[Assam] Story for Grant/ A Granduncle's story
Mridul Bhuyan
mridul_mb at yahoo.com
Tue Oct 3 22:11:23 PDT 2006
Chandan Da,
Nice one. Your story reminds me of the days in Loonpuria Gaon Nimno Buniyadi Vidyalaya in the same condition, where studied a year or two. The old hut has long been replaced by a pucca building. Last year visited my old home in Loonpuria gaon via the Khorikotia Ali ( Woodcutter's Trail) and the Khoragorh. Still remember the 'Xanko' (always afraid to cross) used for crossing the Namdang river to Xologuri. :) No longer people take bath in Namdang river. Noir ghats are no longer there.
Regards
Mridul
Ram Sarangapani <assamrs at gmail.com> wrote:
C'da,
That was very good C'da. Now, whenever you give us a tough time on the net, we can always remind you of that chopper chasing you:)
--Ram
On 10/3/06, Chan Mahanta <cmahanta at charter.net> wrote:
Hi Grant:
Here is a story from my childhood for you. It is kind of long, but I
hope you would like it:
I was about eight years old at the time. Our school was about half a
mile from home. It was a small, one roomed hut, with dirt floor,
mud-plastered bamboo walls and thatched roof framed with bamboo.
Thatch is a kind of long and sturdy grass, which people used to make
roofs with, after drying them. We had two teachers and two
blackboards, where about fifty pupils from Grades A, B, 1st, 2nd and
3rd. sat, in different groups, on the dirt floor,on mats that we
brought with us from home. There were no bathrooms and no drinking
water ,other than a pond in the front yard, where we drank from on
hot days, with our hands cupped together.
When we were in second grade ( I think), there was a vaccination
drive by the State Public Health Department, funded by the World
Health Organization, for immunizing children against the dreaded
disease tuberculosis ( TB). The vaccine was called BCG, short for
Bacillus Calmett-Guerin. The vaccination was done at another little
school about two miles away from ours. All of us kids and the
teachers walked about a mile and a half along the little but historic
dirt road, that linked a large number of little villages separated by
rice paddies, which ran from the capital of the Kingdom to the
mountains in the south, and was called Khorikotia Ali ( Woodcutter's
Trail). From the road we took a detour of another half a mile or so
to the vaccination site along a railroad track.
We got our shots. OUCH--it stung too,but I did not cry.Then we were
heading back home in groups of twos and threes and even more. After
we got off from the railroad tracks and got back on Woodcutter's
Trail, I got separated from the other kids who went to their homes in
a different direction and I was trudging along the road all by
myself. All of a sudden I heard a strange, beep-beep-beep sound
coming from the rear, which was getting louder by the moment. It
appeared
that the sound was from something over the road. I looked back and
saw nothing but the sound was getting very loud and scary. Suddenly I
saw this huge dragonfly looking thing with a large bulb like head
appear over the groves of bamboo tree-tops that line the
roadway,flying, it seemed, straight towards me. And that noise, now
ear-splitting, going braap-braap-braap-braap ---!
Panic struck me!
I ran, as fast as my little legs would let me, towards the only house
on my right about a hundred yards away, surrounded by waterlogged
rice paddies. Thinking back, I probably ran that distance faster than
anyone I would have ever known. I reached the gate, which was made
of horizontal bamboo poles spaced about a foot or so apart on bamboo
posts with holes in them, and are called 'nongola' in Assamese, my
native language. To open the gate you slide the poles through the
holes. But there was no time for that. I slipped right through the
gaps and crossed the little front yard and almost flew into the
house, struggling for breath. In those days and even today, people in
the villages of Assam leave their front doors open. There is no fear
of strangers . And there is always someone in the house. Since there
were no door-bells, and knocking on mud-plastered walls or the woven
bamboo-mat door panel don't make much of a sound, if a stranger comes
visiting, he or she would make a coughing sound or clear the throat
to indicate there is someone at the door. Later I learnt that city
folks made fun of that coughing sound as the "Assamese calling-bell".
Anyway, to make a long story short, the man of the house found me,
this breathless kid barging into the house with panic in his eyes,
just about when this dragon-fly-from-hell flew past the house. He
knew what was coming after me.
He told me it was kind of a 'ura-jahaaz'( flying ship). He also knew
who I was, since took his bullock cart along the trail by our house
every now and then to the railroad station, carrying old ladies to
the train, or delivering rice or firewood to the business-people who
lived near the railroad station, and we would always ask him where he
is going or what he is delivering in his ox-cart.
He told me not to worry now and go on home.
That evening, my older cousin,who passed away a couple of years back,
told me that the scary, giant dragonfly was a helicopter. An oil
company owned it and it was making seismological surveys looking for
oil. Later on they found oil near there, and today it is called the
Geleki Oilfields.
Now I hope you won't make fun of St. Louis Koka calling me such a
scardy-cat, OK :-)?
Take care.
Love,
SLK
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