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The Head Teacher (standard:non fiction, 1994 words) | |||
Author: Raj | Added: Jul 03 2004 | Views/Reads: 3442/2515 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
This is a real life story describing how the jaws of death clamped on Achayan and the mysterious funeral written in 2 parts | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story convoy of vehicles, one among them – a Maruti van bedecked in creamy khadas (scarves) and flowers - had the school's former teacher, Mr. P. O. Jacob, lying in state. The crowd on the road swelled as the students, staff members, neighbours and well-wishers surrounded the van and solemnly descended the steps to the little cottage, the home of the bereaved family for twenty three years. Blue plastic roofing provided shade to the rows of chairs in front of the house. Inside the living-cum-bed room, one could hear the heart-rendering sobs of the widowed lady, Mrs. Padma Jacob, a teacher of the school for the period the family lived in the town. Just nineteen hours earlier, we had rushed him to the government hospital at Gangtok amidst the fury of a raging storm. The whole evening of the previous day and throughout the night, Achayan, as he was popularly known in the Malayali circles, battled with death. By morning, the jaws seemed loosened only to snap shut in a quick stroke at about eight-thirty. “I escaped from the jaws of Death,” he had said on his return from Dubai only ten days before. He and his wife had gone there to spend the winter with their younger daughter, Nancy, as proud grandparents. There he had a massive stroke and was unconscious for six days in the intensive care unit. It was only a stroke of luck and the medical expertise of the doctors at Dubai that he was on his feet again. Against all advice of his daughter's family, other relatives and friends, Achayan returned to Pakyong with his wife. When I asked him why he returned to Sikkim, he told me, “Your madam has to attend her duty while I have a mission to accomplish”. At the hospital, the critical night that was watched over by a sorrowful wife and a tearful friend, Mr. Sebastian. Now in his last repose, he wore a smile at the corner of his lips. Tranquil, he perhaps wanted to say, “Budo (old man), why have these people gathered here today? Help me get up!” to his best friend, Mr. G. P. Tiwari who stood near the van. With a forlorn look time and again, he glanced at his late friend. Many others felt that with his smile, he could be watching from above the people present at his house. Within a few minutes, we shifted Achayan to his bed in the centre of his room. Near his head was placed the Holy Bible with a burning candle and incense sticks. As friends and well wishers streamed inside the room to pay their respects to the deceased, the inconsolable sobs of Mrs. Jacob pierced everyone's heart. Her colleagues and other ladies huddled near her whispering condolences and words of comfort. Slowly the crowd outside thinned as students, teachers and well wishers moved away mumbling sympathetic words. “I've lost my best friend. Pakyong has lost an intellectual, a social worker and a legal adviser to any one who knocked his door for help.” Mr. Tiwari turned to me as I sat beside him on the steel chair. “Indeed, he was like father to me since I met him here after a span of 22 years. A philosopher and a guide too. I still recollect vividly the days when he was my village school head teacher in Bhutan. I just can't believe that he has left us forever.” The words choked me as I visualized the previous evening when he held my hands and told me to go and rest for the night with the electronic gadgets were clamped to his chest. Then I left the premises for the school after a solemn while. Mr. Sebastian had informed Acjhayan's only children, Annie in New Delhi and Nancy in Dubai from the hospital itself. By evening, Annie arrived with her cousin Mohan. Only informed of the attack the previous evening, Annie was shocked to see the blue plastic stretched in front of her house as they drove up. “Only when we reached the road to the school, Mohan told me that papa was no more though he had known everything beforehand. I knew something was amiss when I espied the blue plastic from the helicopter,” she told me the next day. “Oh why God took him away so soon!” The next day, Achayan's body was taken to the mortuary till the funeral two days later. His brother and his sister arrived in the afternoon. It was only the next day, Wednesday, could the younger daughter, Nancy arrive from Dubai with her husband and their seven-month old daughter Natasha. Mohit, the elder son-in-law had waited for them to arrive and accompanied them home. “We had told papa to have his bypass surgery in Dubai itself after the stroke but he would never listen to us. He always talked of Pakyong and wanted to return. He came only to....” Words choked her. Her eyes were swollen and tears rolled down as she her held her mother's hands. The arrival of the daughters and other relatives had brought some expression on Mrs. Jacob's face that had withered and hollowed since the stroke on the Sunday afternoon. In the evenings the Cluny and Carmelite nuns took turns to be with the bereaved family with offering prayers and singing of hymns. Neighbors and friends visited them. Thursday, the funeral. Achayan's body was brought from the mortuary along with the pastor for the last rites. The school was called off at 11 o'clock enabling staff and students to attend the funeral. At 11:45 a.m., Achayan's last journey began from the house to the cemetery. As we carried the coffin to the waiting hearse, the solemn procession of about 1000 people trudged along the dusty road in the scorching midday heat. The hearse reached the point above the cemetery. The coffin was carried to the mound of the fresh sod near the grave. As Father Victor conducted the holy rites for the deceased, Mrs. Jacob and her two daughters knelt beside the coffin for the last glance and touch of their beloved father. We silently observed Achayan's family and relatives bid a tearful final farewell. The gathering paid their respects to Achayan's mortal remains with khadas, flowers and bouquets. The smiling face was sealed from view as the coffin lid was nailed. Even the two chilly nights in the mortuary had not wiped his last smile that appeared fresh as ever, an expression of peaceful repose. Amidst many tears Achayan was laid to rest six feet below the surface as Mrs. Jacob swooned. All the members of the funeral precession offered their last gifts to him – a handful of fresh soil. The black coffin was out of sight as the soil level rose. The funeral function was completed, khadas were laid with burning of incense all around the grave and bouquets covered the raised part of the grave. A sudden gust of whirlwind rose from nowhere in the graveyard as the finishing touches were put to it. We felt cool and momentarily relieved from the sweltering afternoon heat. The light whirlwind disappeared as fast as it had come from the confinements of the cemetery. I looked in all directions - not even a leaf moved a little further off. Was Achayan bidding adieu to us all in his immortal form, giving a soothing touch to his family and friends as he rose heaven-bound leaving behind his mortal remains for ever in the laps of mother earth? Whenever I enter the cottage to say hello to Mrs. Jacob, my eyes fix on the photograph on the table with his smiling face – the smile hanging from the corner of his lips that defied the jaws of death. I then visualize Achayan smiling and soaring with the whirlwind on his last journey to serve the Savior in heaven. --X-- Tweet
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