I doubt if we’ll be idle at any time of day. Our chapel is simple and elegant, with a whitewashed bell tower. The adjoining clinic is basic—very basic. My nurses’ station has a desk—we need another chair. I have the luxury of a double burner, a saucepan and a tin of Brooke Bond tea. There’s a small doctor’s office and examination room, a three-bed women’s ward, a three-bed men’s ward, an x-ray shed, two storage rooms where I will set up the lab for blood, stool and urine tests.
Dr. Gupta, our hairy, happy, roly-poly bear of a Punjabi doctor, is already holding court (oops, office hours). I’ve been making day visits to assist him two days a week when the convent jeep and driver bring him from the nearby valley town of Jalawaaz. He’s retired and either too old or too lofty to take the minibus. He has a huge heart, but is the kind of chap to whom that organ is just a pump. We argue occasionally about matters at the cellular level. Like, what force could it be that activates a chromosome? He calls it chance. He says, In the beginning was the word, and the word was Algorithm, generator of patterns. I say, In the beginning was the Word, and maybe it was A, C, G, T, the nucleic acids that make up our DNA. I feel as you did, when you tried explaining a Faiz ghazal to a systems analyst.
The chapel, school and clinic are on the estate of an old Sikh family, and we feel very blessed to be running it. Oh, you’ll like this: our chapel stands on the same knoll as an older Sikh gurdwara. So both faiths will share space, and Christians are invited to dine in the Sikh community dining hall after worship. Father Pashan says sitting side by side and eating “langar” breaks caste and he approves of that, but cautions he doesn’t want us becoming Sikhs!
A power line skims the treetops and darts downhill to meet orange-painted giants carrying it to Shimla. A path down the mountain passes terraces planted with rosebushes and apple trees. She can see women on the path in salwar-kameez, sweaters and kerchiefs, some are just specks beneath cone-shaped baskets on their backs. Older women wear the full-length rejta skirt and dhattu headcovering. Young women wear the salwar-kameez and dupatta like Anu, but in many colours. Most wear sandals or sneakers—the high heels she misses would be treacherous on these slopes.
The Church also has its caste system. Father Pashan says Indian priests are still second class in the Vatican heirarchy, and nuns are definitely below priests. In many parishes, we are required to do menial work for the priests, but Imaculata says, “My nuns don’t.”
When I finish my nursing course, I’ll be the Parish Nurse here in Gurkot. Bethany and I will share this two-room Tudor cottage built by a British colonist, tucked beneath the chapel and clinic, across the road. You’d think it spare, with its jute dhurries, chic-bamboo blinds and navar-beds, but it’s quite comfortable. We’ve applied for a phone, but of course that will take several years. Still, we’ll have electricity, a kitchen with a refrigerator, a tiled bathroom and a flush toilet. And a breathtaking north-facing view of the ranges. Beyond them may lie legendary Mt. Meru. And Tibet (oops, China).
She pulls Rano’s last letter from her hip pocket. Rano says she and Jatin’s family and now Chetna too go to the Dixie-Derry gurdwara every Sunday, as if they keep a Sabbath and as if the gurdwara is a church. Rano asks for a sooji-halwa recipe—she’s taking it to a Punjabi poetry gathering. Anu writes that one from memory. What are the names of the rasas—Anu can only remember seven of the nine aesthetic emotions, and writes those. And the debut dance of a bharatanatyam dancer—jatiswaram or arangetram? Arangetram.
Rano sounds afraid India will slip away from her. Yet she says Canada has a policy of multiculturalism that allows you to be yourself, and Indian, and Canadian in Canada. Which means Chetna won’t be asked to sacrifice being Indian. Sacrifice—blood—
Rano, we’ve begun daylong education camps in this area. We leave very early from Shimla, and Bethany holds a legal clinic and a letter-writing camp, and I teach teenage girls about menstruation, reproduction, babies—subjects the nuns never taught us. I began thinking I won’t be with Chetna when her time comes. Could you explain menstruation? I don’t want her to pick up ideas about being polluted and untouchable during your menses. Sikhs aren’t supposed to have these Hindu customs but a couple of my Sikh students say their grandmothers still don’t allow them in the kitchen during their periods, just like our grandmother. So anyway, please can you make sure?
There is a hole in my heart where she was, and I’m trying to do without her. It’s been six months since I saw her. In a few days, she will see snow for the first time and so will I. I’ll send her another postcard. Hope that’s okay.
Love,
Anu
She folds the letter, inserts it in an envelope. She takes her billfold from her shoulder bag and from it removes three stamps.
Only the most interesting for Rano and Chetna. She found these at Combermere Post Office in Shimla, undemanded, slightly battered since British times. She remembers these same stamps from Dadu’s collection, and the way he held them so gently with a pair of tweezers when he showed them to her.
p.s. The one with the Indian flag is the first issued after Independence in 1947. And the one with the emblem of the Ashoka lions was the second. The ten-rupee stamp was issued on the first anniversary of Independence, to commemorate Mahatma Gandhi after he was killed by that RSS man, Nathuram Godse. Dadu told me, “Finding all three is like finding the trinity: Lords Brahma, Vishnu and Shiv. If you are ever compelled to sell or trade them,” he said, “be sure it is for something vital.”
She tucks them in, licks the envelope closed, and sticks a modern international stamp on the outside. On the back flap, she writes her new name: Sister Anupam.
DAMINI
“WHAT MORE DO YOU WANT?” SAYS VIJAYANTHI. “I GAVE you advice, boots, beedis for tobacco …”
Icy mountains loom all around. Snow patches are appearing on nearer mountains, too. Today it feels as if it will take longer for Damini to balance her karma as for wind and rain to lay the mountains low.
She follows Vijayanthi beneath the overhang. As Vijayanthi hunches to enter her cookroom, Damini too doubles over to duck under the smoke layer, crouch-walking till she can drop her bottom and sit before the four-legged bowl of the stove. Vijayanthi pushes a jute sack cushion at Damini and she takes it, gratefully—Vijayanthi is according Damini some respect, trying to make up for her harsh words.
Heat from the twig and coal fire singes her face. Her eyes smart—must be the smoke. “I didn’t think it would be so difficult,” Damini says.
Since she brought the tiny body home from Anamika Devi’s cave two weeks ago, she has been feeling weak. Ever since that small body, too young to cremate, was buried under the peach tree on the lower terrace, her heart has been jumping as if missing beats, as if she has taken too large a hit of tobacco. And she has been heavy with longing to lie down.
Lying down is impossible since Leela is still in her unclean stage, unable to cook, and too depleted to work in the field. Today Damini was washing clothes beneath the waterspout by five, collecting firewood in the forest by six, and then working with Kamna to milk the cows for Mohan to carry milk to the roadside storehouse. Muscles she never felt are informing her of their presence.
You can be thrown in a rat-infested cell for what you did. You can hang for this if someone tells.
“Did I say it is easy, fighting for women’s wishes?”
“No.” Damini’s throat feels knotted and dry.
“You saw my Madhu—when she was born, I couldn’t do it. I told my grandson I have become too old and soft. But you are strong, still. Tell me, is Leela glad?”
“She’s … no, not glad. She is doing what needs doing.”
“But?”
“She does not speak.”
“Does she blame you? Sometimes they do.”
“She said when I left her and went to New Delhi, she began to learn never to want what she cannot have. And she says the girl’s bhagya took her early. But no, she’s not grateful.”
“Huh—what gratit
ude can you expect from children these days?”
“She says if Chunilal had not withheld his name, she would have fed the girl.”
“It’s too late now. Who came to mourn?”
“If I had told Chimta, Tubelight, Supari or Matki, they would have sent the men in their families. But I didn’t. As it was, the sweeper-woman, Goldina, and her husband, Samuel, came. Samuel dug the grave.”
“What did you tell them?”
“That a ghost came into the child and gave her a fever, and she died.”
“Did you pay the sweeper well, to believe you?”
“Yes—twenty rupees.” And because the thought of jail sent her into mindless panic.
“Is Leela’s husband glad?”
“He has stopped blaming Leela.”
“And how is he treating you?”
“He doesn’t refuse my care. Maybe he is trying to please me by accepting it. I had to feed him tea with a spoon today, he was so ill, and I’m tending him only because it’s my dharma. I can’t be angry at a sick man.”
“Arey! If you still have a roof over your head, what more do you want?”
Vijayanthi reaches around till her hand meets a brass bowl of wheat flour. She pulls it toward her and says, “People think a dai has to do something like this every time. It’s only sometimes that such acts become necessary.”
Damini draws an uneasy breath. She wants to forget the feel of that tiny body nestling close, the smile that bloomed on those tiny lips when she massaged the baby’s face. That the baby’s eyes opened, and that the child looked directly into her eyes as if she could see. What she has done is—say it, name it!—killing. The horror of that fact encases her in ice.
And though her Gita tells how Lord Krishna urged Lord Arjun to do his duty as a warrior without regard to outcome, even if those outcomes included the killing of his relatives, it does not say if Arjun felt as heavy-hearted, as full of remorse as Damini when he returned from battle.
“If it had been someone I didn’t know, if it had not been my granddaughter …”
And there’s the matter of her remaining granddaughter. Kamna is not speaking to her father since he smashed her bottle of Fair & Lovely. Kamna is afraid of him, though he grows sicker by the day. Damini has told her a bottle of face cream isn’t important, but today Mohan asked Kamna to dance, and she wouldn’t.
Mohan is oblivious, blowing his flute tunelessly till the cows low and roll their eyes in agony. Damini shouldn’t have bought it for him.
Vijayanthi cups her hand in the bowl. Damini follows the prompt, taking up a nearby jug. She pours water into Vijayanthi’s hand. Vijayanthi lets the water run into the flour for a few seconds, and then gestures with her other hand to stop.
“At least it was you, not some stranger, who returned this atman to brahman,” Vijyanthi says. “At least it was done with love. Tell Leela, next time the gods will send a boy. And if you can’t do what women want”—contempt rings in Vijayanthi’s voice—“don’t come anymore. I have too little time left in this life, I’ll teach someone else.”
“No, no, don’t say that.” says Damini, misery eating at her insides. “You see, my pension … aye-hai! The gourmint has stopped my pension. I went to the post office in Jalawaaz—a letter from the pension office was waiting. The guormint says now my son has a job, he should now look after me.”
“Then? Did you tell Suresh?”
“I can’t.” says Damini. “When I lost my job and couldn’t give him money every month, Suresh couldn’t afford to live in Delhi anymore. So his swami found him a job in Jalawaaz as a teacher in the RSS school beside the temple. He came to see us yesterday in his new khaki shorts, white shirt and saffron scarf with Lord Ram printed on it. He’s now wearing a tail of hair from here,” she touches the crown of her head, “longer than the rest. ‘Jai Shri Ram!’ was his greeting, full of pride. But they don’t pay him a salary, only living expenses, and travel expenses when he goes to teach the sweepers and jungle people in surrounding villages. Sometimes they give him a share of the temple donations.”
“That’s more than many other men get.”
“But he needs money to find a bride from a good family, with a bit of land maybe—so how can I say, Oh please give me money?”
“You don’t need money till you go to a city. Till then, just exchange this for that.”
Vijayanthi gropes around till her fingers meet a hollow iron pipe lying beside her. She hands it to Damini. Damini blows into it, enlivening the coal-flame beneath the stove. “I had promised Chunilal my pension. Two hundred a month,” she says. She will give it to him from her bonus money until she begins earning.
“Two hundred rupees: that’s four babies a month,” says Vijayanthi. She finishes working the dough, twirls the bowl. The flour paste turns sticky as it changes to roti dough. “In a city you’d find four babies a month. But here—only ten or fifteen a year. You can charge more if they come out boys. If they are girls, ask if the father wants to greet a marriage party or not … if he says no, you know what he is asking you to do …”
Damini blows into the pipe a few more times and the coals burn brightly. “If the baby comes out a girl,” she says, “would I be blamed just as they blame the mother?”
“Sometimes.” Vijayanthi taps her breastbone. “I tell young men, if you want sons, plant sons, then only can you reap sons and carry on your family name. Plant a daughter, reap a daughter. But they! They think a woman’s koke can turn a daughter into son or a son into a daughter.”
“I will only take fees for children I deliver live,” says Damini.
“Then you will get half the pay you could get,” says Vijayanthi. “But it’s your bijness. I can tell you what to do, the rest is up to you.”
“It’s not a bijness,” says Damini. “In our family, men do bijness, not women. I’ll take donations. People can pay what they feel my skill is worth.”
“If that’s how you want it, then you’ll need to learn to heal all sicknesses. I will teach you.” Vijayanthi pats the dough into a large ball, scrapes her fingers and adds every last morsel to the whole. “Most people only want to tell me the old ways are wrong. When I heard the padri is going to open a full-time clinic beside the church, I immediately went to ask him if I could help—a year ago I could still see quite well. But he said I’d have to learn many new things.” She reaches into the dough and scoops out a small ball.
“Learn about new medicines or new plants?”
“Neither. Medicines come from Delhi and abroad. The plants—what can he teach me that my mother-in-law didn’t? See, the padri isn’t like our ojha—the padri only prays, he doesn’t heal. And he only becomes possessed by his Lord Jesus on Sundays, no other day. And he and his followers pray only to Lord Jesus for healing, not all the gods. He needs a doctor-saab to come and do healing.
“Then what did he say you had to learn?”
“To touch strangers and clean away shit like any sweeper. He said he himself is a sweeper and all of us are just like sweepers. But I thought, I’m not so desperate, and came away.”
Vijayanthi rolls the dough ball between her palms, and then dredges it in flour.
“Will the new doctor have medicines to stop girl babies from coming?” says Damini.
Vijayanthi laughs with no amusement. “Ask Lord Golunath. He’s Lord Brahma’s incarnation, and only Lord Brahma can stop girls from coming,” She holds out the ball of dough. Damini takes it, looks around, finds the rolling pin and stone flat by the stove and rolls out the roti. “Medicines stop boys as well as girls from coming. But you can find out if an atman has by mistake entered a girl’s body, so you can clean it out. You must find out early, mind you. Not so late as Leela—that’s why I didn’t tell you before.”
Slap-slap. Damini flips the floppy dough from palm to palm and places the roti gently on the tava, heating it in the concave bowl of hot iron. “Then you don’t need to …”
Vijayanthi nods. “And more live children will be born.”
She pauses for effect, and rubs her thumb over her forefinger. “The padri said his clinic won’t have an ultra-soon.”
“Ultra-soon?”
“What,” says Vijayanthi, “is the use of opening a clinic if village women still have to walk all the way to Jalawaaz for ultra-soon?”
“What is ultra-soon?”
“A machine that looks inside a woman,” says Vijayanthi. “With it, there is nothing the doctor can’t see. He sees the flower of her womb, the stems that hold it, the passage, the gateway the baby will use. He takes a photo, click!—right through the woman’s skin—to see if a tail is growing in front of the child.”
“Can the machine see her past?”
“No. And though it foretells if a girl or boy is coming, it can’t—” Vijayanthi’s voice drops to a whisper and she shifts a squat-step closer, “it can’t foretell what the woman will do if she knows a girl is coming. Of course, doctors know what she will do, but they pretend they don’t.”
Vijanthi gropes around again, comes up with a pair of tongs, which she hands to Damini. The roti is rising slightly. Damini pokes at it with the tongs.
“And if she is told a girl is coming?”
Damini lifts the roti from the tava and places it upon the flame.
“She can have it cleaned out right there, at the Jalawaaz clinic—but first the woman needs to know.”
“Does a husband or father or brother have to go with the woman to get it cleaned out?”
“No, the woman doesn’t have to tell anyone. But it’s difficult if she doesn’t, because its so far to either Jalawaaz or Shimla. And sometimes doctors ask the woman to bring her husband with her, to prove her husband says yes. And if the woman can’t bring her husband, some doctors charge more money. If she takes you with her, you can say you’re her mother-in-law.”
The roti has begun to blister and smoke. Damini removes it from the fire and drops it onto a steel platter. Vijayanthi scoops into the glistening wheatish skin of the roti-dough, and begins another.
The Selector of Souls Page 25