Thursday 29 November 2012

For your tomorrow, we gave our today.


Journal Entry- 29th November 2012.

Set 14,140 ft. above sea level, the winter frost loomed over the feeble sun on the horizon of Nathula pass. It was a funny kind of winter, one that held a promise to warm my heart despite the bitter cold.

They say exploring a part of your own country teaches you a little more about yourself. If the drive to my destination was anything to go by, I learnt that I lacked the immunity to battle deathly temperatures. It was 3 degrees Celsius and I felt the five layers of my thermal clothes and soft woolens vanishing into thin air, one by one. No, the imported brandy didn’t help either. The scorching heat I detested back home in Mumbai, I sorely missed in Sikkim. 

 As we scaled the heights, a few streams of water traversed through like blood from veins cut open. A few others were turning into ice crystals. The red, yellow and blue Buddhist prayer flags hung suspended in the air, trying to keep up a fight against the robust wind. They had to, for they were there to protect their holy land.
 
I realized that sometimes, you might think the world is more or less how you perceive it to be. But when the skies open up before you in shades of emerald and blue that can only be shown never described, the world under it transforms. You may even wonder if you’re eavesdropping on what is meant for the Gods. The sharp smell of pinewood sings through the air, the bald mountains garb their heads in wigs made of snow and squawky seagulls soar the highest heights. For a while these heights may remind you of the plunging depths and dark corners of your life but slowly, they also teach you to let go. 

Our vehicle continued to ascend the Himalayas, stirring up gusts of dust. The hours evaporated into moments and after a few nasty head bumps, the car screeched to a halt. The grime cleared away and revealed a flight of staircases up hill that led to a band of barbed wire. Rugged army men with rifles stood guarding the Line Of Control. Men with assault weapons never looked so graceful.

Beyond the barbed wire was the land of Tibet occupied by the Chinese army. It made me wonder how different could people on that side possibly be. After all, we lived under same sky. You see, Indian and Chinese army officers at the border were friends; they shared the same brand of scotch and hard Chinese cigarettes. Yet, as the Indo-Sino war of 1962 suggests, they will pull the trigger on each other without any remorse.

The dichotomy of the same land took my breath away, literally. Panting profusely, I stopped at a red-bricked wall a few meters away from the Indo-China border. The red-bricked wall framed a black marbled mantle, which had a few names and these words engraved in gold;

“When you go home, tell them of us,
And say,
For your tomorrow, we gave our today.”

I stood still as a host of clouds crept over me, reminding me of the enormity of every soldier’s sacrifice. In that fleeting moment, my sense of self was reduced to nothing. At the same time, I expanded with pride. It was a feeling I felt not because I was Indian but because I was human.

Lieutenant Prakash stood there with the wind growling against him, guarding the memorial. I clicked his picture trying to evoke some reaction. He didn’t budge.

I wondered; Did he miss the aromas from his mother's kitchen? Did he long for the touch of his lover? Did he miss his baby's tiny fingers? I couldn’t have guessed in those seconds of shared silence.

His lips were dry and flaky. I spontaneously wanted to gift him my lip balm but realized it would be inappropriate. Wearing a crisp uniform, the number of layers seemed much less than what I had expected.

I looked into his eyes, as if to ask, “Aren’t you cold?”
His big brown eyes silently answered my question; “I wear a layer of devotion for my country, for my people. I need no more.”

I cupped the bowl of steaming and seemingly bland Thukpa between my cold hands, sitting in the Army canteen half a kilometer away from the memorial. I peeked at our Indian flag as it slow danced in the wind. I looked a little ahead and found the Chinese flag fluttering as well. I thought of the futility of boundaries, for the same sun that lights up their land, lights up ours too. The firewood had been lit in the camp but I felt a different fire had begun to simmer within me. Sluggishly, the dark clouds began to descend on all sides. It was time to go.

Throughout my train ride back home, I thought of him. I hoped the next time I went up there, Lieutenant Prakash would be a face with moist supple lips and not just another name engraved in the memorial mantle.

The blur of scanty green fields turned into the neon lit streets of Mumbai. I had returned but with an invincible sheild of warmth.

It was 9 degrees celcius one winter's night in Mumbai. My mother asked me "Aren't you cold?" She brought in a thick blanket.

His memory flashed infront of my eyes; torn lips, bright eyes and the fire in them.

I smiled and told her I didn't need it. Not any more.

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