Dhiraj
Kumar Barman
My
friend from Shillong had joined Doomur Dullung Tea Estate sometime around the late
seventies. After about six months of his joining, three friends decided
to visit him all the way from Shillong. Some of us were studying, or on the
verge of looking for a job.
Though
our pocket money was limited we made up our minds to visit him at Doomur
Dullung T.E. (Moran) by some means. Those days roads were poor and there were practically
no telephone services - not to talk of garden telephones. We
travelled by bus from Shillong to Guwahati and by train to Moran Railway
station. Somehow we managed to inform our friend about our arrival.
We
were shabby, with cheap cigarette packets in our shirt pockets. When we saw a
person with a white cap and white safari suit with a shiny "Doomur
Dullung TE" embossed brass plate on his chest pocket, we were at a loss as
to how to react. We whispered to each other and decided to throw away our
cheap cigarette packets. We bought "Wills Filter" instead, which was
the expensive cigarette then at Rs.2.00 for a packet of 10.
The
chauffeur greeted us with a "salaam" and informed us that "Burra Saab
ne gari bheja hai"(Burra Saab has sent his car). He led us to the
sparkling white Ambassador car with white seat covers, parked outside the
railway station.
We
were dropped at the Chhota Bungalow and the Chauffeur left with a "salaam".
After nearly an hour our friend arrived cycling and perspiring as we were
sitting on the sprawling bungalow verandah, trying to show off to the
bungalow servants who brought us water followed by tea and biscuits. We were
stunned to see our faces reflected on the Red Cardinal polished, slippery floor
of the verandah.
As
the evening approached, we all decided to go to Moran Polo Club nearby where we were introduced to Mr.Bipul Barsaikia, Mr.Siban Mazumdar, Mr.Phunu
Das and later many others who arrived to celebrate our visit.
We
all were informal, as it was not a club evening, and we decided to sit on the verandah. The drinking session continued with rum glasses lining up as the "Bearer Ghuraow"*
continued. As mentioned by someone, rum was the cheapest drink available in the
club, and whisky was unaffordable for young assistants. For the bachelors
those days, the club bill used to be higher than their pay packets.
The
following evening Mr.Bipul Barsaikia brought two bucket full of
"first cut Haspani" (first distilled local Assamese brew) and kept it
in the massive "Electrolux Kerosene Refrigerator" of the Chhota
Bungalow. He declared "Haspani" is cheaper than whisky or rum.
The
drinking session with "Haspani" and the merry making continued
till late at night. Suddenly someone suggested "Let's have Mitha Paan!"
In
the middle of the night, we all drove down in Mr. Bipul Barsaikia's car to
a Paan shop in Moran town which was open in the middle of the night. Thanks
to the organised bachelors of those days who enjoyed life much more than
thinking about their pay packets.
*'Bearer, Ghuraow' - instruction to the bearer to serve a round of drinks.
Dhiraj Barman adds : The names mentioned in my story "Expensive Whisky" are all real names. Mr. Bipul Barsaikia, a tea planter, a body builder and at one time "Mr. Assam", passed away at a rather young age. Mr. Siban Mazumdar left tea long ago. Mr. Phunu Das opened his own tea garden in Upper Assam is doing well.
1 comment:
Tea hospitality even in Asistant Tea Manager's chota bungalow took outside visitors by surprise. Doomur Dullung T.E.has been known for prime quality Tea. I also remember Bipul Barsaikia , so unfortunate he passed away very young.
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