My wife T
(21) and I (28) started our serious married life in Chabua beginning Oct 1978
after an arranged marriage, one day honey moon on Mahabaleshwar beach, followed
by one month Flood Relief operations in Calcutta where T & I were housed in 5 star MLA quarters
in Chowringhee to continue honey mooning
while I flew my pants off for flood relief, morning noon and night. It was a
boon that my older sister then in Calcutta took charge of T . They went around
Cal and had a ball while I earned my keep and let T spend it all in ‘New
Market’ and gallivanting on Park Street.
Once we reached
Chabua, it was a cultural shock for T.
We started
with my bachelor’s room, the size of a toilet, with an oval aluminium mess tin
and a spoon. The ‘mess tin’ was from my ‘camp
kit’, free issued by AF when I was commissioned eight years earlier. The
rest of the camp kit, the kit bag, folding canvass cot with mosquito net and
rods; they were the heirloom of Mohammad Ali, my exclusive Bangladeshi Jeeves
for life, inherited on the first day when I joined 43 Sqn in Jorhat immediately
after the 71 war. He was about 21 or 22 then, same age as T.
T & Ali hit it off from day one, mainly because he would regale her with never
ending stories of my bachelor life and T was hell bent on hearing every word in
the series of torrid stories. She said she wanted to get to know the man she
married. I was hoping to start with a
clean slate and Ali was a strategic nuclear threat. He even offered to take T
sightseeing on my mo-bike and introduce my old GFs. That is when I read the
Riot Act, and threatened to chop off Ali’s gonads.
Ali
remained my Jeeves for 23 years, refusing to do anything unlawful which T
ordered. He often quoted AF Act and AP 129 to T. He knew the law more than I
did. But between Ali and I there was no
law, just exemplary loyalty arising from gratitude. He was a refugee with no
family, except me. Perhaps reason why he believed that everything that I had was
his too. My clothes including flying boots and flying overalls, Ray Ban, razor, after shave, mo-bike, music system… the works. I drew a line when I
married, T was my personal property and he was to do Namaz in front of her five
times a day. Ali was Bindas, never did Namaz, but he actually worshipped T,
following her about like a Labrador puppy.
As a
mighty F/L, I was considered a capitalist bachelor because I had T, Ali, a Java
mo-bike, an Akai music system, and a quilt with a big cigarette burn in the
centre. My pay was around Rs 450 including ‘Rs 75 as flying bounty’ for which I
had to have a private insurance with minimum monthly premium of Rs 80. I had
about Rs 5 in my bank, a shaving soap tin in Ali’s custody. T said with
conviction, ‘it is enough and more, because you are a resourceful man’. My
share of two boxes of chocolates and five tins of condensed milk every month,
the flying rations to prevent ‘hypoglycaemia’, kept T happy, sugary and syrupy.
I suffered only from hangovers, not hypoglycaemia .
Two large
cast iron British army steel trunks with ‘Dowry’, essentials to start a married life (pots & pans, a
pressure cooker, bed sheets and so on), and some of the stupid presents that we got during our wedding including a 2 feet
high brass lamp, these were despatched from Madras to Chabua by goods train by
my Rajput Rgt KCIO father-in-law. Our future chugged its way, at snail’s pace.
There were
several good married friends living in ‘bashas’, and primates in bachelor
quarters much like a Zoo, who took good
care of us. They ensured that we ate two meals a day for about three weeks.
Then I took T to Chakabama, for two months, lived off the army while we continued
to honey moon. On return, we would go to Chabua Rlwy Stn daily to enquire about
our trunks, the ones with our heirloom. When it finally arrived after about
four months journey, it seemed heavier.
We hauled them back to base gleefully in two rickshaws. When opened them, one was
full of stone aggregate (railway kind), the
other had a mile stone, ’50 miles Gaya’. It broke T’s heart, all that
she had was ‘Gaya’.
Since
there was no Araldite those days to mend broken hearts, I told T to sit and
make a wish list, everything she wanted. I promised her that I would makegood
everything on that list. After two weeks
of very secretive activity, she excitedly produced her master piece, a roll
about 2” wide and about 25’ long. She had torn ‘Legal’ sized paper into strips,
stuck the strips together with goo made of boiled rice. It was her ‘Talmud
Scroll’, in two parts, written in microscopic alphabets, in English.
The first
part ‘Mishnah’,
the ‘must have’ started with a ‘Bajaj Mixie’. The second part ‘Gemara’, perspective plans
for long term acquisitions, started with a Fridge, with a ‘2nd hand
Car’ somewhere in the middle. It ended with a ‘House Of Our Own’. I fell down
and hit my head on the empty steel trunks that had by now become a sofa cum
dining set. When my head stopped bleeding and my heart beats reverted to
normal, T gave me a choice. ‘Either be a Kartha (a doer) or change your name to
Akartha (non doer), make good your promise if you are a Kartha’. She shook her
bums and pushed off to the kitchen like a good woman. I lay there on the floor,
cursing my father who didn’t name me an ‘Akartha’, which compelled me to go and
be the ‘do and die’ type.
The ladies club in Chabua, who were adept at market survey, advised T
that the first item on her ‘Mishnah’ part of the Talmud
Scroll, it was Rs 5 cheaper in Sadar Bazar in Delhi. ‘Damn Cheap’, T advised me
in turn. After series of correspondence in free Pink Inlands (forces mail),
authored by T but censored by me as Adjutant, my previous CO (late Jaya) in Air
HQ in Delhi was commissioned to procure
a Bajaj Mixie from Sadar Bazar. It was air lifted by Comn Sqn aircraft under
the PM’s seat, 43 Sqn Daks along with goats, and finally all by itself in a
Mi-4 to Chabua.
At that time, T&I were staying in the
adjacent 42 WEU mess, an empty zoo with only one primate, the mighty Godzilla,
Pilot Officer Anjit Bose (with frequent visitor Peter George from Chabua Zoo).
Both of them addressed me as ‘Big Brother’, but refused to call T as ‘Big
Sister’. They called her nothing because she refused the offer to be called
‘Madam’. ‘Aayyee, Madam is bad woman’,
she said. It was young rascal Anjit who gave T her name as ’T’, as in ‘Abe Oh
T’, though it made her mad. Anjit gave names to all. Poor Bisht and Yasmin in
Dinjan, good friends of ours, were ‘Beauty & the Beast’. Yasmin, a lovely
woman, was the beast. Behind my back rascal Anjit used to refer to me as ‘Big
Brother Kirtar’, a habit which he still has.
For the inauguration of Bajaj’s Mixie, Anjit and Peter waited patiently
for T to light a lamp, do ‘Aarti’, put soaked Dal into it to make Pakka (Dal)
Vada. When T turned the Mixie on, it burst into flames. The motor got
burnt. I ran away.
I have no idea what Anjit did, perhaps tuned into Bajaj’s telephone in
Gujarat, using 42 Wireless Experimental Unit’s eve’s dropping technology, sent
hate telegrams using meteorology tele printer network, more hate mails through
pink forces inland, whatever. After about 20 days, T got a telegram from Rahul
Bajaj, ‘Sorry, New Mixie Despatched’. So one morning after about a month, the
local distributor of Bajaj Mixie from Dibrugarh personally delivered a new Mixie to T. It lasted us 33 yrs, till we retired it with much sadness and bought
another new Bajaj Mixie from CSD Canteen, Rs 50 cheaper than Sadr Bazar !!
Alwyn 165 fridge, the first item on T’s other ‘Gemara’ scroll, came by
air from Hyderabad to Poona courtesy NSS Avro, at 30% employee discount,
courtesy the father of one of my pupils in B Sqn when I was posted to NDA after
I sent him a cheque for Rs 1745. He was an employee of Alwyn. It lasted us 29
yrs despite moves on postings all over India, storage in Hakkimpet hangar while
T& I went to France. The Alwyn 165 finally became stand by ‘beer fridge’
when T went and bought a Samsung double door fridge from her salary as a Babu,
from Babudom, the Kindom of GoI. I had no money, I was retired by AF by then as
non-performing asset.
T has preserved the ‘Talmud Scrolls’ just to remind me that I was
indeed an Akartha, many of the items on T’s scroll, especially the last item
‘house of our own’, is yet to be realised even after 38 yrs. T says I didn’t do
a thing. She has forgotten my old share of two boxes of chocolates and five
tins of condensed milk every month, the flying rations to prevent my
‘hypoglycaemia’, which once kept her happy, sugary and syrupy while I suffered
only from hangovers, not hypoglycaemia !!!! I flew Mi-4s for a living, like
Bond’s martini, shaken but not stirred, the pay wasn’t adequate to acquire
everything on the Talmud Scroll wish list of our married life !!!!!!
Reason why
T left me. She is now married to GoI. I am now back to being a bachelor,
looking for Ali. The bugger has gone back to B’Desh with dual passport; he is
no longer a refugee like me. I also miss my mo-bike and Akai music system. My
son hijacked the Ray Ban. ‘Pop, you don’t need it ', he said.
The TV is
all balls, not worth watching.
Cyclic
:)
ReplyDeleteThanks for new stories sir. I will add it to my story bank. My 3.5 years old son keeps on asking for stories every night before he goes to sleep (I rather take him to sleep and many times end up sleeping before him, who ultimately sleeps when his mother makes him sleep)..He would definitely love it...as it is his favorite stories revolve around Helicopter, aeroplane and rocket...He is getting habits of saluting and salutes me now and then. When in josh, he screams "Jai Maa Kaali", that's fine, but after that he shouts "Aayo Gorkhaali"...does Hooraah push ups with me (atleast tries to do), so its visible to me where would he go once fully grown adult. I am sure your stories will help me keeping that little chap's dream alive for him. Please keep on adding.
ReplyDeleteThanks and regards,
Chandan Modi
The beautiful, heart-warming tale of a million middle class newly-weds, starting off low on resources but high on love and aspirations, excellently narrated. Brought back sweet memories of my own experiences during that phase. Sir, you are a story teller par excellence. Thanks for remembering, recollecting and recording for our sake.
ReplyDeleteWhenever I start flying high with these fancy feelings about my great professional achievements, my wife waves her own yellowing second 'Talmud Scroll', of unfulfilled promises in front of me, bringing me (crashing) down to earth !
Down memory lane....We eagerly wait for your write up.... Please keep writing..
ReplyDeleteDown memory lane....We eagerly wait for your write up.... Please keep writing..
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteReading this in California at 7:00 AM Iin the morning, all those beautiful memories of Chabua came flooding back, what happened to the AKAI finally? You are a good man, Kartar Singh. Will see you later this year.
ReplyDeleteAnjit 42 W.E.U. C/O 99 A.P.O
Great Unni Garu.
ReplyDeleteGreat Unni Garu.
ReplyDelete