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Welcome to the world of a secret romantic. Interesting individuals gifted me the backbone of the stories which wrote themselves. I have, of course, tweaked them the way my imagination would allow. Though years were lost, I plan to catch up with time now. The urge to bring the beauty of the time gone by is too strong! Enjoy!! Ajay P.S.:A comment with your views at the end of the blog will be appreciated.

Wednesday, 29 August 2018

In Quest of Heaven


Rafiq slowly opened his eyes. For a moment, he could not understand where he was. Then it all slowly came to him in bits and pieces. He looked around to get his bearings. On his right was a mud bank about ten feet high. On his left, he could see the town in the distance. He now realised he was somewhere off the road, and a little way above the town.

He tried to move his hand but a searing pain shot through his body. He moved his head and saw the ground near his middle, a darker shade of brown. He recognized it for what it was – his own blood mixed with the dirt. He had taken a bullet but he could not locate where he was hit.

He tried to estimate the time of the day, but the overcast conditions would not allow him to put an accurate fix on it. Must be quite early, for the bullet got him while it was still dark. How long he had been lying there, he was not sure, but it could not have been more than a couple of hours at the most. Had it been longer, he was sure he would have been discovered.

He remembered that someone had been trying to shake him awake in the night. No words were spoken, no light was shone. That someone must have been a friend, for he was trying to wake him and at the same time trying to pull him towards the window. He had been expecting this for the last many months – every new location brought a sanctuary and also new risks. Each location had to be understood afresh but there was so little time.

He and his group would be moved every few days for fear of discovery and to keep a step ahead of the forces. He could not remember how long he had been on the run – but it was not more than a few weeks. He had lost track of time after the first few days and it was a new place, new faces, new dangers every couple of days. Earlier he could not sleep in a new bed, but that habit had been overcome more than a year ago.

He had moved towards the window along with the other shadowy figures, but before he could reach out to open it, someone had pulled him down. He did not question this, but he could vaguely see a small trapdoor near the floor and one person slipping through it. He ducked low and went through.

He found himself in a ditch with shallow water. The side of the ditch was not very high but by crawling in it, he was sure that he would not be visible to anyone a little distance away. He felt the urge to pop his head up but that could be very dangerous. He controlled the urge and started crawling as silently as possible.

After a few minutes of crawling, he was sure that he was far enough to now leave the ditch. They had been trained so – split up after an escape, move away at least a couple of kilometers, and hide in the forest. After two days, meet at the predetermined spot when a new hiding place would be arranged.

In case someone was caught, the orders were very clear – don’t be taken alive, you could be a potential source of danger to others. Take down as many as possible. No heroics! All the attacking was to be done only as a last resort. You are much more valuable alive to the cause, than you are dead.

He saw a cluster of trees a little to his right. That could be a good spot, but it could also be crawling with the forces. He had to wait for signs lest he walked right into the waiting arms of the enemy.

He did not have to wait long. There was a sudden whistle followed by a burst of gunfire. The firing came from the left. There was retaliation from the house, which he had vacated recently.

The sounds of the firing would cover any noise that he made while moving towards the cluster of trees. Yet he moved cautiously to avoid detection until he reached the trees. He understood that peripheral vision in such situations was quite enhanced and any sudden movement detected by any one of the force personnel would be a quick invitation to a shot.

However, he made it safely to the trees and found that there was another one of his comrades already there. Two were usually better than one, but not when you were making a getaway. If there were two chances of being recognised also went up.

However, nothing could be done now. They would split up as soon as they were a little distance away. After a while, they reached a spot, which could be later identified and was far enough away from the beaten track to hide their weapons. They could not travel with weapons; there were too many check-points. They carefully dug a shallow pit using their knives and this took the better part of an hour. The darkness did not help.

The wrapped the weapons as best as they could in thin plastic sheets that they always carried and put them in the pit. Covering it with the earth and then with stones as best as they could in the darkness, they bid their goodbyes and moved off in the darkness. They could not be sure that the concealment was adequate or not, but it could not be helped. They had done the best they could, and staying there in the darkness would be a risk.

He moved away from the road uphill and keeping to the shadows provided by the trees. It was safer as he would not be caught in the headlight of any passing vehicle. Not that many civilian vehicles would be moving in the darkness given the tense atmosphere in the valley. If any vehicle did come along, chances were high that it belonged to the security forces.

After about an hour and half he was reasonably sure that he was near the town and that any hiding spot in the vicinity would give him higher chances of access to bare necessities for survival and also afford a quick getaway if required. He was sure that he was far away from the encounter spot to escape the search cordon.

He would also be closer to the next rendezvous location. He would have to wait for the first light to start looking for a suitable “home” for hiding for the next two days. Any search in the darkness was futile. He sat down to wait. Daybreak was not far away, but it was cold. He shivered, but tried to put the thought of discomfort away. Lighting a fire would be too risky!

The wait without any activity led to drowsiness and sitting against a tree trunk he nodded off.

Something woke him up. He could not be sure what it was. He waited – still and alert. Then he heard it again. A distant sound of a bark! The light had still not broken. So it could not be some local taking his dog for a walk. That meant it could only be a security patrol.

It was still some distance away but he would have to move away. If they came closer, the dogs would hear his movement or would smell him. There would be no hope. He could not be sure exactly which direction the sound had come from. He had to depend on his instincts.

He started moving away, as quietly as possible, pausing every once in a while to listen. He could hear no sound so he was reasonably sure that he was moving farther away from the patrol.

 

After some time, he came to a road. He found that the road fell away on his side rather steeply and moving on his side would be quite difficult. He needed to cross the road, but that had to be done carefully. He waited. He listened. When he was certain that he was alone on the stretch, he decided to dart across. He had almost reached the other side when he heard the shout – “Kaun hai?” The simple words were chilling. He dashed into the bushes on the other side and rolled so that he was lying on the ground on his belly.

He saw a couple of torch-lights swinging in his direction and slowly moving towards him. A security patrol apparently has been resting after moving through the night and he had been unlucky enough to choose this spot to cross the road. He surveyed the side he had arrived on. He could not see the sky, except directly overhead; meaning that there was a sharp upward incline on his side of the road. The other side of course had a sharp downward incline as he already knew.

With the security forces moving towards him he was faced with a tough choice. If he continued to move away from the road on his side he would have to move uphill making his progress slow while the security forces could move along the road much faster and reach him quickly.

The other option was to dash across the road to the other side and run downhill in the dense bush. It would be risky and could be very uncomfortable, but it would deny the forces any real advantage as the shrubbery was thick and his movement would be faster.

He decided to take his chances with the second option; it offered a better chance although there would be the initial dander of exposure.

He acted.

Suddenly, springing up, he dashed out of his cover and made a run for it. Immediately shots rang out though none hit him. He was certain that while the forces could see some movement, they could not pin it down exactly. He was now almost at the edge of the bushes across the road when he was hit.

It was a lucky shot for one of the pursuers but he was thrown off with a burning sensation around his midriff. In a frenzy, he got up and kept running blindly through the bush and the trees till he fell himself falling, rolling on and on without control. He was not aware of the hits that his battered body was taking. He must have run for about fifty or maybe sixty yards when he fell. He blacked out.

His throat was dry and the surroundings appeared to be curving and going in and out of focus. He was in a situation, which his trainers had not prepared him for. He was alive but barely so. He could not move his limbs far less attempt to kill himself. He could not afford to get caught. He was sure that anytime now the search party would be here since it was already light.

He was at a loss to understand why the search party was not already there. He was bleeding to death but he could not hasten it. There was nothing to do but wait. Surprisingly there was virtually no pain. On the other hand, maybe his senses had been dulled due to loss of blood.

With nothing to do, his mind drifted. How had he come about to be here?

His grandfather was dozing in the sun. A tall gentle old man, he would tolerate all of the mischief of his grandson. His sister, a year older than him, was sitting in his grandfather’s lap playing with his white beard. The old man would sometimes smile with his eyes closed. It was a blissful scene broken only by the arrival of his two elder brothers. They started pestering him for a story.

It was a story that they had heard often. It never bored them. It was about his grandfather’s time as a freedom fighter during the British Raj. A mere teenager at the time, he narrated the passion of people fighting for freedom.

The story was in many parts -of the bravery of his friends, of the lack of fear that his comrades displayed in the face of an armed force, of the joy of independence, of the pain of partition, of the advance of the newly formed Pakistani army in Kashmir, of the heroic resistance of Kashmiris and of the Indian Army.

It was a story which was narrated with passion and his grandfather seemed to be transported to a time which he cherished. He told them about his move back to the valley in 1950 to be with his people. He spoke about his dream to see Kashmir as the Heaven that he had dreamt of.

He had quit his job in Delhi as a professor and taken up work as a teacher in a Srinagar school. He talked about his new group of friends who shared his passion and of the long debates that they had on setting priorities for all the work that required to be done.

While narrating these stories many shades of emotion would flit across his wizened old face – joy, pride, pain, hope, anger…….

His father had been a different man. He was a reasonably educated man, who started his own business since there were few opportunities for educated people but a reasonable living could be made in the tourist trade. A religious but not an overtly or demonstratively pious man, his life revolved around making a reasonable living, which would give his children the opportunity he never had.

The responsibilities towards his ailing father did not allow him to move away from Srinagar to Delhi or other parts of India where opportunities existed. After the purge of Pundits, the tourist trade suffered. But his father had the foresight to set aside enough to ensure that his children would have access to education outside Kashmir.

 

Meanwhile, a cerebral stroke had rendered his grandfather paralyzed and over a period of time the old man became so frail that he spoke less and less and spent his days lying in the cot in the corner of the front room. The cot would be moved into the sun when the weather allowed and then silently the old man would gaze at the hills with love.

He remembered the visits vaguely. But he remembered the fear in the eyes of his father and the disappointment, nay contempt, in the eyes of his grandfather. The visitors were ordinary looking folk who initially spoke with camaraderie but soon the tone changed to demands and threats and they always left with something wrapped in a packet.

At these times, his father would gesture him to stay inside but he would still manage to see from behind the curtains and hear snatches of the conversation. He could not really understand what was said but he could sense his father’s fear and this was very confusing for the people were men they knew and they never did any harm.  

When he was about fourteen or fifteen, he found one day his classmates going out while school was on. He was curious and when he asked what was happening, one of his classmates laughed and asked him to tag along.

Soon they came to a place which was packed with youngsters like him. At the other end of the street were policemen with guns. The group of students would dash out from niches and hurl stones – it was good fun because the stones barely reached the police officers. He too at the behest of his friend hurled a couple of stones but soon left in a hurry when the police officers started charging towards them.

His friend took him to a house, which was packed with youngsters. There was a lot of laughing and joking and suddenly a twenty-rupee note was placed in his hand. He did not know why but when he reached home, he found his father sitting quietly. This was the case quite often nowadays and he did not much think about it.

A couple of days later, when he reached home, he could sense that there was something wrong. His father was looking grim and his mother was looking worried. Then he saw the twenty-rupee note in her hand.

“Where did you get this?” she asked gently.

He was quite speechless. He had forgotten about the money. He could not lie.

“A man gave it to me.” The answer, though true, sounded lame.

“For what?” his father’s voice was gruff and he could sense apprehension.

“Don’t know. But he was giving everybody money.”

“Did you go throwing stones at the police?”

 

He could just nod. Now vaguely he could understand that what he had done was wrong, very wrong. He saw his father clutch his head and also noticed that his grandfather was looking at him, his eyes moist.

His mother caught hold of his wrist and dragged him inside. She was saying something, explaining, but the words barely registered.

A couple of months later, he found himself on a bus with his father on way to Delhi via Jammu. He was to stay with his father’s friends, the Bhats. His dad explained that he would be attending school in Delhi and would stay with the family.

Their son Khawer was a couple of years younger and would provide him company. He would be able to come home during the holidays but he was never to travel alone. His father would come to fetch him and also visit him as often as he could manage.

Though he took time to get used to his new home, he found the family loving and soon adjusted to his new circumstances. Khawer and he shared a room and soon they were more like brothers.

He was treated no differently than the rest and soon adopted the customs of the family. Though Uncle took him to the mosque from time to time, especially during Eid, he would enthusiastically participate in Diwali and Holi.

But over a period of time he noticed something. There were infrequent but periodic meetings of people in the Bhat’s drawing room. These meetings were not social gatherings and the children were told not to go downstairs. But children, being children, would take every opportunity to eavesdrop and Rafiq was old enough to understand the gist of what was discussed.

It was mostly about petitions, collections, actions to reclaim property left behind. Rafiq was not aware about the purge but he made it a point to read about it. Surely, this could not all be true! These must be biased reports. He would have to get his hands on the other stuff to really understand this. But unfortunately other stuff was not widely available.

As he grew older, he often went about alone. Sometimes Khawer would accompany him. On one such visit to Old Delhi, they found themselves unable to move because of the crowd. Then they saw it. A Muharram procession led by groups of young men hurling strung sharp knives on their backs so that they were bleeding while others hurled water to provide some relief.

He felt Khawer tense beside him. Rafiq smiled gently at Khawer and squeezed his hand to reassure him. But the horror in Khawer’s eyes was plain to see. Somehow, they managed to squeeze past the milling crowds and return. Rafiq was unable to understand this fear then.

During one of his visits home he decided to ask his grandfather why he did not go to Pakistan at the time of partition. The old man looked puzzled at first and did not say anything. Rafiq repeated the question. The old man did not respond for a long time. Finally, he mumbled weakly but with a sparkle in his eyes. It was difficult to understand for his voice was so weak. He just said this one word –“My land!”

That is what it was. For the old man it was his land- land which could not be divided on basis of anything – geography, politics, religion, whims….. What was important was that he was part of this land, for good or for worse, he was the land!

Rafiq got the meaning of what the old man was saying, but at the time he failed to comprehend the sentiment behind it, the depth of attachment, the tie to the roots.

On another occasion he was sitting with his father and enjoying a cup of steaming tea. His grandfather was, as usual, lying on his cot in the corner, apparently asleep. Rafiq never really could converse with his father but felt comfort in his presence.

His father was a man of few words and the only exchange that they had since he had come home was about his studies. However, Rafiq gathered himself for what he was about to ask. It was a question, which had fascinated him and troubled him for long. He asked about the purge of the Pundits from the valley.

Perhaps the question was too sudden. Perhaps his father was not prepared for it. He jerked his head up from his cup and looked at Rafiq. He kept silent, but in his eyes Rafiq could see pain, shame and…….fear. Then his father hung his head and did not say anything. It was impossible to say what he was thinking. For Rafiq, it was not a satisfactory response.

Unlike his father, his grandfather was looking animated. The old man was by now so weak that, it was impossible to understand his mumblings. The old man was shaking his head from side to side. The moan coming from his throat was distressed and tears were wetting his cheeks. Both of them rushed to comfort the old man but it was a while before he calmed down.

While his quivering had stopped, the tears continued to flow. Finally, the man was too tired even to cry and dozed off. From that day on, Rafiq could feel the eyes of the old man following him whenever he was around. It was as if the old man wanted to warn him, to keep an eye on him so that Rafiq could be protected – from what- he did not know.

Rafiq had soon returned to Delhi to join college. He had done well in school and had joined a course for graduation in commerce. He was also attending a part time course in Programming. These two courses took up most of his time. He had wanted to move to a hostel or a dormitory with some of his classmates, but Mr. Bhat would have none of it. So he stayed on with the family. With this change, there was little time that he could spend with Khawer who was also growing up and had his own circle.

While in college one of his friends introduced him to Khurshid. Khurshid appeared to be a well read person and was one of the people who could make good intelligent conversation.

Rafiq  found himself drawn more and more to Khurshid who appeared to know something about everything. He could speak about technology, science, politics, religion and many other things. He also appeared to be well travelled and Rafiq always felt at ease in his presence.

There were others who joined Rafiq and Khurshid from time to time. Gradually the discussions became more and more Kashmir oriented. This started when Rafiq asked Khurshid about the purge in Kashmir – a topic which had intrigued him for long. Khurshid did not reply immediately but over a period of time, the topic came up again and again, usually many insights being provided by others in the group.

All snippets of these conversations convinced Rafiq about the need for such a move. His young mind, with the inquisitiveness of youth, wanted to know more and more and thus the opinions and convictions were taking seed.

 

To an outsider, by the end of the second year, Rafiq would have seemed a perfect example of an educated jihadi. To his own mind, there had been too many injustices heaped on the brother Kashmiris and Muslims to not allow him turn his back on them.

He did not want to stay with the Bhats anymore but Khurshid convinced him that he had been put in the perfect place for observing the enemy. He started by passing information about what was being discussed. His indoctrination was well on the way. Gradually he started introducing more and more youngsters to the group. Over a period of time his role was defined – he had to appear to be the perfect moderate Muslim youth – at ease with technology, staying with Hindus, no overt radical opinions.

The drivers were lack of opportunities for Muslims in general, the lack of education and health facilities, the exclusion from reservation, the anger at a Hindu Kashmiri ruler taking the decision to accede to India rather than Pakistan, the frequent use of Muslims as vote bank by political parties without providing any improvement in their lot, the growing disillusionment of an increasing number of Muslim youth with the rigid structure of their religion and their increasing preoccupation with money and jobs.

 

One day while returning from college on his bike, he saw some commotion ahead. It was Kanwar yatra time and apparently one of the commuters on a bike had accidentally hit one of the Kanwariyas. The mob of Kanwariyas fell on the youth and was beating him up mercilessly.

Their ire also fell on the passing vehicles and the small police presence was proving woefully inadequate. The general chaos made it impossible to turn back. For the first time he understood the fear that Khawer had felt at the Muharram procession all those years ago. Instead of seeing the fanaticism of mobs, Rafiq found that mobs in frenzy were a source of power.

On completion of his degree, he returned to Srinagar against the wishes of his father. He had done so because he was working on a plan with Khurshid’s group. His real work lay there. What he had done till now was just fringe work. In Kashmir, he would be trained to become a potent force. Shooting, explosive use, survival in all conditions – these skills would be taught to him.

New faces were in demand – faces not in police records. That would allow free movement in the tight security zones. For as long as possible, he had to keep up the pretence of being an educated young man struggling to make a living. This would ultimately be exposed – that much was made clear to him. Then he would have to take up work, which had claimed the sacrifice of many a young man. He had been prepared well. There were no doubts in his mind.

His father tried to get employment for him, but Rafiq’s mind was not in it. He would stay away from home for days together when he was attending the training camp away in the hills. He became quite proficient at most of the skills taught in the camp. Whenever he was home, he could not get away from his grandfather’s eyes.

The eyes would have hurt, pain, and beseeched him to return. It was an effort to put it out of his mind. His father’s eyes had pain. Then one day a couple of his comrades came to visit him. It was then that he noticed that fear was added to the family. They knew who his comrades were.

Fear for him, for his other family members. Thereafter, no one really spoke to him. They were afraid of him- he realized. There was no reason to be afraid of him – he was their own! What he had not realized was that he was no longer their own. He belonged to a concept not to a family, nor to a nation.

He had progressed from small robberies to finally killing an informer. Soon, he would travel across the border for the advanced training. After his kill, he had been shaking and had not been able to run away.

He had to be dragged away from the spot by one of the others. His trainer looked at him with pride and reassured him that the reaction was natural after the first kill. He would be more in control the next time. The cause came first and these hurdles had to be crossed. However, he had probably been recognized and would have to be in hiding for a time, maybe forever.

And so had started the series of moves from one place to another, never more than three days at a stretch; during this time he had time to think and reflect. There were new questions, which needed answers. New doubts had crept in which needed clearing. Until the fateful escape!

And now he was lying in a ditch, shot like a dog. He could not decide whether it would be better to be discovered and survive or to die like this. There would be no more projects for him in either case.

He missed his mother’s touch, his father’s support but the one thing that kept appearing again and again was the sadness, disappointment, pain and shame in his grandfather’s eyes. They simply refused to go away.

Whether he was caught or died, all he would be was a piece of forgotten statistic. Only his family would remember him. Would it be with fondness or would they prefer to forget him? Probably it would be impossible to forget him, but they would have to distance themselves from his actions – to protect the stigma of being a terrorist’s family, to protect their other children. He had left them with no choice. Had he failed them?

 

Was his passion for the cause any less than his grandfather’s? There was no comparison. His grandfather never had doubts. He was beset by a horde of them. His grandfather found a connection to his cause that he was finding it difficult to sustain.

His path had caused pain and shame; his grandfather’s path had brought only pride. His grandpa’s motive had been positive and universal – to bring freedom and prosperity. His motive had been principally negative – a reaction to injustice for a section of people. Was the injustice limited only to Muslims? Did not many others suffer from the same – lack of opportunities, prejudice ….. Did he act against the malaise? The answers were clear but not very flattering!

He now understood, finally. He had been promised heaven at the end of his life. As the first of the snowflakes fell he realized that he was not going to heaven, rather he was leaving what could possibly become heaven had he worked for it.

With a sad, forlorn look on his face, he finally closed his eyes.

Thursday, 16 August 2018

Chedis

It had been a busy day.

There had been a continuous flow of student groups which had been coming in droves. It was always the same in July when the “freshies” came to the campus and most groups had two or three seniors herding a bunch of seven or eight freshers. Ragging period was a busy time and Bhutto did not enjoy this one month. His days became busier than he would have liked.

Not that he had much else to do at other times. It was work and sleep mostly and only rarely did he indulge in any other activity. It had always been like this simply because he did not really know any other life.

Bhutto could have been thirteen or he could have been thirty – it was impossible to say. Stunted growth, forgettable features, dark complexion, and irritable temper…….these were the characteristics which made him what he was. But against all odds, Bhutto was arguably one of the most remembered and loved characters on the campus, his fame surpassed only by that of his employer Chedi Bhai.

Chedi was a middle aged rough man with a pockmarked face and owned the “dhaba”. The “dhaba” was not more than a mud and bamboo shack with about half a dozen rough hand assembled tables and benches placed in front of it, dim lighting inside the structure and the outside was served by the streetlight or moon light, if the streetlight failed to cooperate. The only chair in the establishment was occupied by Chedi, who was virtually a permanent fixture. It was rumoured that the chair had never been seen empty. Some believed that the chair had become part of Chedi who apparently never left the shop for home.

The dhaba was open 24X7 and was the place to go to at all times of the day or night – especially at night. Situated adjacent to the railway level crossing, it was the first establishment (though unofficial) of the engineering institute. It was strategically placed – far enough from the hostels not to draw attention to the unauthorized nature of the establishment yet near enough to attract the student clientele.

It could cater to the students, the rickshaw pullers, the vendors and the odd truck driver who happened to be taking the route through the campus. Many a group of freshers had witnessed the sunrise there after a long night of pursuit of knowledge about the culture of the institute as opposed to the curriculum. It was an important location for one of the several rites of passage for the students.

It also catered to those inclined towards the game of chance since it was also one of the local “Satta” (a form of gambling) centers. Many an inebriated soul would stop at the dhaba to replenish the bodily fluids with a cup of tea as would also some of those who had partaken of the gaseous cousin of liquor - “ganja”- at the nearby Shiv Mandir.

In spite of such varied clientele the dhaba was as safe as a church and no one remembered any fighting or other such undesirable acts at the place. When a particularly bad case of intoxication sought refuge, Chedi would discreetly take him towards the back of the structure and wash his head with cold water until the poor guy felt well.

The dhaba did not have a varied fare. All it served was multiple combinations of eggs, bread and potatoes, tea and not much else. Whatever was leftover from the night was thrown together into the wok, fried and served as one of the items of breakfast popularly known as “Idi Amin”!

In spite of this, at no time of the day or night was the dhaba without a couple of clients. The loyalty of the clients lasted well beyond the time of their stay at the institute hostels. Invariably, any old student who happened to be returning to his alma mater for a visit would have a visit to the dhaba as a part of his itinerary. Usually it would be the first item on the list. A French toast and a glass of tea later, he would continue on his journey.

Bhutto watched the proceedings with disinterest – he had seen it too many times over the years. The same stupid questions (though he did not understand as they were in English) were repeated year after year, the same scared faces of the freshers – none of them held any interest for him. All that mattered was that the demands would be greater on his time, the small tea glasses would have to washed again and again, the prospect of “sunrise over Chedis” repeating day after day would be real – no fun for him!

But the one thing that irked him the most was when one of the seniors showing off before the juniors would say – “Bhutto! I love you!” Then the expletives would pour out – under his breath, and it would cause even more mirth! He did not see the funny side of it and there was no reason for him to.

Nobody really knew how Bhutto landed up at his current position. Apparently, no one had really seen him grow up there and there were various claims from different batches as to when he first appeared on the scene. Some people claimed that Chedi Bhai had found the orphan at the roadside and had taken him under his wing like a son. Not having any idea apart from training him to work at his dhaba, he went about the training as best as he could.

Now Bhutto was a inseparable part of Chedis and had been so for long. Bhutto also probably knew no other family other than Chedi Bhai. And, for sure, he knew no other life. No one could authenticate the story because all queries about this were parried by a disarming smile from Chedi Bhai, who neither confirmed nor denied the story.

For such a rough looking man, Chedi had a really soft voice and a smile which made his face light up.

Many well thinking individuals would shake their heads and mutter – child labour, right to education and so on and so forth. They do mean well! But realities are very different. And harsh!

Not many would have picked up a poor orphan from the streets and given him an opportunity to live – may not be the quality of life that we take for granted, but at least an opportunity to be able to live and maybe improve his lot sometime in the future.

I can assure you that it was not about exploitation – Chedi Bhai could have had many people to work for him – our social inequities ensure that. But Bhutto was working for him was because that was the means at Chedi’s disposal. That was the opportunity that Chedi was able to provide – his own lifestyle was no great shakes!

As for education, there is a story – like most stories associated with Chedi, not really verifiable and whose source is hidden in the mists of time – which gives us insight into the reasons why Chedi Bhai did not provide the means for education for Bhutto. It seems that once Chedi noticed the wistful look in the eyes of Bhutto when he saw students biking to class with notebooks.

Bhutto did not really know what happened in the institute but the sight of so many smart young men going together in pursuit of something he did not understand made him want to join in.

Chedi did not say anything but the look troubled him. Not being educated himself, he did not really appreciate the value of education except that it provided good business for him. At the same time, he did not want to deny the desire of the child. He also knew that he would neither be able to assist Bhutto with his education, nor be able to afford it in the long run. The circumstances were not just right for the sudden surge of righteousness!

After a few days, Chedi noticed two “spirited” students staggering by – barely able to walk and falling over a number of times along their way. As usual, he got them to the back of his shack, and washed their heads and gave them a glass of tea before sending them on their way – a little sobered up.

While not saying anything directly to Bhutto, he kept muttering under his breath “Education! This is what happens!”. Bhutto heard this remark, as was intended to, and got the message. Not factually on the button, it served to remove a largish bit of his desire to study.

Another incident, more realistic, drove the final nail in the coffin. One day a group of students came to the shack to have tea and something to eat. It was late, in fact, it was the wee hours of morning, and Bhutto was tired from serving. So was the cook. But it did not matter to the students – one in particular. When the tea came, later than usual, it was not really piping hot. While some of the group started to crib, one guy took it upon himself to express the collective displeasure of the group.

He called Bhutto, started shouting about the quality of the tea and finally threw his glass across the road. Chedi stepped in to manage the situation but after they were gone he started muttering to himself – “What good does education do? Does it teach consideration? Or manners?”

The shake of his head and the ugliness of the act removed all desire for education from the mind of the kid. It also resulted in sustained contempt for all students in him. Misplaced emotions maybe, but can we really judge?

Bhutto’s life may not have been remarkable in the conventional sense but most people of the institute of the time would recall him at the first utterance of his name. He was but one of the millions of faceless, nameless kids who grow old doing the same things that they do every day, no future to look forward to, no past worth remembering and die unsung. Bhutto was no different. He was last seen at Chedis a few years ago but his whereabouts today are not known.

Maybe he is older, and wizened, serving tea and omelettes in some other shack at some other place! But he had a role in the making of a large number of future CEOs, Directors and so on who survived the rigors of the institute fortified by the numerous cups of tea and the French toasts at Chedis, served at all hours of the day and night by a surly Bhutto.

As for Chedi Bhai, he grew old, still providing sustenance to batches of bright students round the clock till he was also hit by the change in social structures. Children from nuclear families, who grow up in a protected environment, avoided Chedis as unhygienic. The institute placed guards to stop the movement of students outside the campus with a gate such that Chedis was no more part of the campus.

A host of glitzy eating joints nearer to the hostels sounded the death knell for the popular shack. But with characteristic resilience, Chedi Bhai somehow managed to keep his joint going with a different set of clients from the new establishments had come up on the other side of the level crossing. The place still retained the charm for the old timers for who it was a pilgrimage of sorts.

Chedis came into the limelight briefly again with the news of passing of Chedi Bhai. But it was not the same! Chedi Bhai’s eyes always lit up when old timers visited him. But something had changed.

His “family” of students had deserted him in his later years. More importantly, Bhutto had left him.

Chedi never took another orphan under his wing!