sea, he saw the coastguard ships braving the unusually ruffled sea. For a moment he was wonderstruck as to why the sea was behaving so madly. The sea appeared playful even. A joyous memory: the boat’s rough planking, painted freely, artlessly in red and white; his feet struggling in the bow, stomach taut over the gunwale, his hands holding her sister’s as he laughingly dragged her to the edge. A smile on his lips cracking the bloody crust on his lower lip. Pain. Again he was pulled into scary reality.

He thought his parents will return. They will all be together in their sweet home. A child’s hope as vast as the sky. And till then it was his duty to take care and protect his little sister like on so many occasions in the past.

The titanic Tsunami caused by the fifth largest earthquake in hundred years occurred on the twenty-sixth—a date that has become synonymous with the destructive face of nature. On 26 December, 2003, it was Bam in Iran that bore the brunt of the raw, unnerving, shaking forces of nature; On 26 January, 2001, there was epical devastation by the Bhuj and Latur earthquake. And now it happened again on the same date—quite unexpectedly since Tsunami is such a rare phenomenon in the South Asian region. It just caught the people on the wrong foot.

All hope seemed to have vanished from the people’s Tsunami-tortured faces. Whenever a VIP visited the relief camps, the people folded hands with such desperation and helplessness like they had never done before any of their Gods. There was so much to say for so many losses, for so little of the help that might come their way now. Some even vent out their desperation to the hilt during these rare fleeting moments as the hurried VIP chickened out of the mess lest there might be some mud smeared on his clean shirt.

Holding his hands over his smashed head a man was crying inconsolably. It was the mournful acme of sorrow. Just tears and cries didn’t appear sufficient to give expression to the sorrow born of the terrible loss of his little son, daughter and wife. His very purpose in life had been washed away. The four-five years old boy, who had given him so many reasons to start out for work and return home after finishing a bone-breaking schedule, was now lying to be buried hurriedly in line with his eternally asleep sister. The mother’s covered body appeared sleeping comfortably under warm clothes like somewhere in North Indian winters at the time.

On every face ‘missing’ and ‘homeless’ was written. Explosive tidal waves which had taken many countries in their destructive spectrum now haunted the tormented psyches of these displaced, hungry, and destitute masses. Hospital morgues were choked with unclaimed bodies so there were mass burials. Multihued coastal community that once glittered with the sea’s softly gyrating waves now bore horrific testimony to the all-battering sea-surge. Massive relief operations, on the other hand, were turning out to be a small and feeble whiff of desperation. Still people engaged a hopeful talk in the stinking relief camps, narrating the miraculous tale of an infant’s survival, written inexplicably on a floating mattress. Kudos to life—one single flicker of life lighting up the endless depths of thousands of lost lives. Well, that’s life!

This earthquake off the coast of Sumatra was so powerful that geologists claimed it made the earth wobble on its axis. The evil aftermaths of this emission of energy, caused due to the undersea slippage of the fault-lines, were felt in every nook corner of the earth. Like tiny insects people were scurrying to safety, impassively carrying the leftovers. A battered woman was moving expressionlessly carrying a colour television set on her head. Her little home, fishpond and vegetable garden all lost and other family members still missing. How was the television set saved? It could have been another story of miraculous survival. We cannot expect it to be dry at least. It must have been in water and not in working condition. But after losing your present, you salvage survival crumbs from the past and look into the future with certain shared memories. It was the tiny idiot box that had seen so many moments of their togetherness. She carried the spoilt box of memories on her head, still catching onto the thin strands of hope, to meet her family, to gather the sinews again, to make a nest once more.

Madhavan saw Nikhita. The left side of her face smashed. In place of the childish smile, a purplish scar and reddish right eye gave her a fearsome expression. Seemingly unmindful of her serious, unattended open injury, she was munching a crumb that had luckily fallen in her pleading hands from somewhere. In the face of such calamity, you have to grasp to the streaks of life filtering through the screen from the unknown world. Also you have to be lucky among thousands of hands that try to hold that iota of life. They had played together on many occasions. It was but no occasion to play. Jayachitra smiled at their neighbour carrying a different face now. The girl was too young to feel the pain of loss; she could just sense the dull pain in her head. Nikhita, however, was grown enough to have an idea of the loss, and knew it was not the time to reciprocate a smile. They remained sitting silently. Unable to bear some silent unseen agony, the once agile chirpy girl got up and moved limpingly. He watched her almost lifeless body move away with undecided steps. Where is she going? He thought of following her, but then dropped the idea because she appeared not to even know them.

Whenever something worth eating fell in his hands, he first gave it to sister to eat, happily looked at her as she ate, and with enthusiasm thought of the praise he will get from pa and ma when they will come to know of this. He seemed to forget all the hardships as his present melted to make a happy picture of the future. When they will be together, they will go to the school, their mother will cook, and father will go fishing. His hopeful eyes putting the scattered pieces together.

In what can be termed as the largest ever relief operations during peace time, all three wings of defence forces were notching out every ounce of their professional efforts. However, the extent of the tragedy was such that even the most humane of their efforts appeared lost in the mishandling chaos around. Life had derailed, and so were the common most expectations. The dead bodies had lost reverence and respect, and the scenes like carrying a dead body tied to a wooden stick jolted the last bit of optimism still lurking around. It appeared strikingly unreligious as the dead are given utmost reverence under normal times. Under such disharmonic times, however, all civilized norms get thrown into the dustbin of survival, and humanity sucks out draughts from the same to somehow survive and see another day. Volunteers were dragging dead bodies on all fours to save them from still worse fate of rotting in the open. Relief and rescue personnel worked mechanically; clearing away the rubble and the bodies with the same expression. There was no other way. It was frightening, more so for his sister. You have to be brave, he recalled his father once telling him. Embracing his sister, turning her face the other way, he braved the sight, his breathing heavy and heat beating fast.

Having lost each and everything related to her, an old lady was wailing piteously. Her wide-open, toothless mouth and lost dull eyes drowned in the salty surge of the sea of tears. Her face was questioningly raised to the God’s eyes somewhere in the sky. He had seen her earlier. He recalled vividly. No doubt it was she. She had grinned and acknowledged his father’s greetings, while he looked happily wearing a bright red shirt, walking with his father on some Sunday, going to the market holding his father’s hand. Now her hands hung limply in air; palms wide open having lost each and every belonging linked to the lines on them through the inexplicable and invisible chord of love, relationships, and life’s abounding pleasantries.

Badly battered alive bodies were walking upon hundreds of others still buried in the sand. Their vibrant fishing hamlets wiped out of existence. The fishermen robbed of their catamarans and nets looked at the sea as if it was some perennial foe; broken was that sanctimonious bridge that links a fisherman to the sea like a farmer is linked to his plot of land. The army had dispatched various columns to somehow undo the horrendous extent of this catastrophe. The whole of humanity seemed to have been stranded in a tortuous quagmire. It was a struggle to survive, to move in the mud to gather the broken pieces, to find the surviving family members, then walk a bit more to take on what remained of life.

The Coast Guard, Navy, and Air Force were carrying out aerial reconnaissance mission to salvage some pride from the human side in the face of this gruesome attack of nature. Temples, churches, mosques, schools and offices were being converted to makeshift shelters for this badly battered section of the modern humanity.

Bodies in hundreds—naked, half naked, black, brown, some already showing initial signs of purplish decay; others still fresh like they were asleep; children, men, women, old, young, middle aged—were waiting for the final rites. Nobody was bothered about their caste, class, creed, or religion. It was just a gruesome mass of corpses. Manmade differences melt in the face of assault by the larger forces.

Relief workers were frantically digging a big mass grave to provide a quick burial place, where these victims could be laid to rest within the shortest period of time. No ladder was available to carry the bodies to the bottom of the pit, so even the last respect that could have been given to the once-thriving life had to be abandoned. The uncomplaining corpses were thus thrown into the pit. The hands alive and moving being forced to carry out this apparently inhuman burial, almost feeling ashamed and carrying bruises on their conscience. No God-fearing eye could spare even a single look at the jumbled up limbs once the work had been done, so closing their eyes the workers threw earth over these unknown and even casually acquainted faces.

The nearby beach—a little shiny patch of softness to absorb fatigue and tension—had vanished in a deadly jiffy. The beautiful sand-work was unprotestingly swept off as the waves came rising in a flash and then completing the first calamitous cycle, the water subsided as hurriedly as it had surged. Here Madhavan had spent many hours with family and friends on holidays waiting for his father’s boat to return from fishing. The seaside hotel, from whose balcony he had panoramic view of the paternal extent of the sea while his father supplied fish to the kitchen, had been ransacked by the mobbish waves. He looked at the rubble. Some happy memory waved at him to bring a smile on his face. He looked more intently into the rubble to rebuild those nice times. Even his childish fancy failed him. That world seemed to have been ripped apart. No, it wouldn’t be the same again. He was suddenly scared. ‘But I shouldn’t get scared because I am elder brother and have to take care of Jayachitra,’ he worked up a little resolution.

On Christmas, the visitors had put offerings and money in boxes in the church. The priest was now distributing the same to the needy lined up, of all faiths and beliefs, having lost their colour, mired in the same colour of tragedy, mere battered human beings. The priest distributed the things with a peculiar sense of detachedness as if it didn’t matter anything to him anymore. Madhavan held his sister in front of him in the queue. Putting some coins and some candies on their open palms, the priest put his hand on their hands, first on the girl and then her brother. It was the first human touch of sympathy since days, since so long that he hardly remembered the last time he felt the same. He felt like crying out and ask the elderly priest about his parents. But then the queue moved on mechanically and he just stepped ahead. He knew it was futile. How will the priest help him in finding his parents, he calculated the impossibility of the task. But then who will? All he knew was that he has to take care of his sister and continue looking around to catch a fragment of his lost world. But the world had been shattered in a way that all broken pieces appeared the same. These seemed to belong to all and none at the same time. 

The gigantic rupture in the earth’s womb whiplashing deadly ripples on the open bosom of the sea, which gained horrific momentum over hundreds of kilometres, had broken the languorous calm of that Sunday morning. Hoping to see his father’s boat he went to the fishing jetty. It but was decimated, only tiny vestiges remained. Some sullen fishermen were helplessly looking at the angrily lapping watery tongues, more dangerous than fire, hissing against the broken stone and woodwork. Much to the pitiful cry of his tiny heart, a big mechanised fishing vessel had been washed ashore. It was lying on its side like a big whale stranded on sand, like a broken toy on the table. It appeared damn funny to them. They laughed, gesticulating like two little monkeys, pointing towards the funny tragedy. Children can laugh, for the good only, even if there is hardly any reason to. 

Children cry as easily as they laugh. He cried. He ran weeping, holding Jayachitra’s hand as tightly as he could, lest the chaos snatch her away. She was the only possession he was left with. A trench-like long and deep mass grave was being dug. Coming to its edge, he saw the horrific sight of a girl being carried to the bottom. He cried loudly and ran with his sister, scared that they had gone mad and were burying girls and might snatch his sister to do the same to her.

“Father and mother will get angry at me if I don’t take care of her,” he was calculating with his innocent mind.

He was now moving towards Velakanni beach hoping to find their mother. On the way he came across the water-work done by the seismic onslaught of the waves. Leftovers were being dragged out of the devastated fishing hutments. Rubble-strewn landscape glittered with Tsunami’s calligraphy—mud smeared utensils, battered clothes, smashed trunks, tattered cupboards, broken chairs, unhinged tables, open chests, and dislodged cots. Many a time, they went crashing into battered fishing canoes. The survivors, wailing hysterically, were being led to relief camps and hospitals. Municipal lorries were carrying dozens of bodies to dump them into huge pits and municipal graveyards. Killing the last emotion for the dead, their relatives just handed over the bodies to the relief workers for burial. Most of the bodies had been smashed beyond recognition. There was no need for post-mortem now, so the hospitals were getting rid of corpses as soon as possible.

The huts and semi-concrete houses of Seruthur, a fishermen colony about a kilometre from Velankanni, had been rubbled beyond recognition. Subramaniam uncle, a fast friend of his father, was not at his customary place today to greet him. He just stared at the place where he supposed the house to exist.

A little shrine of the sea goddess, worshiped by the fisherfolk with special protective prayers offering toddy, turmeric water and neem leaves, stood half ravaged. Trail of death and destruction around it still grinned wantonly. He had seen his mother praying. ‘God listens to your prayers if you pray with a clean heart,’ he remembered her telling him one day. He went up to the broken shrine to pray with a clean heart. He wasn’t sure whether he will be able to do it with a clean heart or not. ‘In any case the God couldn’t save its own house,’ he felt like making fun of God and turn a little joke of it. But then he was scared the God might delay meeting with their parents. Recalling all mannerisms of his mother, he sat down to pray. The agonised air continued to tickle him, the sounds around, and he gave up the effort to muster up a clean heart.  

Collapsed walls and roofs meekly brandished the signs of destruction at the VIP and official vehicles buzzing around. A fishing trawler had been rammed into a minor bridge. Sacrificed coastal life had been offered at the seismic altar. Boats, electric poles, nets, planks, boards, roof tins, clothes, and ropes were scattered over the grotesque mud. Hopelessly people wandered through the mud and water puddles. Everybody seemed to be hopping around like children, sullen-faced children rather.

Jayakodi, the fisherman uncle who talked to him so lovingly and confidently that the child in him considered the big fisherman as the bravest man in the world, bore the sight of a big mountain collapsing. The big bulky man’s spectacularly heart-rending mournful abandonment to the incessant stream of sobs made him more curious than scared. The more the big man tried to control himself, the more uncontrollable became the stream of sorrow shaking his body with piteous convulsions. Bending on his knees, he was holding his boy’s lifeless hand against his left eye as if to prevent the stream of sorrow. His wife was wailing by his side, her face convulsing on the boy’s chest. He thought the boy was lucky in having his parents by his side. But then the boy will not get up to smile at his parents. He knew death meant the point of no return. They were, he and his sister, but alive and would smile on meeting their parents. Then his heart beat faster. What if, if ma and pa don’t smile when we meet them. He was gripped by fear. The scene of him and Jayachitra wailing by their parents unsmiling bodies flashed in his head. He had seen too many dead bodies, so the picture came vivid. He started crying. Seeing him cry, his sister cried even louder. He heard her crying, recalled his responsibility, embraced her, and caressed her to smile again.  

Everybody appeared robbed of something most precious in life. Against this background of black-music of death, the sea thundered demonically, forcing the badly pillaged human beings to rush inland and cram the make-shift relief camps. The people were just simply fleeing away from themselves; away from their God-ordained right (or duty) of performing the final rights of the dead bodies coming their way whom they recognised as their direct relatives and dear friends. Their badly smashed selves dithered from taking up this responsibility.

Chinnapillai from a neighbouring colony was bravely putting a flower garland around the twisted neck of his girl wearing a pink frock. His wife’s body lay at some distance. Around them dead fish littered the muddied landscape. He had seen thus jolly person. Their small family had been a guest at his house, last year, and had lunch at their place. Yes, he remembered her dress. Pink. Was it the same? He peered into the frock to find out if it was the same. No, he wasn’t sure. He was staring at the dead girl, or at her frock rather, when he shifted his look and found the unfortunate father looking at him. He thought he will recognise him, but then found the man was just seeing through him. He was alive, but perhaps he didn’t see any longer.

Quite anxious to lay her frail hands upon something useful for the life staring into her feeble old eyes, an old woman, clad in a tattered sari, was furtively roaming around in the Tsunami battlefield. Plastic cans, broken dented utensils, plastic chairs, and a sack of clothes were the things that lay around her waiting to enter some badly contrived shelter. Her once cosy shelter having been blown and scattered away like brittle matchsticks, it was a humungous task, at this stage of life, to make a beginning, to regain a foothold again. The Tsunami had left behind many a dangerous sea resident on the land. Angrily the old woman threw a big stone at a scorpion, as if taking it as the veritable representation of the deadly sea. A boy wailed nearby, fruitlessly pleading that he had been bitten by a snake. In normal times it would have been news, driving people to rush to his help, but not now.

At a short distance, people were running to beg rations from the relief workers. Most of them did not know how the sudden shifting of the sea floor and the consequent vertical displacement of water created disequilibrium in it giving birth to this evil child of death and destruction. Now survival meant with how much strength you could stretch out your begging hands as voluntary organisations came with food and clothes. There were hundreds of hands jostling for littlest of piece. Hands stretched out flatly, tautly on their all five; lines on the palms—the webbing of luck and fate—glaringly evident like death-sentencing signature of the Tsunami.

He, having made his sister stand at a safe distance, tried to fight his way into the faceless behemoth of a beggar, the pity-faced, soulless, multiple-handed creature, jostling, shifting, restless to survive, to grab the morsels of life. He was pinched down in the innards of this ever-hungry creature. Gasping for breath, scared for life, he howled and found himself pushed out. An old woman, beggar before and beggar now, got him up and handed him a handful of plain boiled rice. Smiling through tears, holding the treasure in his cupped palms, he ran to his sister. He held it to her mouth. The little one was hungrier than he expected and ate all of it, like a little puppy gobbling greedily from a bowl. There was rice around her mouth. He wiped these last grains from her face, put these on his palm and ate, closing eyes. He was happy that she was no longer hungry and will not cry for some time now.

The black Sunday had gobbled everything. Temples, churches, mosques, and an odd gurudwara had been razed to the ground. The survivors had put red rags as signs of reverence at the former shrines. Here hundreds were trying to sew up their tattered faith and praying for the survival, well-being and finding their near and dear ones. Faith and its symbols had been cut down. It will take some time for it to heal, to grow. Well, all this takes time of course.

One cannot know from where this devastated young couple got dry wood to cremate their four-year-old twins, son and daughter. Two little pyres were burning as the unfortunate young mother buried her face in the sorrowfully heaving bosom of her husband. Though it wasn’t cold, he felt a little shiver as the tide of some strange sensation welled up the pores of his skin. He saw the fire. Felt like getting some warmth. He needed some warmth of love. He stood by the pyres, solemnly as if he was a fellow mourner. All he felt was the warmth. Flesh burning. Fire crackling. Then he got scared and ran away to his sister whom he had instructed to stand at a distance. 

Some priests were carrying out a religious procession towards the sea for its pacification. One was saying that it was the disaster born of an angry sea God. “No, it’s angry Varuna, the water God!” the other countered. Someone was trying to romp in his point that it was a sea goddess who had caused all this.

The twisted time was taking turns to get itself free of the knot it was entangled in. Then some missive triggered a panic wave. An early-morning warning from the Ministry of Home Affairs to the Chief Secretaries of the affected states went around the devastated mobs in rumoured versions. Fearing another sea storm, people abandoned whatever little things they were left with and took to their heels. Horns were blazing. Vehicles and humans competed to beat the swift forces of death chasing them. The Tsunami tandava had been too fearsome to be faced twice in a lifetime. Noise made by the relief planes and helicopters was mistaken as another sea-surge. Many were injured in the stampede. The brother and sister also ran, imitating others. His sister’s small legs gave in and she fell. He got her up, tried to lift her in his arms and then run. His mind was up to the task, but his small body wasn’t. They both fell and crawled away from the stomping feet to hide by a broken wall.

That fateful day, Fatima’s four-year-old son was playing on the beach imminently facing a wall of the sea. He tried to scamper back as the Tsunami struck. She had her infant son in her lap. She also ran towards him to protect him from the perilous wall. Nonetheless, this crippling natural disaster was beyond any of her prayer to the Almighty and snatched away the boy. Tragedies defy all logic, miracles do even more. Clinging to a floating plank, she still clutched the infant and was pushed far out into the mud, and when the sea retreated with even more force, she found the board struck in the branches of a tree. A day later some gutsy fisherman got the mother and child onto the ground. A young mother, she was now feeding coconut milk to her infant daughter. Her dried motherly bosom now spent of its contents, while the heart heaved inside promising recuperation as soon as possible. She was a mother. She had to give life even if she was almost starving. Madhavan had sometimes seen his mother talking to this woman. He ran towards her for support and succour. She did not appear to recognise him. Her glassy eyes just stared into the murky horizon where the sea hissed. Mechanically her hand was raised and she caressed his little head, but then the thought of her own son overcame her like another Tsunami and she started wailing so loudly that he was scared and forced to retreat.

The symptoms of post-traumatic stress infested the foul air inside the relief camp. He had forced his way in, like it was their home. He tried to find some known face. Hundreds of orphaned children were trying to come to terms with this gross reality in feebly-lit makeshift tents. Some were lying with eyes closed but sleep was nowhere near. Some were eating from paper bowls; others were just staring at still others who did the same in return. Doctors and nurses were trying to forestall the battle against impending epidemic. He saw some familiar faces. He had definitely seen them. It was on that fine morning, the weather being exceptionally calm, his father had taken him in the boat. Christian fisherman Miller, Minsha, and Bapsha had greeted so lovingly that his head felt their blessing touch as their fishing boat passed along. He raised his hand towards them. They just looked. Memories had melted in the heat of the tragedy. Possibly they did not even recall him whose son he was. He just allowed his hand to drop down and caressed the little head of his sister.

Collapse of clean water supply had brought the camp to the verge of cholera, typhoid, and other diarrhoeal diseases of poor sanitation. Sickness loomed large in the air.

Still unburied bodies, petrifying, now placed in a nearby camp, turned dogs on the path of scavenging their once masters. A policeman, Sanjeevan, stood guard to chase away the canine onslaught. A month back his father had a row with another fisherman and this policeman had come to their house, had been extremely polite and helped to resolve the matter without aggravating the issue further. He remembered this kind, moustached face very well. He might help even now. He ran and tugged at his baton. The policeman did not remember him, but as a humanistic gesture took him to the stinking corpses so that he could recognise some acquaintance. He carefully left his sister outside and pinching his nose against shirt end to keep the stink away, inspected the corpses with utmost seriousness belying his little years on earth. He did not even know whether he was relieved or sad over not finding his parents there. The air, the stench, the corpses jolted his senses. When he came out, he was older in years in his mind.

Military field hospitals and temporary shelters were being set up to provide basic amenities, drinking water, clothes, and utensils. However, the extent of the damage along the 2000 kilometres southern coastline was so huge that the relief effort proved to be a molehill before the mountainous need.

He had taken up parental responsibility for his sister. Having been almost trampled to the pain of his bones, he grabbed some clothing and toiletries from the military relief site and rolling his sleeves up, sat to the task of bathing her under the tap, like his mother used to do to both of them, carefully recalling each and every nuance of the art. Kamlawati whom he recalled as the condescending elderly lady, who shared some anecdote with his mother in the vegetable market, appeared to recognise him. She sat to the task of bathing both of them. Like tiny puppies finding their mother in a stampede, they felt safest in the world. They had at least a fistful of the lost world. But then life had been jolted so terribly that everybody had lost footing. Before they could even come out of their initial childlike shyness for the casual acquaintance, the chaos grabbed the benefactor, and they lost her face in the unhitched humanity around. They were alone again in the crowd. For a while he considered to search for the old lady instead of his parents, but then looking at the disorder around dropped the idea.

A woman at a specially erected pandal was lamenting over her inability to save her elder son. She appeared brutally traumatised by her ordeal to save only one of her sons. The one-and-half-year old squeezed against her bosom, she was haunted by those flashes of memory as the perilously swirling and debris-strewn torrent snatched the other one away. Theirs was a little heaven on the palm-fringed shore before the 30-feet water wall brought overwhelming devastation. Their little hutment was twisted and snapped off its foundations as the Tsunami came crashing. The boy was clinging to her right hand while she grasped the infant with the left. Paddling for life, she knew their fate as combined three had been sealed, so in a stony ennui she allowed the waves to snatch away the boy, somewhere inside her knowing that she could have held onto him for some more time, but that surely would have been the peril of all three. As mother she had to salvage something out of the doom. She cursed herself for allowing him to be offered at the altar of twisted wreck all around. All silent and sullen now, she stared into the distance and safely cradled the baby in her arms, an expression of incalculable guilt written on every pore of her being. Mud-smeared school books, diaries, papers and photographs from some unknown house sprawled around her. She took up a photograph and stared at those unknown faces.

He saw Divakaran, a neighbour of theirs. His father had once a bloody fight with this man and got a bleeding mouth. He had hated him to the core. Even now he stared at him like a foe, least inclined to call out for help. After all, he was a true father’s son. He had to prove loyalty to his father. In anger he even felt like throwing a pebble at the enemy but desisted somehow.

Bulldozers and tractors were mechanically laying bare the mud and wreckage to find bodies and bones. Bloated, purpled, and smashed bodies were washed up on the neighbouring beach. Aah, with unstinted brutality natured had devoured live things. The very same ocean that was a source of livelihood had angrily snatched everything from them in one sudden surge.

Nearby, a cement and plaster statue of the local deity had been miraculously left unscathed amidst all the terrible ruination around. The male deity’s softly feminine features appeared aloof from the physical world mercilessly swallowed up by the tidal waves. Some people were still standing with bowed heads before this symbol of unflinching faith, praying for the safety of their near and dear ones. A lone coconut frond, survivor, proudly swayed its tattered branches on this serene sunny morning.

At a short distance, people of all religious hues were digging up graves in the dargah’s graveyard. The mighty sweep of death had removed all post-death distinctions among the corpses.

A boy suddenly went gaga over his find of radio from the wreckage. His shrill, playful cry brought grimace on the faces of gravediggers.

All around fate had been catastrophically locked. The grey crest of seamlessly swelling waves found trees, boats, nets, and concrete from near the shore lying in rice fields two kilometres away.

That was all that remained: The little boy with his younger sister. He had forgotten that he himself was a kid; he just realised that his little sister was too small and needed care. She was sleeping, her head on his lap. He stared into the chaos, to salvage some hope, to grab some more fragments of their past, to build a rope of better hope to reach their parents.