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the-south-asian.com FEBRUARY 2002 |
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FEBRUARY 2002 Contents Lifestyle Ageing - breaking mind barriers! 'My Secret of
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Asians in News 2001 Leadership Know
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Sharma - India's First Books 'Knock
at Every Alien Door' Films Vasundhara
Das - the bride of Fashion & Jewellery
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Page 2 of 2
'KNOCK AT EVERY ALIEN DOOR' by Joseph Harris
Chapter 2 The Magic Flute (Cntd.)
I soon found myself in the outskirts of Calcutta near the
banks of the Hooghly River. The crowds dwindled, and the sounds of the
bustling city streets diminished. A more pastoral sound, coming from what
direction I wasn’t quite sure, filled the air with its luring music. It
was the sound of a flute and what I took to be a sitar or eckar.
Unaccustomed to Indian music in those early days, I found the sound
appealing, and out of curiosity began to search for its source, unaware that
I, like Ulysses, should have put wax in my ears against the lure of the
Sirens. I moved along an avenue of sparse and unkempt buildings with
the riverbank on my left until the sound of the flute grew louder and more
distinct. A tinge of excitement filled me with a kind of poetic rapture as I
drew near to the source, thinking that I had somehow stumbled on some
ethereal island out of the pages of lost Horizon or Kipling. But life decrees that all such pastoral raptures be
short-lived, and mine ended abruptly with the shout of a gruff masculine
voice, distinctly American: "Soldier, can’t you read!" I turned as if struck physically, so unexpected was the
intrusion. I must have muttered something to the strapping M.P., neatly
uniformed with his girded look and white spats. He stood alongside his
British counterpart who seemed to have the faintest hint of amusement in his
look. His reply to whatever confused response I made was to point angrily to
a sign well above eye level on a nearby building. In bold letters it said:
"Off Limits to All Military Personnel." Reading that under the
admonition of his pointing finger can only be likened to the words over the
entrance to Dante’s Inferno. "Despair Ye All Who Enter Here." I dutifully identified myself by rank and serial number, and with a note
of entreaty offered, "I didn’t see …" "That’s no excuse," the M.P. blurted out.
"You’re supposed to look." "How long you been in India, mate?" the British
M.P. asked. "A little over two weeks." The British sergeant looked at his companion with what I
thought to be a touch of compassion, but to no avail with the ruddy American
M.P. who pressed on: "What’re you doing down in these parts?
Everybody knows this is off limits." "I was just sightseeing." I decided not to mention
the flute and the sitar. "Yeh," he said, a wicked grin crossing his face,
"sure you were." I was to learn only later the meaning of that grin. In his
abrupt, no-nonsense manner the M.P. put an end to further speculation.
"I gotta take you in. You can tell the Provost about your
sightseeing." He underscored that word with all his disbelief. I followed the two a short distance to a spot between
dilapidated buildings where a jeep was parked. The American motioned for me
to get in. With visions of court martial and a possible firing squad racing
through my brain, I climbed in the rear of the jeep. I thought then – and
have become convinced by later experience when on those few occasions a
flashing blue light has appeared behind me – that police the world over
belong to a mystical fraternity. They have supernatural powers, among which
is teleportation that allow them to materialize and dematerialise as the
occasion demands. They are not like ordinary humans whose comings and goings
one can clearly see. We drove in silence back into the heart of the city,
stopping only once at a busy side street where the British M.P. was let out.
He gave a kind of mock salute to his American companion. "See you
tonight, mate." "Right," the American sergeant replied.
"Eight sharp." I wondered at the relationship of the two. One seldom saw
British and American together, especially in the line of duty. Perhaps the
Britisher, an old India hand, was simply showing the neophyte American the
tricks of the trade. My speculation ended when the jeep came to a quick stop in
front of what looked like a hotel. The M.P. jumped out and told me to do the
same. I followed him through a maze of desks at which sat G.I. clerks
engaged in that second front known as the paper war. The M.P. stopped at a cubicle office, told me to wait, and
entered. Although it seemed a long time, I’m sure it was only a few
minutes before he returned. He motioned me in. "You can tell the
captain about your sightseeing," He walked away grinning. I entered, stood at attention, saluted and identified
myself. I trembled at the prospect of my dilemma. The wooden sign on the
desk read: Capt. Orville T. Jarvis. The captain, overweight and sullen looking, reminded me in
appearance of some good ole boys I had known in the Deep South. My heart
leapt up when I reasoned that a little regional allegiance might weigh in my
favour. But when he spoke, after keeping me at attention an inordinately
long time, I pegged his speech as mid-western. "What’s this about you being off limits,
Sergeant?" "Sir, I was looking over the city and …" "Yeh," he interrupted. "I was told about you
doing some sightseeing. You expect me to believe that?" "Sir, I give you my word …" "Can you tell me what’s worth seeing in this
God-forsaken country? You were going to see something, all right. You mean
somebody, don’t you, Sergeant?" "I don’t understand, sir." "The hell you don’t. You were headed straight for
that place, weren’t you?" "Place, sir …" He looked me over intently. "You’re either naïve as
hell or stupid, or both, Sergeant." He said, impatience rising in his
voice. "That off-limits sign was up there for good reason. You were
smack in the middle of the biggest brothel section of this lousy city …
and don’t tell me you didn’t know it." "Sir, I swear I didn’t know .." "You do know a brothel’s a whorehouse, don’t you,
Sergeant." My silence was that of the lamb led to the slaughter. "Who’s your commanding officer?" "Major Billington, sir." Although a temporary
commander, I was glad I remembered his name. "This will be reported to him." The captain’s
fat hand was busy writing. "He’ll take it up with you." He
looked up at me scowling. "How many hours leave you got left?" "About three." "No you haven’t. You got none left." His voice
was harsh and commanding. "You get back to your post on the double.
That’s an order, Sergeant." "Yes, sir." "And Sergeant," he said, rising for the first
time, and looking shorter than I had imagined, "if you get picked up
again, come up with a better story than that sightseeing crap. Now, get out
of here." He didn’t return my salute, and I left with a great sense
of relief that my fate was less than an instant firing squad. Although
relieved, I knew I must still face the judgment of my commanding officer.
Yet somehow, I felt that would be a lesser ordeal. For two days after returning to my posy – a small.
Makeshift barracks on the outskirts of Calcutta – I live din acute
apprehension of being called on the carpet by Major Billington. There were
only five of us – a small medical unit – under his command, waiting
orders for our final destination. The atmosphere all along had been relaxed
and very unmilitary, so a certain natural camaraderie existed in our ad hoc
status. In some ways the major seemed the most unmilitary of all; he spent a
lot of time away, leaving us on our own. Since he was a good-looking and
affable man, this led to a lot of speculation on our part; the consensus
being that it was some romantic assignation that occupied most of his time.
A few cynics among us demurred, pointing out that in a place like Calcutta
the opportunity for such an assignation was nil. But the more imaginative
among us countered with the fact of the large British colonial population
that existed, among which we argued were bound to be some bored officers’
wives. So it was, to while away the hours, we wrote our own soap opera
script about the mysterious major. In my great anxiety I mentioned the incident to Mark, who,
instead of sharing my concern, thought the whole thing was hilarious and had
only to look at me to break out laughing. When two days passed without my being called to judgment, I
began to relax. Either the sullen Captain Jarvis hadn’t reported the
incident as he had threatened to do, or the romantic Major Billington,
receiving the report, had simply ignored it. Such an action, I decided,
would be in character for a man like the Major, who would be most
understanding of the dilemma of one of his men being found in a brothel
district. The incident was never mentioned by Major Billington, and I
was too grateful to speculate further on the matter. Two weeks later, along
with my compatriots, I shook the hand of Major Billington in farewell. He
handed us sealed orders, giving knowledge only of the first leg of our
journey, a boat trip up the Ganges. Our final destination, he assured us,
would unfold as we went along. He wished us well, and we shared a bottle of
the resourceful Major’s best wine as a parting gesture. To journey up the sacred Ganges, except in the pages of
literature, was never among my grandest expectations when I came to India.
Nor was it the pilgrimage of the Indian who comes to its waters for
spiritual rebirth, for nothing in my heritage could prepare me for that, as
was vividly brought to my attention one day as I stood on its banks watching
the pilgrims bathe. A Hindu student with whom I struck up a conversation when he
noticed a book I was holding – essays by George Bernard Shaw – promptly
told me how much he admired the writer and then proceeded to dazzle me with
his general knowledge of literature. We talked for quite a while as we
watched the pilgrims at their holy task, some spitting in the water while
others washed their filthy rags. "You are offended, Sahib?" the student said with a
smile. "No," I lied, taken aback that he had so easily
sensed my distaste for such sights. "You Americans," he went on with what seemed like
a touch of haughtiness, "bathe for hygiene. For us Hindus it is a
sacrament." For that I had no answer. But my time on the Ganges afforded me another kind of experience
altogether when I encountered the British colonel and the American sergeant,
unlikely companions who accompanied us on our journey up the sacred river. ______________________________
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