Another lunch time at the train station. Just the phrase sounds so stupid! As if I am going for lunch at the train station, rather than handing out lunch to fifteen of hundreds of hungry people. Anyway, today it began a little differently. Me, Muhammad and Deepta, standing in the middle of the multiple no lane road, waiting for a lull in the zooooming buses and the army of taxis to run across to the other side when we saw Fadi. I know its only an expression, but really, my heart nearly stopped. With his sandals on his hands Fadi was crossing the road. Pulling himself across the tarmac, trailing the stump of his leg behind him, with his bundle of possessions tied around his waist. Buses stormed passed him, taxi's careered around him. He appeared like a stray dog, caught in the middle of the rush hour traffic, while we were stranded watching, wishing, hoping with a collective determination that the bus drivers will see him, that the sprinting taxis will not accelerate until they have passed him. Miraculously he makes it. I feel the collective relief from our small group. Without even saying one word to the other we turn and dodge our way over to his side of the road. Fadi looks up. Smiles. Hands in Nameste and then begins to untie his bundle to reach for his half a cup of a hollowed coconut shell. Muhammad fills it up and then pours water over his hands, while Fadi rubs the bar of soap between his palms. Deepta and I empty the small plastic bags of daal and fish out into the cardboard box. Two chapati's are placed on top and then we turn to go, leaving Fadi sitting at the side of the road. Half a meter away from one of the busiest intersections in the city. Eating his lunch – just how he lives his life - at exhaust level, surrounded by traffic, fumes and horns.
Next stop. The old couple in the car park of the train station. The (Angry) wife isn't there, but other residents of the car park point to her mute husband. We follow the pointing arms and find Harry sitting cross legged outside the northern entrance of the train station. Surrounded by moving people. He is sitting directly in the sun. The temperature today is 42 degrees. It is mid day. Deepta picks up the bottom of her sari and runs. I watch as she reaches him, bends down and lifts him to a stoop with an arm linked under his. Always smiling he greets her as she half drags half carries him across the road. His small bundle of belongs and walking stick begin to fall away from his body and are left strewn across the road. I leave Muhammad with the bags of food and like Gita, lift up my long trousers in order to be free to run over to collect them. One old wooden stick. One dirty cloth. One empty water plastic water bottle. We return Smiling Harry to his usual shady spot. He is still clutching a soggy banana. Deepta takes it from him and places in the lunch box we have just prepared for him. We leave Harry with his smiling eyes sitting in the dirt but away from the cars, the blind feet and the sweating sun.
Deepta walks ahead to refill our water bottles and then we face the stream of disembarking passengers. Balancing on the side of the platform, walking towards the end. We look for Ramu. Again always clean and well dressed, but today he is not where he always is. The local cucumber seller will keep his lunch for him. We walk on, step down onto the railway track and pick our way across to the other side. Water continues to seep out of my pores, covering my skin. I lift my right foot up to step back up onto the platform. Back into the shade, and sitting at the very end of the platform, as always, are Raju and Niraj. After Deepta's hair attack of last week they don't look so much like brothers, but I have thought too soon as Deepta whips out the scissors. Niraj lets us wash his hands and then begins to eat his lunch, while Raju just watches the concrete as his long locks haphazardly fall down. He plays with a twig which eventually he uses to build a mountain from discarded hair. The crowds begin to come. They seem to emerge from underground as no train has arrived. The people stand and stare, and they don't care to keep their distance, but encroach upon Raju and Niraj's space. The two men retain their same expression of nonchalance and it gives the impression that they share a unique language that only themselves can understand. Niraj is left with a head full of snips – patches of hair next to patches of scalp. Deepta is pleased. She looks up and then welds her scissors at her audience. She shouts something in Bengali. I imagine it to be something like “So whose next?”. Either way, as always there is no reaction. We leave Niraj his lunch and as we walk away he walks to the edge of the platform to brush off the strands of hair that never made it to his soft mountain. As he faces the railway track Muhammad turns and rushes back. His limp making his run look cumbersome and painful. I motion to Deepta to stop. Someone is trying to steal Niraj's food. Muhammad intercepts the food and it is returned to its rightful 'owner' and we continue.
The two old women, Laura and Sarah, on separate benches. No smiles. No words. Just a silent exchange. And then Ramu. Sitting on his own. Back against a steel pillar. Covered in cuts and bruises. Deepta shouts at him. But she is not really 'shouting' only trying to ask him what has happened. No response. No reaction. Muhammed takes his hands and washes them. We leave another box of food. I wonder what will happen to the one waiting with the cucumber man? It is a pointless question. There are enough hungry stomachs. Everyday one or two people are feed who weren't the day before. I wonder whose lunch we have just given away. It isn't arbitrary but it is practical. If we have a 'extra' packet within seconds we can find a receiver. We come at the same time every day and if the participants aren't there, there is little else we can do. And today it is Pugli who is left without our lunch. She was not on the station stairs, she was not lying on the ledge outside. She was not crouched next to the rubbish.
We finish our circuit by walking back to Smiling Harry. His (angry) wife is back. She is eating his food. He is sitting in the same place where we left him. He looks up at us and points to The Angry Wife. His gestures are once again supported by the bystanders who seem just to be hanging out like is passive guardian angels. We bring out the last packet, empty the contents for him and place the chapatis on top. Deja-vu.
A gust of warm wind sends a stinging layer of dust around my ankles and a brown tattered plastic bag rolls over my feet. I kick it away. Another gust and I look down to see dirt swirling over the chapatis as Smiling Harry hurriedly tries to close the lid to his cardboard packet of food.
1 comment:
:-)
Great read.
Chaos of the streets....
though....
kuta = dog
kurta = clothing
Hope all is well otherwise, and hope to catch up with you for a dive later in 08!
V
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