Fatal
Decision
‘Give me a glass of
water,’ said the London-trained Nepalese, as he came into the
room, where a group of Nepalese people with Mongolian and
Caucasian features were gathered, either pitying or wondering
what the strange illness could be.
With the glass of water
in his hand, the swarthy, thick-set, bespectacled doctor
approached the thin, emaciated girl, who'd retreated to a corner
of the apartment like a cornered cat, and was having fits. A
brown froth oozed out of her thin mouth.
As soon as she caught
sight of the stranger with the water, she let out a chilling
scream that seemed to echo in the Himalayas.
The physician turned to
the girl's father and said, "I'm sorry Mr.Rana, I cannot do
anything for your daughter. She has hydrophobia".And with that
he packed his black medical bag and left.
Mr.Rana was stunned. The
shock of the doctor's poker face, and dry diagnosis hit him with
such a vehemence that he reeled mentally.
"But there must be some
hope or solution for Sudha, my daughter," he uttered.
He told his wife what
the doctor has said, adding that their daughter had no hope of
surviving the dog-bite, for Maya Devi spoke only Nepali and no
English.
The doctor had spoken
in English, as all educated Nepalese did, even among each other.
Sudha was dying and
there was no help at hand. Even modern medicine, with all its
antibiotics, cortisones, antiferons wouldn't be able to help
their child.
"Oh,Brahma-Vishnu-Shiva!
Please don't let us down", cried Maya Devi, summoning the Hindu
Trinity, with a mixture of fear and worry. And she decided to
send for the local shaman, a jhakri, and dispatched a female
relative of hers with the nickname 'Bhunti’, which means a fat
person, not that she was pregnant or had a pot belly, but
because she had a hollow back, with the result that she went
through life preceded by her belly.
Mr.Rana had faith in
allopathic medicine and didn't trust the traditional medicine or
that which passed for traditional medicine, especially the
jhakris, dhamis, bijuwas, lamas and others who took to what he
called "phuk-phak" methods, which literally meant
'blowing-and-throwing.'
He preferred the old
western school-medicine for himself and his family. That was
because his brother and grandfather were physicians, having
studied at the Grant Medical College in Bombay in the days of
the British Raj.
It had almost become a
family tradition, and he was contemplating to send his eldest
son to this college, despite the astronomical sums that the
medical colleges demanded in India in general. They called these
criminal sums open-donations, and was a rather done thing.
His wife, being a
traditional Tamang tribeswoman, didn't think much of modern
medicine and went back to the traditional healers that she knew
through her parents and grandparents for they'd lived in the
foothills of the Himalayas and had heard only hair-raising
stories of the practitioners of modern medicine. Whereas a local
shaman was happy with a dozen eggs or a small goat, you had to
pay in currency notes to the modern doctor. And currency notes
were scarce in the hills of Nepal, where people bartered with
natural products.
Maya Devi had seen a
sick neighbour receiving a glucose injection with an outsized
hypodermic syringe, and that had scared the wits out of her. She
didn't know what the thing was, but it certainly looked
frightening. The patient, a diabetic, had died soon after.
After that experience
she'd decided that she'd definitely not go to a modern doctor.
Her grandpa, who had
been a village shaman, had treated and cured the whole village,
sometime or other, ever since she knew him. And what's more, he
was her grandpa and that meant a lot to her and she had
confidence in him, because he'd never do any harm or inflict
injury, as was expected of true shamans.
She remembered once
asking him how he'd become a shaman, and he'd told her that he'd
been picked up in his childhood by the banjhakri, a wild, wise
man who lived in the jungle in a cave, and who became his guru
and had taught him the secrets of the healing plants and
profession. Her grandpa had long hair, like that of the Hindu
God Shiva of the Snows: unkempt but braided, and it gave him an
extraordinary appearance as he'd sit near his house altar, where
he had his ritual objects. To her he was Shiva reincarnated.
Maya Devi's husband, an
educated civil servant of His Majesty's government, sneered at
times about her faith in the jari-buti, as the medicinal
roots-and-stems were called.
After what seemed like
ages, Bhunti turned up with a lean man, who had mongolian
features. He was thought to be a 'knowing' practitioner of his
blow-and-throw trade. He was half Tamang and half Bhotay, as
people of Tibetan origin are called, and looked as though he,
himself, was suffering from consumption. He was untidily
dressed, had blood-shot eyes and stuck his thin black hair under
his monkey-cap, and had a pair of drooping moustaches. He was
left alone and Bhunti catered to his needs and demands.
First of all, he
demanded rice grains to be brought for the blowing part of the
ceremony, and then alcohol, since he belonged to the matwali-jat,
which means the 'caste-that-drinks-alcohol'.
In the high-caste,
ritual purity-pollution thinking Hindu society, it is regarded
as a direct affront when one is offered alcohol. But since this
was an emergency situation, a matter of life and death in the
family, there were no protests. Neither from her otherwise
orthodox Hindu husband, not from the relatives and neighbours.
Meanwhile, after gulping
some of the raksi (alcohol) as though he was drinking lemon
juice, he began the treatment by raising his voice and reciting
a mantra and counting the rice grains on a copper plate. After
each chant he drew a deep breath and blew his breath thrice in
quick succession.
His first intention was
to find out whether the child, who was letting out screams
intermittently, was seized by a witch in the neighbourhood or a
distant demon (bhut), for only then could he apparently begin
treatment. After more swigs of the Gurkha raksi, his mantras
became unintelligible and he seemed to withdraw within himself.
After a great deal of
time, he began shaking and said in staccato bursts, "It's the
demon from the othay-khola". A rivulet in the vicinity of the
town. 'Othay' means a 'lip' in Nepali.
The diagnosis having
been completed ,a blood-sacrifice had to be made to appease the
concerned river-demon along with a prayer to the Mahaguru:
Shiva. It had to be a little red rooster.
Bhunti organised a red
rooster in no time, and the jhakri prepared his ritual.
Although Mr. Rana showed
respect this time for the traditional methods despite his
distrust, he just couldn't help feeling irritated by this
particular species of his sort, especially his preference for
alcohol at a critical moment in someone's life.
"Perhaps he's just an
alcoholic and practiced traditional medicine as a quack, a
dabbler who could in effect do nothing," he thought. There was
nothing he could do at the moment. He had to try it out with
this quack too. It was faith healing at its best. Either you
believed in someone or not. Take it or leave it. There was no
choice. And when you're in a desperate situation, you had to
take all the chances that were available to soothe your
conscience."
Meanwhile, the thin
girl had started seeing double, because her optic nerve was
affected, and her brain stem was assaulted by the rabies-virus
and she had problems with her swallowing reflex.
Her mother had tried to
give her water not knowing the medical implications and her
daughter had a spasm of panicky angst and screamed again.
"Oh God, my poor Sudha,
what's become of you?" cried Maya Devi as she held her daughter
wrapped in a brown blanket. It was pathetic to see a pretty
daughter, a girl who was only eight years old, with beautiful
black hair and an olive complexion turn virtually into a
skeleton, so that even the teeth seemed to jut out, the body
growing thin, dehydrating and the psyche a chaos, for she was no
longer able to take in the world as it had been.
There was a mighty
struggle going on in her nervous system, and it registered
through her brown and frothy saliva and her screams of angst and
terror, which had seized her. She was evidently losing the
fight.
A neighbour suggested
that the patient should be immediately transported to Kathmandu
for "further treatment." Another thought it would be better to
try out a local dhami, a traditional healer, and yet another an
ayurvedic practitioner from the town, who wore spectacles and a
turban and was from the Punjab. A well-meaning Lepcha neighbour
said, "Ranaji, you should call a Lepcha Bongthing who is a
mediator between humans and the Spirits. If that doesn't help we
could engage a Limbu Yeba exorcist.
Mr.Rana had often seen
the Limbu Yeba males going about wearing their ridiculous
creased white skirts and turbans, with long feathers, cauri and
rudraksha garlands.
"Why not try
homeopathy?" said another.
In
this lost and helpless state there was nothing to do but to try
everything, like a drowning person clinging to the last straw,
and so began an odysee of 'treatments' carried out in the hope
of saving a child whose body and mind were rebelling and running
out of control.
Mrs. Rana's thought
wandered to the day when her daughter Sudha had returned with a
neighbour's daughter after the bhai-tika ceremony from a distant
part of the town. Bhai-tika, the festival during which the
sisters proffered various honours on their brothers after a
ritual puja, whereby the brothers are blessed with prosperity
and protection against the adversities of human existence and
unseen evils. And who could think that evil would strike on such
an auspicious day?
As is the custom in
Nepal, the people have their chicken, dogs, yaks and goats
outside the courtyard. The dog, which was a bitch, had let out a
few snarls and barks to warn passers-by that they were
trespassing her marked territory. The children had been scared
by the angry barks and had emitted shrieks of fear, and the
bitch had made for the two scared children in a frenzy and had
bitten them on their legs after a short pursuit.
The two girls had
returned home crying and told their parents about the fierce dog
that had bitten them. However, the parents who were entertaining
guests in the afternoon hadn't thought anything worse about the
consequences of a dog-bite and Mr. Rana had only used the zinc
oxide and eucalyptus salve that you find in every household. He
had faith it would heal the wound, as in the past against other
bites and wounds.
And that had been a
terrible mistake.
Whereas the other girl
Chitra was immediately sent to a local doctor, who gave her
anti-rabies injections, Mr. Rana's daughter was treated with
only a smear salve.
"That ought to do the
trick," Mr. Rana had thought. "Why spend more money
unnecessarily on the doctor? Injections were expensive. And
after all, if the salve had the same effect, why not save the
money for another purpose?"
Only last Monday the
Nepalese Brahmin from Dhankuta had visited them and had
predicted something inauspicious in the near future in the
family. But in order to counteract that he had suggested making
an amulet for his two daughters, with vedic mantras inscribed in
them, which were thought to have preventive and protective
effects against the bad planets (grahas) that had changed their
constellations. The Brahmin was a jotisi, a learned Banaras-returned
astrologer, with the ability to interpret and analyse the
astrological data of Hindus, for every Hindu possessed a long
scroll (janai-patra), which bears all the lucky and unlucky, the
auspicious and inauspicious days in one's lifetime, noted
according to the constellation of one's zodiac sign, and
starting from the date of one's birth.
In the Nepal of yore,
this scroll of paper was an important document, and it still is,
in the Middle Mountains of Nepal where the Chettris and Brahmins
live.
Mr.Rana though a
Chettri from birth, didn't think much of the jotisis and other
wandering brahmins. As far as he was concerned, they were slimy,
garrulous, cunning fellows who went from house to Hindu house
talking fancy Sanskrit with the married women who were
unfailingly always at home, and departing with a handsome
dakshina (present) in the form of: rice, currency notes and
coins, and sometimes even a whole cow. The Hindu religion
allowed it, and the priests and astrologers made the best of
this belief.
The doctor's words had
struck Mr. Rana like a guillotine. It was a death sentence.
A dark, monsoon-like
cloud hung over the family. A feeling of mourning, depression
and helplessness spread, even though the daughter was breathing,
shrieking and struggling with death. Their daughter had
developed a hoarse throat and her whole frail body was shaking.
Mr. Rana had heard that
it took at least 15 injections to treat the rabies virus. In
these days it was even possible to do it with three shots, but
what was the use of knowledge? Or when a medical therapy is
refused due to the ignorance on the part of the parents who have
the money, and therefore the power to decide whether a member of
the family should be medically treated or not, through
traditional or western healing methods.
The way Mr. Rana saw
it, it had been a blatant misuse of power. And he had a terribly
guilty conscience regarding his daughter. It had been a fatal
decision. One part of his mind accused him and the other seemed
to rationalise and shift the blame to the uselessness of
medicine, even though man had set foot on the moon and the skies
were studded with satellites belonging to the western world.
And Sudha died that night.