Chronicle of a Corpse Bearer (24 page)

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Keepers of the Unclean. . .?
Is that how posterity will label this sketchy log? Future generations won’t be interested in it at all, I’m certain; nor is there any likelihood of its ever coming to public attention
.

Still, as I dip my stylus in a pot of Waterman’s royal blue ink, and continue to scratch upon the leftover blanks of my eviscerated notebooks, the irony doesn’t escape me. As much as I hated those eight years of schooling, they gave me the tools to keep myself occupied through the bleakness of my declining years
. . .

As a rule, I can’t bear to read any of this. Yet when I do turn the pages back, reread it in snatches, I
wonder
if I haven’t compromised the veracity of my narrative with too much grimness. Maybe an unmistakable deficit of humour as well
?

I must point out: rubbing shoulders with the dead at odd hours of day and night doesn’t necessarily make us more gloomy, dour or over-serious about life. The truth is, like everybody else we corpse bearers, too, behave with the smug breeziness of immortals—convinced that death cannot strike us down in the conceivable future
.

Make no mistake—my own narrative may be responsible for this erroneous impression—but much of the time our lives were anything but dull, dreary and repetitious. Despite routine, there was always room for excitement, passion and a frenzied tomfoolery
.

Twelve

The end of World War II saw a spurt in building activity in
Bombay. As land prices escalated, the vast wild acres of the Towers of Silence attracted several encroachment attempts.

Almost all of this land had accrued to the Parsi Punchayet over the years, in bits and pieces as well as larger tracts, through the generosity of its wealthy donors. In those early days none of the big builders and land sharks, who would later jointly destroy the charm and beauty of Bombay with their unbridled greed and frantic building, were active yet. Meanwhile, the Punchayet had an encroachment case pending in the High Court against a pair of Muslim brothers called Jameel and Ijaaz Sheikh. These were small fry.

The Sheikhs had owned, since their father’s time, an adjacent plot on the Teen Batti side, on which stood a shop selling brass and copper vessels. Now the father was dead, and the sons had extended its rightful boundaries by about twenty feet into our grounds, setting up there a makeshift hut made of bamboo, planks of wood and thatch. Here they had installed a desk and two chairs, with a painted signboard outside reading—if you please—
Real Estate
!

On information provided by the Punchayet’s officers, their law firm, Craigie, Lynch and Dubash had served them a notice for trespassing. Eviction proceedings should have started right away, and that’s what the law firm strongly advised, but even in those days, the Punchayet was completely embroiled in a finicky delegation of authority. While they dawdled over procedure, the Sheikh brothers got an ex parte stay order from the court, claiming the disputed land had been paid for by their father, and had been in the family for the past twenty years.

Now it so happened that one morning when Buchia and Edul were measuring the boundaries of the said segment in order to have it fenced, they were rather rudely asked by the elder Sheikh brother to leave, since they were trespassing!

Buchia was furious, and would have assaulted the man there and then, had Edul not intervened and restrained him. That afternoon Buchia organized a posse of about ten young and spirited corpse bearers, asking them to report to him at sundown; he said he had a plan that would show the encroachers their place.

I wasn’t among those picked for this punitive mission. But, after dark, under Buchia’s direction the boys, casually dressed in their sudrahs and shorts, created mayhem at the disputed site, ripping up the wood-thatch-and-bamboo cabin, smashing the table and chairs, pulling down the signboard advertising real estate and breaking it in two. Fali was bent on putting a match to the debris they left behind, but Buchia categorically warned him against indulging his pyromaniacal instincts; at which a disappointed Fali muttered to the other boys under his breath as they walked away, just loudly enough for Buchia to hear:


Saalo bailo!’

When I heard accounts of what fun they had had vandalizing the illegal structure, teasing and roughing up the lackey appointed by the Sheikhs to guard the place at night, I almost wished I had volunteered for the job and shared in their collective discharge of pent-up frustrations. But reprisal was swift, for the brothers made a police complaint. The very next afternoon the Deputy Commissioner of Police, a Mr Ignatius Strickham accompanied by three constables and a police van, entered the secluded premises of the Towers of Silence. Strickham himself rode in on horseback.

(i)

Now this was rather unusual, I should point out. Strickham was obviously new to India, and his job. Perhaps he was trying to impress and intimidate the locals with the added stature the horse gave him. But under the Places of Worship Act first enacted by the East India Company, for more than a hundred years the diverse religious communities of India had been assured the privilege of maintaining the sanctity of their places of worship. Moreover, the small corps of mounted police which had existed in eighteenth century Bombay had been disbanded long ago. I heard later that Strickham was a horse-lover who maintained his own private stable of horses.

As became evident, this arrogant and possibly corrupt officer was entirely out of tune with the times. For the year I speak of was, I think, 1945, or ’46: the War was over, the British were engaged in talks with Indian leaders to find a face-saving and ostensibly fair formula under which to withdraw and return to its own people ‘the jewel of the British empire’, which they had zealously guarded for so long.

‘You there. . .! Yes, you, I am speaking to you!’

Concisely insolent in manner, but with an underlying nastiness to his voice the middle-aged Englishman, I’m told, cantered all the way up the hill to where the fire temple broods with its flame kept alive through all hours of day and night.

‘Do you know where I can find the manager. . .? Here! I say, do you speak English? I said do you know where I can find the manager?’

Clean-shaven but for a thick moustache that showed flecks of grey, dressed in white flannels and wearing a pith helmet, the deputy commissioner, whom none of us knew to be a high police official, persisted in thus rudely demanding information from two old priests who had emerged from within and stood frozen at the temple’s entrance. Somewhat taken aback to see this ill-tempered, red-faced apparition within a restricted space of the Towers, they pointed mutely in the direction of Buchia’s office, upon which the policeman yanked the horse’s reins fiercely and spurred it on. All who saw this unlikely figure on a brown sorrel, bounding over hedges and galloping down quiet pathways, were stunned; especially to hear him yelling at the top of his voice:

‘Where the hell is that bloody manager?’

When the policeman finally located his office, Buchia happened to have stepped out on his rounds; but it didn’t take Strickham long to find and accost him.

‘Are you Mr Kavarana, the manager of this place?’

‘Who’re
you
? Horses are not allowed in here!’

‘You are under arrest, Mr Manager.’

‘And who may you be, sir, if I may ask?’

‘Deputy Commissioner of Police, if that’s any of your business.’

Some of the policeman’s impatience may have communicated itself to the horse, which whinnied and stood on its hind-legs for an instant. Buchia was dumbfounded, and more than a little frightened; he had no idea when he triumphantly and unilaterally undertook to evict the encroachers that he was violating a court’s instructions. He combed his fluffy sideburns nervously with his fingertips before asking:

‘On what charges?’

‘Assault, destruction of property, rioting and disturbing the peace. Come with me, please.’

Meanwhile, the constables in the police van had driven up to the adjoining disputed plot, and escorted back the watchman, who was wearing a white bandage on his crown; as well as Jameel and Ijaaz Sheikh.

Pouting grouchily, and limping every few steps, the watchman—evidently well-tutored by his employers—made a show of identifying members of the previous night’s ‘mob’ for the police; that is, he pointed out almost everyone he came across on the estate (barring the better-dressed mourners at the afternoon’s funeral), including a couple of gardeners who had been busy since early morning planting saplings for a proposed bamboo grove behind Albless cottage, and one seller of sandalwood who normally sat on a chair by the main gate retailing sticks to those attending the day’s funerals but who had left his post propelled by curiosity, alarm and an insidious feeling of excitement when the equestrian Englishman galloped past him.

The burra saheb rounded up men of different ages and professions, and had them bundled into the van—a motley group of corpse bearers in pajamas, sudrahs and prayer-topees, two gardeners in khaki shorts and mud-stained vests, the sandalwood-vendor and Buchia; all twenty-two of them were, moreover, handcuffed, and driven down to the Colaba police station where they spent a rough and sleepless night in the lock-up.

Later, I heard from those who had been present, there was a curiously contrived temper to the whole episode, as if the objective was to intimidate the culprits of yesterday’s destructive merriment, rather than apply the rule of law. Why a police officer should be so partisan in an ostensibly criminal matter was something that wasn’t speculated upon until much later, but I’m glad to say our boys, and Buchia as well, suffered these indignities without feeling cowed; in fact, they displayed a healthy and outraged resistance.

While all this was happening, myself, Jungoo and Kobaad were out. We drove back in the hearse with the corpse we had gone to fetch to a dark and desolate Towers of Silence with hardly anyone about. The sun had already set, and the whole place was immersed in an air of mourning. Luckily Edul had plucked up the courage to phone Coyaji as soon as the police van drove away and inform him of the arrests. Next morning all twenty-two prisoners were brought before a magistrate, and released on bail, for which the required amounts were put up by the Punchayet.

Three weeks later, when the case came up for hearing, the Punchayet’s lawyers had built a strong defence for its clients: land records had been dug up, certified gift deeds were produced and the verbal testimony of old-timers like Rustom and Fardoonji invoked to assure the magistrate that the land which the Sheikh brothers were claiming had never been in their, or their father’s, possession during the last twenty years. As for the relatively minor charge of assault on the watchman, some clever cross-examining of his deposition deflated the claims of ‘serious injuries inflicted by a murderous mob’.

As a final and dramatic trump in support of their contention, a handwritten receipt was produced by the plaintiffs— acknowledging payment of Rs 12,000 by a Mohammed Ghulam Sheikh to the Parsi Punchayet in 1919. But a brief examination of the paper by the court’s clerk, and then the magistrate himself, led him to observe that it was entirely deficient in details of the plot allegedly purchased; and moreover only semi-literate in its language. It was rejected by the magistrate outright as a ‘crude and unconvincing’ attempt at forgery; the case was dismissed.

The deputy commissioner of police, Strickham, too, came in for some strongly censorious comments from the English magistrate, a man called Peabury, who found the policeman’s entry into the Towers of Silence on horseback, and his handcuffing of the accused ‘overzealous beyond the farthest limits of civility’. This observation made in court was widely reported in the Indian press; and word of mouth even insinuated that Strickham was corrupt, and had probably received a large amount of money from the Sheikhs to behave in the way he did.

(ii)

Several months after this rumpus died down, we were already on the cusp of 1947—the year in which India got her independence—when, late one evening, I had a visitor at my quarters whom I didn’t immediately recognize.

It was already dark when he knocked at my door, and though we now had electric lights at Doongerwaadi, the one on my veranda hadn’t been turned on.

‘Phiroze. . .?’

It was a husky, soft voice, which sounded familiar, but I couldn’t place it. Only when the stranger drew closer as though wishing to embrace me, I recognized him at once: it was my old school buddy.

‘Rohinton?’

His face was round, his shoulders broad and fleshy: expansively at ease with himself in a colourful bush shirt, he still retained much of his baby fat but his features seemed wrinkled and pitted: Rohinton Kanga all right, but no longer the carefree and cheerful friend I remembered. Before I could stop him, he enveloped me in his arms and hugged me tightly. I was seeing him again after the passage of a very long time.

I observed only one unexpected change in his appearance. Like myself, he too had lost most of his hair; but, in his case, two outgrowths at the rear extreme of his crown—grey, hopelessly entangled bushes, straggling sideways—gave him the mien of a winged creature caught in a moment of fluttery indecision before taking flight.

BOOK: Chronicle of a Corpse Bearer
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