Just the other day a journalist friend of
mine from Delhi and a relative of Aparna Sen called me up to help him
organise transport from Jalpaiguri station to Darjeeling. I do this kind
of offline travel agency job now and then. (Strictly non-profit making
and strictly Darjeeling.)
He and his family
made it through the terrible road from Kurseong to Darj (once it was
45-minutes long, now almost 1 hour 30 minutes) and returned to SMS me
that it had been one of the most terrible holidays in his life. His
words were: “It’s dingy, it’s overcrowded, it’s strenuous, the weather
has taken a toss, any resemblance to childhood memories is a pure
coincidence.”
Well, it’s really not surprising for me
since I frequently hear such or more aggressive opinions from many
quarters. I have literally grown up there (almost 11 years since 1963)
and have memories implanted of the most quaintly beautiful hill station
ever. I have seen time, cheap consumerism and corrupt politics, complete
nonchalance of governance take its toll systematically. But still I
would like to tell my friend from Delhi or the numerous disgruntled
readers who may chance upon this article, that: Take a walk behind the
Mall as early as 5am, sit quietly at the viewpoint below the Observatory
hill, look down at the misty Bhutia bustee below and think of the rest
of our land. You will see the truth.
The truth behind
the squalor, overcrowding, bad roads, cheap matchbox structures called
hotels with cheaper quality of “maach bhaat”, the depressing service of
the one-time astounding confectionery called Glenary’s, the outrageous
din below the classic roof top of Keventers, the pathetic state of
Capitol cinema, now a makeshift town hall used for distasteful “chaat”
festivals, the monstrosity in the name of a concert hall called the
Gorkha Rangmanch (Mr Ghisingh’s contribution) that has forever marred
the skyline of the Queen of the Hills…. You will see the people.
Gorkhas, Bhutias,
Lepchas, Nepalis, Tibetans, Marwaris, Bongs, Biharis, Anglos, British,
whatever you want to call them. The real people of Darjeeling, who
despite the enormous pressures of political disturbances of almost 30
years and the absolute shoddiness of the basic amenities of life like
water supply, electricity, hospitals, roads… still have a glint in their
eyes, an inherent kindness in their smile and an eagerness to make you
try to feel good. Kanchenjungha is there just as a bonus.
The cisterns in
most of the toilets of the one-time luxurious Planter’s Club don’t work.
But the stunningly handsome houseboy Kamal who is always there to serve
you tea, pour water into your whisky glass, will tell you stories of
his enormous struggles, but will never think of leaving Darj to look for
a career elsewhere. Why? Hopes of Gorkhaland? Don’t let the dirt in his
nails and his torn shoes mislead you.
ANOTHER DAY ENDS SO BEAUTIFULLY
My dear architect friend, 60-plus Austin Plant, who came over to Darj as a child from Burma perhaps has the answer.
The rest of his
family all left for London. He married a stunningly beautiful Afghan
woman and cannot stay anywhere from Cal to London for more than 15 days.
Is it because he has the most stunning view of Kanchenjungha from all
the rooms of his superbly designed house?
“It’s the
friendliest place, Anjan. The quality of life you get here you can’t buy
anywhere else. Despite the bandhs, the crises, the people are always so
bloody kind.”
I step out of the cutest
hotel ever called Revolver having stuffed myself with the most delicious
Naga lunch in this part of Southeast Asia prepared by my friend Aselna,
a Beatles freak, and I walk down to Chowrasta to let the smoked pork
and sticky rice slowly sink. The walk from Keventers to the Mall seems
like Puri’s Swargodaar with peddlers selling almost everything from
plastic nail cutters, cheap umbrellas to Che Guevara T-shirts, and I
literally have to fight my way through, dodging the obvious Bong
tourists who pester me to pose for the cellphones. By the time I make it
to an equally or more crowded Chowrasta, I literally want to cry.
Kuchi, a dear friend and a
second-generation tea seller of the most exclusive heritage tea shop
called Nathmulls, hands me a chair on the porch of his tea lounge and
pours me a goblet of ruby red first flush that almost looks like rum.
“You know Anjanda, it’s true we are behind schedule, but is Bangkok any
better or Pattaya? What you have to understand is that Darj being so
close to Cal and much colder, the main bulk of tourists are middle-class
Bongs who get an affordable holiday overnight. You want to make it
exclusive only for the rich and classy, it’s your headache. The numerous
taxi drivers, all the staff of the numerous cheap hotels with ugly
structures, the uncountable peddlers selling their cheap mufflers and
umbrellas are the majority of our population. You want to deprive them
of their livelihood, it’s your choice too. All our memories of what was
and what could have been cannot be valid in a land where 70 per cent of
the population is not rich and classy.”
Though Kuchi sells
tea worth Rs 30,000 a kg to Japanese tea experts, the sheer ground
logic is irrefutable. “You want your old-world charm?” asks one of my
best friends, Puran, who runs a cult bar called Joey’s Pub in a damp,
narrow lane opposite the ugly Big Baazar. “Book yourself a continental
supper at New Elgin Hotel. The Shepherd’s Pie and Chicken Roast are as
good as anywhere in London”. I have done that, I have been to London and
eaten there quite a few times and cannot but agree with Puran.
Diamond, the
perpetually elegantly dressed owner of New Elgin — still by far one of
the best boutique hotels I have ever been to — goes around sharing his
tea, his alcohol, even suppers, with his guests. “They cannot kill Darj,
Anjan. The people here are still simple-hearted. Come let us sit in the
Gazebo and look at the sun set on the valley.”
We do that.
Cookies freshly baked from the hotel kitchen run by Oriya cooks and the
best Darjeeling tea is elaborately placed before us. The setting sun
turns everything orange. “Another day is ending so beautifully. Aren’t
we blessed to be up here?”
I think of all the
countless Mongoloid faces of people young and old in the lower bazaar,
all the bustees, their toiling hands, their soiled clothes, their chinky
eyes… all turning orange. And I want to write another sad song.
JUST THE FACES
My best friend Chris Schulz, an
engineering consultant from Germany, grabs my hand as we walk into my
old school, St Paul’s, on Jalapahar overlooking a glittering
Kanchenjungha. “This is where the songs and movies are coming from,
buddy! This! Now I get it!”
He tells me how he
hated the marble and concrete jungle of Gangtok. It was like any other
city in the plains. “But this is the real Eastern Himalayas”. The man
who made it to Everest base camp and wept profusely when he saw the
first ray of sun hit the peak almost cried when Jamling Norgay casually
walked up to me and said: “What? Another shoot?” “That is Jamling? My
legend!!” exclaimed Chris. Jamling chatted for a long time with Chris
and his dream came true.
My wife Chanda was in a nursing home with a
hip-bone fracture and the two of us, like naughty schoolboys, bunked
our responsibilities and flew to Darj for it was Chris’s final weekend
in India. He wept, hugged and thanked me unabashedly for bringing him to
his best place in India during his two-year tenure at the underground
Metro extension in Cal. We walked for hours through the dirt and squalor
of the thickly populated lower bazaar. Chris kept taking pictures. A
foreigner’s fondness to shoot poverty is nothing new to me, but when we
sat down at Joey’s Pub for a drink, he showed me the shots. One after
another, faces of people.
Colourful faces,
old faces with innumerable wrinkles and toothless smiles, children,
women, coolies, drivers, tourists, endless beautiful faces. Hardly the
hills or the mountain range. Just people. That was the pocketful of
Darjeeling Chris took back with him. I stepped out into the chill and
called up my wife to promise that I will bring her to Darj the moment
she would walk. I could have promised Vientiane, Phuket, even Paris,
because I can seriously afford it nowadays, the two of us do take off
around the world each year and I was really feeling guilty. But it was
Darj. I don’t know why. Perhaps the faces inside Chris’s camera.
By the time we
were merrily drunk another dear friend, Deven, a schoolteacher and
guitar player walked in. Someone at the bar said: “Darj is still a place
Anjanda where you can take a sad song and make it better”. So Deven
sang Hey Jude and it was suddenly old times.
From the Telegraph

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