| Priyanka Borpujari writes from Dantewada: December 30, 2009 |
| Campaigns - Human Rights in Chhattisgarh | |
|
Does Time Really Heal Wounds? Priyanka Borpujari December 30, 2009 It
is not easy to see a pale Himanshu Kumar, for whom, even smiling on the
fourth day of fast – December 29 – seems to be an effort. I avoid
making new conversations with him – because I know we would not cease
to talk; perhaps also because I shudder when I preempt the result of
his silent ways. Are we really aiming for a definite result here? Are
we here to win and lose? Are we here only to separate the black from
the white? How long will this game of snakes and ladders go on? For how
long will our side of the snakes continue to be pythons, and the
ladders stunted ones? It is only a matter of time. It
is also only a matter of time that will heal the wounds and dissipate
the anxiety of Rita Kunjam, Ramo Kunjam and Saroj Kunjam. They are, in
that particular order, the wives of Kopa Kunjam, who was one of the
pillars of Vanvasi Chetna Ashram (VCA). He was picked up the cops on December 10 this year, on false charges of murder.
Javed Iqbal, a reporter with New Indian Express, who arrived in
Dantewada in the morning, had been working in Bastar region through
2009, and had known Kopa quite well. Along with Iqbal, we went to meet
Kopa’s family in their residence in Alnar village near Farspal village,
which is also where Mahendra Karma, whose brainchild was Salwa Judum,
lives. No wonder that as we approached the village, the road on each
side was decorated with brick fences for small saplings. Now, the
saplings may have grown to about a foot, and most likely, they too were
dead in this district of death. But the fences were elaborate – about
four feet tall and three feet in circumference, they had been painted
white. Luxury for the saplings, axe for the trees. Further
beyond were houses which were green or blue in colour, typical of the
rural landscape of Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh. And each of them
had that enviable dusty dish of a cable connection by Dish TV. Like
SRK, Mahendra Karma wished for it, and got his people the dishes. Finally
we reached the road leading to Kopa’s house. It was a five-minute walk
amid the fields from the main road, and the location of his large blue
house seemed a perfect site for a mad writer, who would want to escape
from an even madder society. Only, within the walls of that house
reigns anxiousness and a feeling of helplessness. Kopa’s three wives,
who live happily as a huge family, have met their husband only twice
since he has been arrested. But they are unsure when he would be
released. ![]() Kopa Kunjam's idyllic house in Alnar village in Dantewada “Our
husband never told us what he had been doing. We knew that he was quite
a popular figure among villagers, but he was not one to bring his
worries home. On August 3rd this year, about 100 policemen came to our
house, took Kopa to the Shankani river, and beat him up there. They
asked him to cross the river. Had he done so, we realized, they would
have shot him dead and called him a naxal. He survived that day only to
be arrested later. When will he get released? What is the point of such
work which will tear you from your family?” questions a visibly nervous
Rita, while she treats us to some tasty red-ant chutney. Each
of the wives has borne Kopa a school-going child, and the youngest
wife, Saroj, is carrying her second child. She is visibly
malnutritioned – in the fourth month of her pregnancy, such Kafkaesque
separation from her husband is not doing the coy and petite woman any
good. “When
we reached the Dantewada jail last time – all three of us and our three
children, along with Kopa’s brother – we could not speak anything.
Firstly, we had to bribe one of the female police officers with Rs 100
to let us meet him. We met him only for 10 minutes; none of us could
speak. We were all crying. Kopa did not make any eye contact with us
either. He hung his head down. Kopa has stopped smiling,” said a vocal
Ramo, while trying hard to hold back the tears welling up in her big
brown eyes. ![]() (Left to right): Saroj Kunjam, Ramo Kunjam and Rita Kunjam We
bade the family of that brave man our goodbyes and told them that
appeals to the government was pouring in from across the world for
Kopa’s release. They would be meeting Kopa in jail in a few days, and
while we want to meet Kopa too, we know it would be best not to tag
along. There is someone else who needs to get back the smile on Kopa’s
face – Himanshuji, a man who is not taking any food since the last four
days to convey a message that enough blood had been shed and families
bludgeoned in this Fascist state. Fascism
escalated to new heights in the current location of VCA too. The seven
police personnel, who had been assigned with the duty to protect
Himanshuji, wore new garbs of being eavesdroppers. Until the time when
the security cover was lifted for a brief 30 minutes and restored
again, on December 28, the men were sitting together near some tents
put up by VCA, about 30 feet away from the tree where Himanshuji is
seated. But now, they are right behind him, facing the land surrounding
Himanshuji’s house. Of course, with all of us quite vociferous, it was
obvious that our words were music to their ears, as they sat the entire
day in their plastic chairs, a gun in their hands. Himanshuji fears
that the direction of the wind will soon change for the worse. I
shudder at the thought of yet another cyclone in this arid state, where
the air is already permeated with the stale odour of blood. Later
in the evening, we took Gompa village resident Sodi Sambo to the
Dantewada Civil hospital. One suggestion to the city folk who do not
have a fat medical insurance to be able to undergo any treatment in
large hospitals like the Apollo or Jaslok – go to any civil hospital in
a sleepy town like Dantewada. The floor is spic and span, the walls are
not decorated with red spittoon, there is no nauseating odour of
Chitranela phenyl in the corridors, and the ward boys are not languidly
chewing paan and ogling at each patient’s relative walking in. The
hospital gave me yet another reason why I should not enter the
whirlpool of insurance policies. As I learnt in Dantewada, through its
beauty and horror stories, a 20th century invention like insurance is
not a need. ![]() Sodi Sambo waits patiently for her leg to be tended to Sodi
was shot on her right leg on October 1 this year by some Salwa Judum
SPOs. She has since been living in VCA, under the love and care of the
other tribal women who keep VCA inmates happy with their culinary
skills. Sodi had to be taken to the hospital to get her wound cleaned
and bandage changed. A young man, with no doctor’s robe or green mask,
attended to her slim leg. He removed the earlier bandage and cleaned
the wound with sterilizer with great confidence, but without any gloves
on his hands. When I asked him if he would be wearing a pair, he
replied nothing and continued to work at the same pace. Eventually,
when the bandage dipped in Betadine solution and fastened around the
steel rods fitted into Sodi’s leg had to be replaced, he wore gloves
and finished the job carefully. All this while, as the dressing
procedure was on, Sodi did not utter a word. Since I had not yet picked
up any significant words in Koya Mata language, I asked one of the VCA
volunteers with us to ask Sodi if the procedure was hurting her. Sodi
nodded her head to affirm pain. But she did not twitch even once. Does
time really heal wounds or merely plays with them? Sans gloves, Sodi Sambo gets her wound sterilised We
brought Sodi back and the sun was almost down the horizon. Before
retiring early for the day, Himanshuji was joined by professors Nandini
Sundar and Ujjwal Singh of Delhi University. Sundar has been working on
issues in Chhattisgarh for close to two decades but her fresh youthful
look defies the cornucopia of knowledge and experience that she carries
along nonchalantly. She told us that they had arrived from Jagdalpur
and had lodged themselves in Madhuban Hotel, very close to VCA. “But we
were told by the hotel manager that the next day was the death
anniversary of some relative of the hotel owner and the rooms required
cleaning. They asked us to check out the same night. Of course, such
warm housekeeping was meant only for us,” Sundar said with a wry smile. However,
by around 10 pm, Sundar got a call from the hotel, stating that she
could spend the night there. Weird is the business sense in
Chhattisgarh. Weird is each day here. “Events”, as journalists would
like to call them, can make you cry and laugh at the same time here.
You will cry because it tugs your heart and will leave you sleepless;
you will laugh because even Charlie Chaplin didn’t fathom such inanity
and insanity of The Great Dictator, such as is in Bastar. |
|
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|