Saturday, 9 March 2024

THE GANGS OF FATEHPUR

 


THE GANGS OF FATEHPUR.


   Ensconced in my tiny village near Mashobra in the Shimla hills in the summers, I feel like Raja Hari Singh Katoch of Kangra when he was besieged in the Kangra fort by Jahangir in 1620.  Worse, actually, because the stalwart Raja had to put up with the inconvenience for only fourteen months whereas I have had to endure it every year for the last 14 years. And it's not the Mughal army I have to contend with but the Khan Market and Lutyen's gangs of Delhi.
   Come April every year and members of these gangs, in their tens of thousands, clamber up the mountain landscape and take over our roads, markets, forests and every bed in every homestead. Like locusts they devour everything and leave behind in their wake tonnes of plastic, bottles, empty packets of chips, cigarettes and condoms. Like Jahangir, they lay claim to our lawns, apple trees and parking places; the women have been spared so far, but that's only because we hide them with the cattle. We huddle in our houses, waiting for the pestilence- called tourists in modern parlance- to pass.
   I have given the origins of this annual invasion a lot of thought, and have come to the conclusion that it occurs primarily because we no longer visit our grandparents, and instead prefer to go on vacation to the hills! Think about it. The internet, competitive consumerism and the breakdown of familial relationships drive us to constantly seek " new experiences" and new vistas. If the Junejas can do it, we reason, so can we. Even if it means being stuck for eight hours on the Rohtang pass, being ripped off by taxi drivers in Dharamshala or abused by the pony wallahs in Kufri. It was different when we were growing up in the fifties and sixties.
  My grandfather, a patriarch no one messed with, stayed in a village of Fatehpur district in UP called Husainganj (unless the good Yogi has now changed its name). He had built himself a huge haveli there from the proceeds of his book shops in Calcutta, and inscribed one golden rule in its stones: all his children and 17 grandkids had to visit him every summer: he even paid for the rail tickets. So I never even saw a mountain( or sea, or desert) till I was 25: the only mountain I had seen was the stupendous landfill in Ghazipur, which, like the Himalayas continues to grow each year. Every summer vacation my Dad would pack the family into a second class coach of the Kalka mail at Calcutta (or Hazaribagh or Asansol or wherever he happened to be posted at the time) for the 24 hour journey to Fatehpur- annual migrations one looks back on with fond nostalgia mixed with a regret that my own sons (part of the KM gang) have never seen this facet of the Old India. For today train travel is all about getting to the destination as quickly as possible, it's never about the pleasures of the journey itself. I recently travelled by Shatabdi to Kanpur and found that of the 62 passengers, 60 of them had buried their persona and noses into their smart phones. The 61st was a seven eight year old kid (who should have been smothered at birth) who was sliding the door open and shut, letting in the flies and letting out the cold air. I was the 62nd, observing it all and weeping like Alexander the Great for I had now seen it all.
   For us the journey was itself a delight. There were no AC coaches or electric traction back then. We would stick our heads out of the open windows, breathing in the soot and smoke from the massive Bullet engines, jump out at every station to buy comics from the AH Wheeler stalls (where have they all disappeared?), grab the local station food from the vendors- "jhalmoori" at Asansol, aloo tikkis at Dhanbad, samosas at Mughalsarai, puri-aloo at Benaras, the delicious pedas at Allahabad. All extremely unhygienic, swarming with e-colis no doubt, but Michelin star stuff which built up the immunity which in later years has enabled us to tackle the tasteless swill IRCTC serves on trains nowadays. But the "piece de resistance" for which we all used to wait, came at Fatehpur, which arrived at the opportune time for breakfast and where we deboarded with great excitement. Its generally deserted restaurant served the best buttered toast and omelette on the Grand Trunk line, on round tables covered with spotless linen and cutlery.  (The only railway restaurant that comes even close to its ambience and service is the Barog station on the Kalka- Shimla line). We left the restaurant only when they ran out of eggs, for the next two weeks in Husainganj were to be a vegetarian existence, without even onions and garlic.
   There was only a dirt track between Fatehpur and Husainganj, a distance of about ten kms; there were no buses, only the occasional horse carriage on a sharing basis. But my grandfather had the biggest haveli in the village and there was no way his grand brats would travel in a "tonga"; for us he sent his personal bullock cart, drawn by two of his finest oxen: a magnificent, snow white pair standing almost five feet high at the shoulders, bedecked with colourful ribbons and tinkling bells, their regal horns sheathed in copper. The bullock cart itself was a caparisoned wonder, with sun shades, carpeted with Mirzapuri rugs and stocked with sugarcane stalks, peanuts and nimboo-pani.  We flew down the dirt track like Ben-Hur in the last lap of his famous race , giving the term " cattle class" an entirely new meaning. It set the tone for the next month, a controlled chaos of joint family living, over which my grandfather proudly presided: a patriarch who held his large family together with stern dictats, superb logistic skills and well placed inducements.
   He is gone now, of course, and so is the world we grew up in: the haveli is in ruins, the bullock cart is now a symbol of penury, not of status, the omelette is now a leathery strip served with sarkari reluctance, the station food vendors replaced by catering franchisees hawking packaged rubbish, most trains do not even stop at Fatehpur. Why should they? Nobody goes there for everyone is now headed for the mountains, the seaside resorts or the casinos of Goa. In this world of OYO rooms, Make My Trip.com, Airbnb and cashbacks, visiting grandfathers is such a waste of time. But I do wish the millennial generation would start visiting the old critters again: it would make them happy, it would lift my siege and might even save the mountains from further depredation. I speak, of course, as a grandfather-in-waiting.

7 comments:

  1. A superb rendition of many journeys of millions visiting home, parents, grandparents at various times of their lives. In those days holidays meant exactly that. Even for honeymoons, the newly weds would come to places where they had relatives! But as families became nuclear, the visits became shorter. Holidays metamorphosed into Obligation or partying. Like a day and night visit at marriages, deaths or touristy destinations. The journey itself became an irritant. Just like in life, we look forward from one success to the next. Forgetting the journeys that took us there. And those who held our hands.

    ReplyDelete
  2. What a delightful portrayal of a bygone time cleared of its cobwebs! Taking the reader into the languid past, as the narration conjures the vision of dust stirred under the cloven hooves of cart-pulling bulls. The now decrepit Haveli must have resounded with fun and merriment once, like the flashback of a sepia tinted Hindi movie. All of this framed within the trademark Shuklan humour, while ambassadoring for senior folk the yearning to enjoy their grandchildren's visits, however infrequent.

    One gathers Avay Shukla is about to be promoted in the filial order; if so, felicitations to his son on being visited by the stork. He will observe with unbridled joy his future 8 year old grandchild play relentlessly with the sliding door of a Bullet Train carriage when travelling with him to Delhi/Shimla.
    Here's wishing the best as we wait for him to regale us with grandad stories in the times to come.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Sincere thanks, Mr. Patankar, for your felicitations but sadly they are a bit premature. My status as grandfather-in- waiting matches that of Rahul Gandhi's as PM-in-waiting. But, as you have no doubt observed by now, I have not given up on either!

    ReplyDelete
  4. In that case, dear Sir, you are sighing away from the desire to cuddle a cherubic infant in your lap, conditional expressly to the chromosomes matching yours! I must then urge you not to consider taking things into your own hands. Al Pacino became a proud father at 82. Not to be done in, his compatriot and peer Robert de Niro became Daddy at 79. K.P. Singh of DLF married at 93 late last year, and Rupert Murdoch got engaged 4 days back at 92.
    These are hardy men who could hardly wait. We may be lesser mortals than these dazzling dashers, but we are made of the sterner stuff called Patience. As one Mr. R. R. Gandhi is.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Loved this one! Thank you. Took me straight back to my childhood when during our winter hoildays we'd head the other way - down to Delhi to stay with relatives.
    We'd go down from Simla by the rail-car, long thrown into the dustbin I presume) which got us down to Kalka for the Kalka Mail which would chug out of that ultra clean station almost at midnight.
    In the interim period we'd have the most delicious chicken curry and proper puffed up phulkas brought to the compartment by smartly turned out waiters in white with green cummerbands and phanka wallah turbans.
    ALL gone!

    ReplyDelete
  6. The Kalka mail in my childhood - and that is seven decades ago- used to take just 16 hours from Howrah to Kanpur so it couldn't have taken 24 to Fatehpur from wherever you boarded.
    Memories, of course, are fickle.
    We all used to be visiting grandparents in those days.
    It used to be great fun because so would all our cousins and that accounts for the enduring friendships that we forged.
    Pity today's generation which will be lonely in old age.

    ReplyDelete