| Satis
Shroff lives in Germany according to the motto: once a
journalist, always a journalist and has written over a
period of three decades, what the Germans would call a
“Landesumschau,” for his Nepalese readers
with impressions from Freiburg, Venice, Rottweil, Prague,
Paris, London, Frankfurt, Basel and Grindelwald. Satis
Shroff has worked with The Rising Nepal (Gorkhapatra Sansthan),
where he wrote a weekly Science Spot and editorials and
commentaries on Nepal’s development, health, wildlife,
politics and culture. He also wrote weekly commentaries
for Radio Nepal. He has studied Zoology and Geology in
Kathmandu, Medicine and Social Science in Freiburg and
Creative Writing under Prof. Bruce Dobler, Pittsburgh
University and Writers Bureau (Manchester). Satis Shroff
describes himself as a mediator between western and eastern
cultures and sees his future as a writer and poet. He
was awarded the German Academic Prize for 1998.
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Travelogue 1:
THE LAND OF THE
GREY-EYED (Satis Shroff)
‘Mom, I’ve
received an invitation from Raj. I’m going to Germany!’
Saraswati’s mother,
who had just finished her morning puja and meditation
in her house-altar, and was carrying a copper plate with
tika and other offerings, replied rather shocked, ‘Germany?
Why on earth do you want to go to Germany? All those terrible
skinheads and neonazis! How could you do such a thing?
Didn’t you see the horrid pictures in Nepal TV and
BBC? And the sad letters that your brother Raj wrote to
us? It’s sad enough to have a son living abroad
and now you want to leave your country, your matribhumi
.’
Saraswati tried to comfort
her mother and said, ‘ But mom, I’m not leaving
my country forever. I’ll just do a bit of sight-seeing
and return home.’
‘Your brother also
went to study and came back with a memsahib as a buhari
. Not that I have anything against Claudia, she’s
a decent daughter-in-law, but I’m worried about
you. You’re a young girl, and not a man. Think of
the dangers in a foreign country’.
‘Mom, you can’t
worry about everybody all your life. In my absence you
could live with Sandhya and her family in Biratnagar.’
‘Please don’t
mention Biratnagar,’ replied Mayadevi disdainfully.
‘You know that I
can’t bear the beastly heat down there in the Terai.
I am a pahari woman. All those cockroaches, lizards, snakes
and pesky mosquitoes. No thank you. I prefer to live here
in Kathmandu and battle with the bad air, rising prices
of vegetables, change of governments and so forth.’
Mayadevi blessed her daughter
by applying a scarlet tika on her forehead and went on
to admonish her. ‘Let me read what Raj wrote about
Germany’. And with that she went to her bedroom
took out a letter from a bundle of blue-and-red striped
airmail envelopes and put on her reading glasses.
‘Mom, I’ve
also read the letters quite a few times.’
‘And you still want
to go to Germany? A country where 45,000 Nepalese soldiers
died in trenches in the two World Wars ?’
It took weeks to pacify
her mother but finally Deviji resigned to her fate and
moaned, ‘Perhaps it is my tagdir. Perhaps the Gods
will it this way.’
And so it was on a lazy
Saturday afternoon in June that Saraswati out to board
the jet that was to take her to Germany. There was a haze
over Kathmandu, obscuring the normally picturesque blue
Mahabharat Mountains girdling the valley. The Himalayas
weren't visible either.
A Nepalese policeman with
a walkie-talkie was strutting on the tarmac of Kathmandu's
Tribhuvan International Airport rather importantly. The
mobile staircase sped away from the belly of RNAC's Frankfurt-bound
747 jet. The engines began to purr and whistle to a crescendo.
Saraswati peered out of the jet-window to catch a glimpse
of Surendra and Rani, who'd come to see her off, in vain.
Surendra was a college friend with whom her brother had
lived at the Amrit Science College hostel in Thamel. They
had gone to school in the Darjeeling district and both
of them came from Eastern Nepal. They’d done their
Intermediate in Science from Ascol and had stayed on in
Kathmandu to do their Bachelor's degrees. After college
Surendra had gone to Australia for higher studies and
her brother had gone to Germany on a scholarship, but
they’d remained good friends. Whereas Surendra had
returned to Kathmandu and had married and built a house,
her brother had settled down in Germany.
Inside, two experienced
sari-clad stewardesses, with rich glistening jet-black
hair, began to show the passengers the routine safety
and emergency gadgets. A moustachioed Nepalese steward
started along the aisle with a bamboo basket full of bon-bons,
a curt commercial smile on his round face. The jet headed
for the northern end of the runway, swerved around, came
screaming down towards the southern approach and left
the ground.
There was a time when
this same airport was described as being the size of a
handkerchief. Some handkerchief, with DC-10, Jumbo-Boeings
and Airbuses landing all the time, not to speak of the
internal-flights of RNAC, Necon, Nepal Airways and so
forth.
The sun was going down in the Mahabharat mountains and
the clouds appeared yellowish, with orange teints. Through
a break in the clouds you could see the lights of Kathmandu
winking at you, and glittering as though myriads of gemstones
were scattered from the heavens by Manjushri .
And suddenly Saraswati saw the Himalayas: majestic and
breathtaking. It certainly is one thing to look at the
snows from below, but quite another to peer at them from
above. Snowy clouds appeared and then a meandering river
and behold, the Himalayas, those tectonic giants.
There were orange tipped
mountains in the distance because the sun was setting
and you recognised Mt. Langtang instantly with its broad
conical peak. Further to the west another massif: the
Ganesh Himal, and then the Manaslu and Himalchuli. Far
out, sticking out like the tail-fin of a fish, the Machapuchare,
followed by the still higher Annapurna South. But Saraswati’s
thoughts were elsewhere.
She was thinking about
the wonderful Nepalese friends she was leaving behind.
She thought about her sister Sandhya and her traditional
presents meant for her brother. Her mother Deviji, who'd
insisted on sending a radish -chutney (pickel) and some
expensive Nepalese rugs. She had no idea that an air-passenger
was permitted to take only 20 kilos of baggage. How could
she, anyway? She'd never flown in her life.
She'd travelled with her
husband throughout the India subcontinent by train and
bus and had often been to Bombay and Calcutta, and naturally
to places of pilgrimage from Hardwar in the north to Kanyakumari
in the south, and naturally to Benaras and Mathura to
bathe in the holy, but hopelessly polluted Ganges. She'd
seen a lot of US air-planes flying sorties to the jungles
of Burma against the Japanese during the Second World
War, when she spent her holidays in Assam with her grandma
and grandpa. Grandpa used to run coal-mines in Assam and
was rather influential and entertained the British gorasahibs
and their memsahibs by organising hunts in the Terai for
them and was also known for his partys.
Deviji was a child then,
and cherished and treasured a green toothbrush an American
fighter-pilot had given her as a parting present, before
he went on a mission and never came back. The Japanese
must have got him in Mandalay.
‘We're flying over
Lucknow city, fine weather, ninety degrees Fahrenheit,’
cut in the captain. Then came the usual Nepalese and western
music. And in next to no time they were soaring over Delhi
and headed for the United Arab Emirate.
Lunch was an orgy with
shiek kababs, tuna and dessert. And the dinner was a cinch.
Saraswati sat near a small woman from Sikkim named Nirmala
who'd been invited to Germany by her German boy-friend.
She'd only seen him a year ago in Gangtok. And here she
was with mixed emotions, for the first time in a big jet
that was hurtling through foreign skies taking her to
a destination and fate that was unknown. She had no idea
what Germany was like, the German language, leave alone
life in Germany. It was a big question mark. She was trying
to hope for the best and to make the best of it. Saraswati
thought, at least she had the assurance that her brother
would be waiting at the other end, for she'd sent him
a fax through Surendra’s NGO office and had telephoned
with him.
A Sikkimese male, a Lepcha,
was sitting next to her and he answered her questions
put in Nepali, in English. He was one of those convent-educated
brown sahibs, who took pride in speaking English and even
humming the latest MTV-hits, oblivious of politics, culture,
tradition and religion. An orientation towards the west
without any objective criticism. But Saraswati preferred
a sympathetic Sikkimese to an arrogant Bhutanese official,
especially after they threw out thousands of Bhutanese
of Nepalese origin, and Nepal has been taking care of
them ever since.
The German newsmagazine
Der Spiegel once called Bhutan’s King Jigme ‘a
buddhistic ecological dictator which takes pride as a
model-nation of the Himalayas.’ The poorer section
of the Bhutanese people are just as innocent, unspoilt,
honest-to-God like the Nepalese. It’s only that
the King of Bhutan and his government approve of subtle,
medieval, undemocratic methods in their dealings with
the Nepalese, creating thereby tragic problems for thousands
of Nepalese, instead of letting them live according to
their own ancient Nepalese traditions and customs. On
the other hand, Bhutan isn’t exactly, what one might
call, a democratic state. What the King of Bhutan and
his Foreign Minister have precisely done is shove their
Bhutanese ethnicity and bureaucratic ideals and values
down the throats of the so-called Lhotsampas. A policy
of live and let live would have been appropriate in that
Himalayan Kingdom. Bhutan doesn’t seem to have learned
and absorbed much from the teachings of Buddha. One thing
that Bhutan understands is tourism management.
When the passengers alighted
at the United Arab Emirate, Saraswati and Nirmala followed
their Sikkimese dandy to the terminal where he advised
them to stick together ‘lest they be enticed to
a sheikh's harem.’ It was strange and exciting to
see so many sheikhs in flowing kaftans, sauntering around
with their families, heading for destinations around the
globe: have oil, will travel. The cleanliness and sterility
of the Arab airport terminal and the luxurious shop windows
impressed her. Soon it was time for them to board the
jet again. The next stop was Frankfurt.
As the jet flew over Frankfurt
Saraswati felt elated. She was wondering what her brother
would look like after such a long time. Perhaps he'd put
on weight and looked like one of those middle aged German
tourists that came to Nepal to do a bit of trekking in
the Himalayas. Perhaps he's just as worked up and anxious
to see her. Somehow, even though she really hadn't seen
her brother very often, they still had a great deal of
respect and sympathy for one another. Since the people
in Nepal believe in astrology, their planetary constellation
was auspicious, and that was why they understood, respected,
and harmonised with each other. The Nepale¬se expression
for it is: graha milyo. However, when the 'grahas' of
two persons don't agree or coincide, the result is: ashanti,
that is restlessness, turbulence, conflict and disharmony.
Before a hinduistic Nepalese
goes on a journey, a jotisi or astrologer is consulted
to seek out an auspicious date for the travel, so that
no mishap should befall the traveller. The jotisi also
chooses the proper time for departure. Saraswati’s
mom had beckoned a bahun from Dhankuta, who happened to
be on tour, and he'd consulted the stars and planets in
his 'patro' or astrological calender, and had fixed a
date, but getting a visa from the German Embassy in Kathmandu
had taken more time than the astrologer had planned, so
she had to extend her flight date. She’d hoped nothing
inauspicious would occur. As a Nepalese she was obliged
to take some rice, a beetle-nut and a coin wrapped up
in a piece cloth to assure a journey without inauspicious
things occurring to one.
She’d told her mom
not to worry, but she'd already fixed up a day for a puja
so that she’d be blessed. After all, her daughter
was crossing the kalo pani (the black water) and going
abroad to the Land of the Beef-eaters, pork-eaters, the
Land of the Grey-Eyed, which they called 'kuiray-ko-desh'
in Nepali.
Her mom was scared that
she’d begin to eat pork and beef, because she was
an orthodox Hindu and very religious and never left her
karma and dharma-principles. But she was a sympathetic,
well-meaning soul, and wouldn't even hurt a fly. She prayed
and meditated throughout the better part of the day, and
fasted on Sundays. Saraswati meditated every Wednesday.
Deviji was of the opinion that even when the sons didn't
care much about religion, the daughters had to carry out
the traditions, and accordingly Saraswati was to undergo
a three-day Hindu ritual purification ceremony called:
pani patiya. This particular ceremony is meant for Nepalese
Hindus returning from overseas to help them regain their
caste, which might have been lost inadvertently during
their sojourn in a foreign country with its strange customs,
religious and eating-habits.
There was a time when
the Nepal Durbar (Royal Palace) was so strict with regard
to religion that the Gurkhas, those fearless fighters,
were liable to punishment and arrest if they were known
to enter Nepal without undergoing the ritual purifying
ceremony. That's why every Gurkha regiment has its own
pundit or bahun. Moreover, the traveller is given an egg,
dried fish, meat and curd, and friends and relatives bring
marigold garlands , spices, fruits and perform an ritualistic
aratie with minute oil lamps placed on a bronze plate
and moved in circles in front of the person bidding farewell.
Saraswati had often seen such small farewell puja being
performed at the Tribhuvan airport when her college friends
left for Russia, France or the USA on government scholarships.
When in 1982 the First
Battalion of the Duke of Edinburgh's Own Gurkha Rifles
was sent to the Falklands, the battalion-bahun went along
with them to cater to the religious needs of the Gurkhas.
It is a Nepalese tradition to put two gagros (bronze pitchers)
on the two sides of the decorated doorway when a member
of a household is leaving for a far-off destination and
also in case someone is returning home, in which case
the traveller is obliged to put in some coins. The gagros
are posted near the doors also during marriage because
they are thought to be auspicious.
It took a long time to
get through the German customs at Frankfurt. There were
scores of jetliners parked outside. It was a different
air that she breathed. It wasn't the fresh Hima¬layan
air of Lukla, the pungent cocktail of kerosene and petrol
of the Tribhuvan Airport. Nor the hot blast of the desert
air at the Gulf. In Frankfurt it was a whiff of car exhaust
and industrial discharge. Yet there were people who'd
adapted to this environment, and wouldn't dream of changing
places.
The passengers were escorted
by a hostess to a lift, and when the door opened Saraswati
recognised her brother Raj, who was busy making a video
with his camcorder. Her German sister-in-law Claudia held
her 3-year old daughter Elena-Chiara’s hand and
came forward to hug and kiss her. Claudia looked beautiful
with her pearl-and-gold ear rings and her blonde hair.
Her well-chiselled facial features seemed to have acquired
a certain pinkiness, for she seemed rather pale when Saraswati
had seen her last in Nepal. At the traditional Nepalese
marriage in Patandhoka, Dada had looked at her and had
exclaimed, ‘She looks like a Bahuni from the hills
of Nepal. So fair and slim.’
Saraswati was shy as usual,
and Raj greeted her and gave her a kiss on her cheek.
That was unusual for a Nepalese, because they generally
folded their hands and wished the other: namaste, which
means ‘I greet the godliness in you’. The
elder person touches the head of the younger and blesses
him or her with the words ‘bhagyamani hunu!’
He was a bit modernised and Germanised, she thought. Her
brother looked the same, except that he had more grey
hair. Nevertheless, it was strange to meet him in a foreign
country, the country of his choice.
They posed for the obligatory
photographs, and proceeded to the other end of the airport
where their baggage were to arrive and they had to separate
again. They saw fat Germans, Europeans, the international
set, flight captains and crew, women in fashionable dresses,
elegantly groomed males going about their business with
urgency.
When they finally came
out with their baggage, there were a lot of Nepalese and
German faces and greetings in Nepali and German. Saraswati
bade farewell to Nirmala, who was picked up by a decent-looking
blond guy, probably a student from his looks, and the
gallant Sikkimese dandy, who seemed to have business connnections,
was greeted by a baldy German. Saraswati went with Raj.
They took an U-bahn (tube) to the railway station, and
then an sleek, fast, white ICE (inter-city-express) train
to Southern Germany. Freiburg, a university-town at the
foot of Germany’s Black Forest.
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