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Sunday, July 29, 2018

Back in the Day – VI

by Shipra Castledine
Everyone who has lived in tea can lay claim to fame to knowing some really colourful characters! The one who stands out in my memories is Big Mac, Donald Mackenzie. I am sure there are many readers who have an instant recall of this literally big man and his booming voice. Donald and his beautiful six foot tall wife Betty loved India. They would eat Indian food at home in their bungalow as we ate Indian food as a daily routine. I can remember Mum discussing shorshe bata recipes with Betty and Betty reporting back with how it had turned out! Betty was an excellent cook as was my mum.
We used to joke about knowing how a Jamair flight had come in to land by how Betty’s lipstick was put on!! The lipstick would be all over the place if the plane had had a not so gentle landing! And we had a lot of good times, our two families. 

Junior and I were childhood playmates and when Aunty Betty would visit with him, we would go off and play and Mum would enjoy Aunty Betty’s wonderful company. Betty learnt how to cook all our Indian dishes including specialised Bengali items like shukto and bhapa ilish shorshe bata. They were at Bagrakote TE when we were in Baintgoorie.
Another thing good I remember was how a number of tea families would host children from Dr Graham’s Homes, Kalimpong. This was a school set up to house and educate orphaned children mainly from Anglo Indian background and to this day it is a wonderful institution. 

Some information about the institution: Dr. Graham's Homes was founded in 1900 by Reverend Dr. John Anderson Graham, a missionary of the Church of Scotland, who settled in Kalimpong and worked with the local community for several years during the turn of the 20th century.
Over a few years we hosted some children. One of them was a girl around my age who we brought home for school holidays three or four times. Her name was Anne Stewart. I still remember what she looked like. At the same time another family hosted two boys from the homes, Alan and Bertie. They were friends with Anne and we would all get together and have a great time.  I was in love with Alan 😉!

We visited Dr. Graham’s Homes a number of times when we would collect the children and drop them back.  I loved the set up. The children were housed in actual homes probably 8-10 of them in a home. They would have a ‘mother’ who would look after them. It was like living in a family home where the children had chores to do and they treated each other like a family. In fact I dimly remember spending some days with the children at their home.
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A cottage at Dr Graham’s Homes
The mountains around the Dooars were an integral part of our lives. Of course we lived and studied up in Darjeeling for nine months of the year. The car trips home were a joy. We were never just ourselves in the car. One set of parents would collect a few children of the same district and take them home. Inevitably down the really windy, steep, narrow Hillcart Road one or two children would be sick! The journey back to school was always quiet but once we were back in school we bounced back. Over the years we visited most of the mountains around where we lived. Gangtok and other hill stations in Sikkim, Kalimpong, the hill stations we passed on our way up to Darjeeling and many other more remote forest ranges. In later years when I was married and had my two children we made a few trips to Bhutan. God’s own country.
As I mentioned in another chapter of my stories planters became friends with the army and air force and the forest department. My parents had one family who were amongst our closest friends. They were the Palits. Their daughter Kakoli was my age. We were very close friends for the years we were together in the same district. Sadly for us Mr. Palit got transferred to Calcutta in a few years' time. But we still had enough time that courtesy Mr. Palit who was the head of the Forest Department, we visited and stayed in every forest bungalow the Department had. 

And what absolutely enchanting places they were. I am so glad we did as most of them were burnt down during the later years of political trouble the Darjeeling district had. Most of the bungalows had no electricity and we saw by kerosene lamps but it was sheer bliss. They are experiences to be treasured all my life. 

The kitchen was always an outhouse and usually had a wood fired stove. There would be a bawarchi who was also the chowkidar and who would cook up very basic food but it was like the best food we had ever eaten. The wood smoke taste in the food ... it is tangible as I write. Breakfast would be toast, grilled over the wood fired stove in an iron frame toast holder and eggs however we liked them, usually an omelette or fried eggs. Lunch would be rough rice, no basmati! - a thin daal, probably an aloo bhaja and a chicken curry with a thin gravy but absolutely delicious. The chicken was always freshly caught and butchered. Tea would be cups of tea from freshly manufactured tea courtesy tea estates in the area and corn on the cob (bhuttas). Dinner was usually sabji and hot, thick rotis.
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Internet picture of Lava forest bungalow, one of the bungalows that we visited back in the day.
I can clearly see one night when after dinner and after clearing up we stepped outside the bungalow. There we were in the quiet of the forest, mist through the trees and it was a full moon night. How to describe it. The hair is standing on my arms as I recall the beauty of it all. The light of one kero lamp burning inside the sitting room, beds with mosquito nets all tucked around the bed ready for us to slip into and this scene outside. God’s artistry. A little puppy yipping and bounding up to us as we sat on the little verandah of the bungalow not needing to say a word.
I must end this part here as I cannot top this memory with anything better for now! 
 
MEET THE WRITER:


'My name is Shipra Castledine nee Shipra Bose (Bunty). My parents were Sudhin and Gouri Bose. I am a tea 'baba' of the 1950-s era. I spent a part of my life growing up in the Dooars and another large part of my life married to a tea planter's son the Late KK Roy son of PK and Geeta Roy of Rungamuttee TE in the Dooars. I continued to be in the tea industry for many years as KK was a tea broker till he passed away in 1998.' Read more stories by Shipra here: https://teastorytellers.blogspot.com/search/label/Shipra%20Castledine

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Do you have a chai story of your own to share? Send it to me here, please : indianchaistories@gmail.com. My name is Gowri Mohanakrishnan and I'm a tea planter's wife. I started this blog because one of the things that I wouldn't want us to lose in a fast changing world is the tea story - a story always told with great seriousness, no matter how funny - always true (always), maybe a tall tale, long, or short, impossible, scary, funny or exciting but never dull. You will find yourself transported to another world! 

 
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10 comments:

  1. Hi Shipra - My wife and I know Betty Mackenzie very well, although not from having bee in the Dooars. Betty always used to attend the Assam Reunion that was held in Eastbourne, each year, but due to her age, and the move of the venue from Eastbourne to Bournemouth, Betty no longer attends them. However, Betty does attend the annual Dr Grahams Homes Kalimpong Curry Lunch that takes place in the Church of Scotland meeting hall in Kensington, London, which Jackie and I also attend and see Betty again. Last year, Betty wasn't looking too bright, and as we haven't heard from her of late, we hope we shall meet up again at this years lunch meeting. Another person that you may know is Rod Brown, who spent all his time in the Dooars. He has written quite a tome of a book, titled "Tea and Me". Betty's lipstick still continues to be a bit 'hit and miss' - now because of her age, and not because of bumpy landings. As you may know, Betty was a famous fashion model in London in her early days. There are some of her stories on the Koi-Hai website in the Correspondents section. Best regards - Alan

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  2. Thank you for so much news on Aunty Betty as I knew her. She comes through so clearly in your updates. Yes I did know she was a fashion model in her younger days. She was so beautiful.

    And I do know Rod Brown though I cannot remember him as clearly as Betty. Do you know the Mackies? Jimmy and Pam? The Moons? Terry and Jennifer.

    Wonderful to go back in time and remember the days.

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    1. Good day to you Shipra - I don't think I met the Mackies if they had been Dooars planters - Terry and Jennifer my wife and I met sometime ago at an Eastbourne lunch many years ago, sadly both now long gone. Jennifer died before Terry and on her passing, Terry shared a bungalow in Barnstaple, Devon, UK with Colin Jackson (ex-Jardine Hendersons). Both Colin and Terry have passed on as well. I am sending, via e-mail, two photographs to Gowri to on pass to you and Aloke. Incidentally, have you ever met Larry Brown who lives on the "Gold Coast" in Australia? Larry initially went to Assam as a Sirrocco engineer, then joined the Margherita Tea Company in Upper Assam, before transferring to Gillanders gardens in Dooars and North Bank. Larry was a Director of the tea company, Madura Tea, in NSW/Queensland, having joined another ex-Papua New Guinea planter to set out the tea estate in Australia. Larry has many stories on the Koi-Hai website in the Correspondents section (An Irishman Joins Tea)- Best regards, Alan

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    2. Dear Alan, sorry I don't seem to see comments when they come in which is why I have not responded to this one of yours. I don't know Larry Brown. I haven't linked with anyone from the tea days here in Australia. The blog is a good place to re-connect.

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  3. A serene rendition of a magical time. To borrow a line from McDonald's: I am lovin' it!
    Thanks, Bunty.

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  4. Hi Shipra, your memories of Donald and Betty Mckenzie, the Dooars and the Darjeeling hills brought back many of my own. I knew Donald as well as an assistant manager would know a flamboyant senior manager oozing masculine charm and style. Yes, he loved Indians and was, I think, partial to the Bongs! Getting entangled with him at the bar of the club and being regaled by his many shikar and other tales, was an experience not to be missed, despite the hangovers which invariably followed! He was one of a kind. I met Betty (long after the Dooars days) in a Planters Association gathering here in Delhi some years back. She was still looked striking despite the inevitable expanding girth but her lipstick was neatly in place! I met their son here also only to learn later that he had, most tragically, succumbed to injuries sustained in a motor car accident in the Dooars (or was it South India?).

    I am still closely in touch with a Tibetan girl (now a ‘Lady’ literally in more than one way!) from Dr Graham’s Homes who along with another little Tibetan girl came to spend their first Christmas holidays with my old friend Clive Roberson and his wife somewhere in Chalsa. At the hosts’ request, the two girls continued coming to them for the subsequent holidays and were eventually adopted by Clive.

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    1. Dear Aloke, I am so sorry I didn't see your comment earlier. As I was telling Alan I don't get alerts of the comments coming in.

      It is so good to hear about Uncle Donald and Aunty Betty. They are people you can never forget. Your memories of Donald are exactly the same as mine! Not the hangovers though as I was always Sudhin's daughter to him! But I will never forget what he told me once, quite philosophically, sitting at the bar at the CCFC in Calcutta 'always stay the same lady that you are Bunty'.

      What a wonderful story of the two Tibetan girls from Graham's Homes. I remember Clive Robeson a bit. I didn't know him personally but knew people who worked under him.

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  5. Hi Shipra and Aloke - I have a book that is published by BACSA (British Association for Cemeteries in South Asia) titled "Darjeeling & The Dooars - Christian Cemeteries and Memorials - 1842 to 1995" written and compiled by Eileen Hewson. In this book, there is a photograph of a memorial that was put there by Betty Mackenzie with the following description:
    Located at Bagracote Tea Estate - The memorial reads: DONALD MACKENZIE - Senior 1929-1994 - Junior 1954-1995 - Donald Mackenzie Junior, born 30th June 1954 at Darjeeling, Died 19th January 1995 at Chalsa - "From all your friends, who will make true your dream".

    The memorial is in a paddy field, the plot was given to Betty Mackenzie by their old bearer, Patras Bara - when the ashes of the Mackenzie father and son were interred there, Patras Bara (a Roman Catholic) arranged for a local priest to have a short service at the graveside. The Mackenzie family have long connections with India. A grandfather and an aunt are buried in Nagrakata Cemetery, but only one inscription was found, which was that of the aunt. Apparently they had run a successful furniture business in the Dooars (Siliguri?). Donald Makenzie - Senior - was a tea planter, Honorary Game Warden and hunter."

    Best regards

    Alan

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  6. Hi Alan. Thank you for this information. It is really interesting to me. Donald Junior was a very close childhood friend. And the Mackenzies were very good friends of my parents.

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  7. Hi Shipra Casteldine, I came across the conversation while searching for some material on the lives of the Anglo-Indians and especially on Donald Mackenzie. I got a vivid description of the Big Mac as a person. Thank you so much

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