All the repose of 1,000 miles in a
city square
The passage across India is a journey
everyone must make, writes Jeremy Atiyah
It was something that every sane and
rational human being had to do once in their lifetime: cross the Indian
subcontinent, from Lahore to
Kathmandu . That was what a guru told
me in 1983. He had long hair and spoke more slowly than weeds grow. But he
lived in a coffee shop in Freak
Street , and I was inclined to
agree with him.
I was only 20 at the time and had
completed the journey in question, which helped. I had also just had a meal of
muesli, chocolate cake, spaghetti bolognese, lemon meringue pie, red wine, lamb
chops and cappuccino. Mogul monuments were all very well but, when it came to
home cooking, Kathmandu
was tops.
My pilgrimage had begun two months
earlier in the rain in Lahore , a
city containing Aurangzeb's Bedshahi Mosque, as well as the tombs of Jehangir
and Nur Jehan, but not the barest whiff of lemon meringue pie. Instead I ate
biryanis in the railway station, plotting routes to Delhi .
At night I slept with frogs croaking under
the bed. When the fan stopped turning, I stopped sleeping. For breakfast I
drank tea so sweet that it made me retch; only by telling myself I was drinking
a form of hot chocolate did I learn to swallow it. But then there were the cool
marble and still waters of the Golden Temple of
the Sikhs: the repose of a thousand miles confined to a city square.
If Amritsar
was hot, what would Delhi be
like? I spent a night queuing for a ticket on the daytime train and then fell
unconscious with tiredness. On arrival I found Delhi
railway station so full of rigid sleeping bodies, I could not avoid them. It
didn't matter. The city was asleep. Outside, only the deranged and the
all-night barbers stayed on two feet.
In the morning I took a tour of Delhi ,
which cost pounds 1, including lunch. I didn't know where they were taking me,
because I didn't understand the commentary. The Red Fort. The Mahatma's
Memorial. The Qutb Minaret. And all of India in
between. The lunch was good though.
Back then, New
Delhi was a quiet place. Connaught
Place was empty and losing its
paint. Old Delhi ,
with its teeming millions and rickshaw traffic jams, was the centre of life.
But it was monsoon season. With black storms beating on the trees, I lay by an
open window, reading train timetables and histories of the Moguls. I understood
neither.
From Delhi I
travelled east along the Ganges
plain. The land was all aflood. Palm trees were knee-deep in the rice paddies.
On the train I was drip-fed sweet tea in small clay cups passed through the window
bars. The city of Patna ,
when I got there, resembled a leprosy camp. I spent a day roaming the bandit
territory of northern Bihar ,
asking people for the bus to Kathmandu .
The border post to Nepal
was lit by candles. The official conducted his business in Y-fronts; he asked
if I would promise to send him a letter. I spent a night on the border, under a
mosquito net that prevented the mosquitoes inside from getting out. Who cared?
The next night, if all went well, I would feast on lemon meringue pie and buffalo
steak.
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