by Ranu Singh Taragi
Tea Garden bungalows are
mostly huge and a plethora of staff, inside and outside, ensures their day
to day running and upkeep.
Each position is recognized
by a name, which gives a clue to the duties that go with it. So you have a
‘bawarchi, a paniwala, a bearer( or two), a sweeper, the ‘babalog ki ayah’ ,
the bagaal (incharge of the cows and the ‘gohali’ ), a bada (senior) mali plus his team,
the chowkidars (day and night) and so on.
From my experience in ‘Chai’ there is
one more person who enjoys a prominent and elevated position….the ‘Burra Saab’s
driver.’
Walk into the bungalow
kitchen around breakfast time and spot him, lolling comfily on a stool. While
his ‘saab’ enjoys his porridge and eggs, this man is no less pampered by the
kitchen staff. In all probability, he could be tucking into a hot paratha! Most
instances, their rounded physique is ample proof.
Come weekends, when the Saab
and his family visit another planter, looking forward to some sumptuous
hospitality, the driver has an equally entertaining time, exchanging local news
with the bungalow staff, the other end.
There are plenty of outings
- the club suppers, the sports events, annual picnics...the fun list is long.
But in all seriousness, this man has important responsibilities. Familiar with
the garden roads, he drives the Manager on his garden rounds. More often than
not, he has prior inkling of brewing labour dissatisfaction and impending
gheraos, so diverts through alternative routes. He drives the manager to
district meetings and union negotiations, and behaves discreetly when he is
privy to important information.He receives the visitors from Head Office when
they land at the airport, and his attitude and small talk makes them welcome.
…And then there are times
when he too enjoys letting his hair down ...on weekends. I recall our driver on
a garden, which was positioned about an hour’s drive from Siliguri. We were
quite happy to spend our Sundays catching the latest movie...or treating
ourselves to hot dosas. Our driver, left to his own devices, had this
incorrigible habit of imbibing a hearty amount of the local brew ‘handia ’
which was sold in the inconspicuous roadside shops. So most holidays, we’d
drive back home, with Naresh at the wheel…..with a gently snoring driver
stretched out...full length, in the back seat!
My mind also drifts back to
a time when I didn’t know how to drive. Then, one morning, I caught
sight of a young memsaab bride drive into a football do , smartly swishing her
Maruti Suzuki 800 between two managerial Gypsies…and at that exact moment, the
desire to repeat this fine feat, reached a feverish pitch.
I hounded Naresh into
giving me driving lessons --utter disasters, enveloping us in clouds of
dislike. Many of you will agree that personal cars are prized possessions on
the tea gardens.
The next sensible course
was to take help from our driver. So, a couple of times a week, when he could
be spared, ‘Taetra’ would turn up at the bungalow….and this is how the lessons
began:
Bungalow Six had a vast
area around it, split into three sections. The middle housed the seasonal
flowers and fruit trees and flowering annuals adorned the second, while the
third part was a big bare field. It was here that the tractor-trolleys would
trundle in, to off-load the firewood, gas cylinders etc. Most mornings,
the bungalow cow would be let loose for a gentle walk-about cum munching
session.
Taetra announced that
we’d begin here. So with memsaab at the wheel and him settled as passenger, we
began. We lurched up and down this field and my confidence grew. And then, all
of a sudden, coming face to face with the cow caught us both off-guard. Instead
of the brake, I accelerated in panic. The bovine was equally alarmed, and took
off, with her tail high in the air…and only Taetra kept his senses. He
wrenched the steering to safety. Whew! As for the cow, she kept away during the
lessons.
After a couple of days,
Taetra decided that I was ready to tackle the garden roads. I welcomed the news
with nervous excitement, but obviously my instructor had faith in my readiness.
However, there was to be a
change in the seating arrangement. Having no second set of floor pedals, as in
the vehicles of motor driving schools, Taetra and I would have to share the
driving seat!! So with me at the helm and him towards the door we set off.
Dear Taetra, the perfect
gentleman was now half out of the window -- much like a black cat commando atop
a VIP car! From this vantage point, he kept survey of the garden roads and lo!
if any tractor trolley loaded with fresh leaf or a brisk line of workers,
bringing in the morning patti came in sight he would wave them off, never mind
where they scrambled! He would vociferously holler, ‘MEMSAHIB
Ayunche….Rasta denu!’
The lessons gave me a taste
of what Royalty feels like on a freeway, and needless to say left me
ill-equipped for a venture into real ‘live’ traffic. It was only years later,
in Dehradun, that I mastered the speedy juggle between ABC….accelerator, brake
and clutch.
Life in the wilderness can
take sudden frightening turns. We had barely settled in a garden, in the
Birpara area of Dooars, where the workforce was notorious for its strong
reactions. Each day brought us face to face with new emergencies: there was hardly
any breathing space.
One evening, hoping to get
away from all the problems, we headed to our nearest neighbouring garden. There
were four of us, the driver Ganeshi, our four year old son, Naresh and I. We
set off in the garden Gypsy. Just about to drive out of the barra bungalow, our
cook suggested diffidently in an aside , that we should halt at the garden
temple and take blessings. We never found out why he said what he did, but we
did take his advice.
Anyway, just as we prepared
to sit in the Gypsy, something prompted Naresh to change the seating. He
decided to take care of the driving….I seated myself in the passenger seat in
the front, with our son on my lap…while Ganeshi was now free to sit behind the
driving seat.
On the way, there lay a dry
river bed, with a sharp incline ,in and out, both sides. So one had no way of
knowing what lay in the depression, till you were already half way down the
dip.
It was dusk when we entered
the river bed. We were shocked to see masked men, racing to close in, around
the vehicle, brandishing country rifles. Naresh speeded up - the only way
out was to race up the opposite incline.
Noticing that we had no
intention of slowing down, the men raced closer...one of them gave a vicious
knock to the windscreen. It was fortunate that Naresh shouted to me to duck low
while he did the same. I pushed our boy to the floor of the Gypsy and crouched
over him. Just in the nick of time - for a second later we were showered with
the shards of the smashed front glass.
Naresh kept his wits about
him and didn’t drop the speed of our car. At the same time he yelled at the
hitherto frozen Ganeshi to lean over his shoulder and help him manoeuvre us up
the incline.
This presence of mind and
teamwork saved our lives. We roared up the slope, on to the highway .and soon
reached our friends’ place. Hot cups of tea, loving fuss to soothe us …it all
felt good. But as long as we stayed in that area and every time we crossed the
river bed, memories of that evening came back. Anything could have happened and
only the blessings of God protected us.
Residing in remote
locations, such shared experiences tend to dissolve boundaries and forge
friendships, based on mutual reliance.
So today I raise my
mid-morning ‘cuppa’ to the lord of the garden Gypsy!
Meet the writer: Ranu Singh Taragi
|
Ranu Singh Taragi, with her husband Naresh |
Ranu lives in Dehradun with her tea planter husband Naresh. They moved there after almost three decades in the tea gardens of Dooars and Assam. Ranu has been writing since her college days, and her stories for children have been published in 'Children's World' Magazine and the Hindustan Times. Have you read all Ranu's stories here on Indian Chai Stories?
The Elephants Come Calling: Tumtumpara Tea Estate,
The Lord of the Garden Gypsy, The Dance by Barkha and Pavan and Freshly Brewed and Packaged Beautifully (which was the first post to go up here on Indian Chai Stories!)
Is this your first visit here? Welcome to Indian Chai Stories!
If you've ever visited a tea garden or lived in one, or if you have a good friend who did, you would have heard some absolutely improbable stories!
You will meet many storytellers here at Indian Chai Stories, and they are almost all from the world of tea gardens: planters, memsaabs, baby and baba log. Each of our contributors has a really good story to tell - don't lose any time before you start reading them!
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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.
The blog is updated every two to three days. You will find yourself transported to another world!
Happy reading! Cheers to the spirit of Indian Tea!
Ranu thanks to your eye for detail, Oz and I are being transported back to tea again. Reminds me of our larger than life Naru “draver.” He still calls occasionally. Didn’t know you had such a traumatic experience. Would love to have you and Naresh over in Chandigarh!
ReplyDeleteThankyou so much!
ReplyDeleteI loved reading about driver Taetra, the perfect gentleman! What good people there are in tea gardens. And as for your being set upon in that terrifying way! Everyone who's ever lived in Dalgaon district would feel shudders down the spine on reading this account of your experience.
ReplyDelete