Friday, July 22, 2016

MEMORIES OF MY FATHER: THE STORY OF HUNTER SAHIB

TITLE:         MEMORIES OF MY FATHER: THE STORY OF HUNTER  SAHEB


My father passed away in 1977, but his memory is everlasting for me.  I remember every facet of his expressions. He was a man of great personality: very disciplined and authoritative. He did not tolerate violation of punctuality, procrastination and failure to keep promise. For a long time he was just next to god for me. He was very much pro-British…
”Look at this Nation, why they are at the top of the world in spite of being a small country; ---only because of their character! disciplined, hardworking, punctual and ‘man of word;’ keep promise up to the last breath!”

 My father’s word was the rule of our house : ‘Early  to bed and early to rise ’was  natural  rule of the house. Morning tea was before 6A.M,breakfast within8- to 8.15,lunch within 12to 1 pm,  tea at 4 /4.15,[ but in winter 3-to 3.30pm], dinner at 8-to 9. The house was dark and silent within 10.o’clock. The routine was more or less like the boarding school for us. But we were convinced to think it as right t.
         He ruled not only the home but also the office –staff. They feared as well as adored him. They trusted him blindly; they knew he would shelter them like banyan tree, if it was needed. But during social interaction, he was a different person; he was famous for his warm, open-hearted loud lough which had the magic power to enliven the environment He was an avid lover of education, sports, music and  gourmet food.

 He worked for the Indian Railways. In his early life wherever he got posting, he used to establish a railway club and institute of library and organized annual sports, picnic in  X-mas holiday, and  Durgapuja, (The biggest festival of the Bengalees) along with cultural function.
In those days, it was not easy to organize all those things in small town. His ideas gave new life to the colony He was encouraged greatly by the people around him.
 I heard many interesting stories of his life. I am going to narrate one of them.

         Just before the second world war he was posted as A.S.M. in Hazaribagh, situated in the eastern part of India. This region  was rich in flora, fauna and minerals. Hazaribag was important as it was  a sub-division  Of Bihar and had military base. Between  Hazaribag and  Gomoh station there was  a particular spot near a long tunnel  where frequent   fatal train accident  used to happen. Those trains were mainly superfast mail train  (special military train) with few  stops. This region was full of forests and hills and had a very rugged terrain.  There was an emergency board meeting among the Railway heads under the GM for solving the issue. Under their supervision a halting station was constructed within a short period for  giving  alert to control the speed of  the train  from a safe distance.
 The station was built along with a residential quarter  adjacent to the railway platform.
But the problem arose as nobody agreed to be posted there in fear of being eaten by tiger. The first employee who was appointed there, was taken by a tiger when he was coming for duty from his quarter to the adjacent station.
Then emergency meeting was summoned among the British Railway officers; They took decision  of roster duty instead of   any permanent  posting. So all A.S.M. posted in Hazaribag, were liable to do duty on that inauspicious newly built station for two days a week throughout the year. 
      


 So there was no way of refusal. Thus when my father’s turn came, my mother who was quite young, got worried. She cooked a lot for two days and packed them in two big tiffin-boxes including drinking water also for my father. The place was not habitable at all. Those who escaped from being victim of the tiger, often suffered from diarrhea or malaria from mosquitoes-biting. My father was too adventurous to go there for the first time.
 The place was really pristine. A small but well done office room with crystal-clear glassy window and brick platform under the lap of surrounding hills covered with lush green jungle. There were three more tribal people appointed as staff by Railway. One of them, Raghu, was my father’s attendant and the other two were signal men for doing duties in day shift and night  shift in turn. There was enough leisure time in the morning half, as neither passenger nor any goods train had any stops there. So my father spent hearing stories from those tribal ( adivasi, Santhal) signal men about their lives. One of the signal man, named Bonda, had only  one hand but robust body. My father asked him,
                 “How did you lose your hand? And manage this job in spite of  that?
   Bonda, who looked like a robust statue made of black stone with one hand,               answered “That’s a terrible story!
 Light and shade flashed across his face as he started narrating, as if, beyond  the yonder of the past,
              “We live in our  small tribe  for a long time , not far from this station. We have grown up with these tigers , jaguars and foxes. They are afraid of us as much as we are of them. Almost everyday my father used to take my brother and me with our axes to cut and collect woods from the jungle. We sell  them in the village near by to earn our livelihood, after saving a portion of them for our own use. But wherever we go, we always come back to our nest at mid-noon for safety, as we know darkness spreads its wings over the jungles quicker than the plains. In the evening we fire woods surrounding our neighborhood for protection and bang drums to keep away the ferocious animals. Fire and drum beat are alarming to them.”

  Bonda sighed and after little pause ,resumed,

               ”One morning I could not go for I had fever; my father went with my brother  to the forest; but they did not returned in usual time. My mother became worried and restless as the sun was leaning to the west . No longer the news spread; worried people of the tribe thronged in front of our hut. The leader of the tribe  consoled my mother to have patience; and promised that they would try their best  for searching in the early  morning.”

   Next morning, the tribal people found my brother’s axe in the darkest spot of the mid tunnel they swarmed the jungle  in search of my father, while some were beating drums  with eerie noises from voices. I was the first to recognize the axe of my father lying in the jungle but no trace of my father! I then cried out.
         It was assumed that, perhaps, all on a sudden the sly tiger caught my brother in the dark spot of the tunnel ;  My father chased the tiger madly up to the deep forest and became victim to another hungry  tiger.
          “ Once the tiger becomes man –eater, they are a big threat for the surroundings. Within two/three months, it happened I was passing through this tunnel for cutting woods. Suddenly I noticed two prowling eyes glaring in the dark. It was too near to escape. So I jumped and attacked the tiger first  impulsively with my sharp axe. I killed the tiger but it bit my hand tightly. I was admitted in hospital The hand started to gangrene so the doctor operated the hand up to my arm."
                 Within a short period of this, construction of this station started. A team of the British officers came to survey the area before starting the construction  work ; all the labors taken, were tribal people. Bonda was one of them. The British  team-leader interviewed  Bonda. He was amazed to hear the incredible story of bravery, killing the tiger with an axe! On his recommendation, Bonda was given the  job of permanent post of signalman since the inauguration of the station.

     My father asked, “ What happened to poor Mr.Dutta, the first appointed officer here?
  Bonda replied,”Raghu knows that better.”

   Raghu was attendant cum cook cum sweeper/cleaner/everything.  He studied up to standard three and could sign his name. That was great! He lived in the village just on the outskirt of the forest.
  My father heard from Raghu what actually happened to previous officer.
Mr.Dutta was extra-adventurous. Everyday he used to go to the quarter for taking shower and nap. Though there was nothing to do in the station, still Raghu fetched him to the station –office for safety within 2  P.M.;  he warned him  repeatedly to stay  in closed door inside the office room. First to watch through the glass window before coming outside. One day at the same time  Mr.Dutta was coming to the station through narrow path escorted by Raghu .Raghu heard him  whistling in a good romantic mood just behind him.
 Raghu turned back ,as whistling stopped, but no trace of Mr. Dutta. It was  a clear bright  day. Raghu noticed the door was locked from outside as before. Immediately it flashed in his mind that he was surely taken by the tiger. The tiger was surely tracking Mr. Dutta and waiting for opportunity.  He must have  watched and noticed the  time of leaving the house and was waiting for opportunity.
After hearing this story my father became very careful and alert. He never left the office-room for taking shower or nap . He spent  his two days’ duty stuck to the station room  with sufficient food in two tiffin carriers which he shared with Raghu also.
Other officers also followed my father’s decision  to come back home safely.

    But the tiger menace still lingered in the area.

Many amateur British hunters came, stayed to watch and hunt but all in vain; the tigers were too clever to step when they smell any danger.

 At last one  reputed ,skilled British hunter  who won many awards, came with the challenge to put an end to the  ferocious creature. Hunting was his passion. He was better known as “Hunter sahib’  than his actual name,  by the tribal people.  He stayed whole month  waiting  for the tiger on a high watch-tower erected for this specific purpose. With his telescope he saw the tiger was huge in size. So he made the tower a bit higher for security and hid himself there camouflaging himself with straw and branches but targeting the gun towards the corner of the jungle where he spotted the tiger. As soon as the bullet shot hit the tiger ,it jumped unexpectedly high up to
 the watch-tower attempting the hunter but its huge lifeless body fell on the ground with a loud thud, embracing  Mr Hunter under its arms, as if, hugging each other. 

 Mr Hunter was taken to the hospital of Hazaribagh. There he survived six months. Falling from the high watch-tower with the huge weight of the tiger upon him caused severe damage to his spine  and hip bones. All the tribal and village people visited him often  in gratitude. 

The tribal and the villagers had sigh of relief from the deadly  man-eater for the valour of the brave Mr.Hunter. Until his death, Mr Hunter was seen always  in high spirit and joyful at saving many more lives. My father used to spend time with him and chat regularly  to keep him  cheerful. He loved to tell many more hair raising hunting stories from his memoires.
But the body of Mr. Hunter failed to bear the tiger’s deadly hug. His body began to gangrene. In spite of the sincere effort of doctors, Hunter-sahib passed away.

       In his memory, the name of “Hunter-Point” was sculptured on a concrete slab with a stand. It was erected right at the spot where Hunter’s body fell from the watch –tower.  A consensus decision was taken that the station will be renamed as HUNTER_POINT.”

      In 1987 I was going to Benaras by train. When the train was passing on the  north-eastern line,  I was sitting by the window eagerly, to see Hazaribagh where my father spent  several years. After Hazaribagh the running train had an unscheduled stop for some reason, but not known to us. As I was looking at the hilly beauty outside through the window, to my surprise, just opposite to the last rail-line the concrete slab inscribed “HUNTER  POINT”  stood in the jungle with a slant (as if, unwilling to  be  buried or  to be lost from viewer’s sight.).  I became very emotional and felt I had a personal connection to that concrete slab.
                 ”Is this the spot my father told about?”

So, no station was named as HUNTER  POINT  in 47 years to acknowledge the bravery of a foreigner  who came far from the overseas  to this land with insatiable passion of hunting   and sacrificed his own life to save the helpless villagers!  Within few years the HUNTER  POINT which had then reduced to look like a mere milestone along the railway track, would be buried under jungle with no trace in memory of  a young British hunter!!