Random
We started off to Lansdowne,
a picturesque hill station in Uttarakhand, on 2nd
April (Good Friday). We were four families, all in their own cars. Four
hours later, just before Najibabad, on a good empty road we were cruising merrily
at 90kmph with my husband at the wheel.
I was half-asleep enjoying
the music and heard my husband curse, honk and brake. Startled, I opened my
eyes and saw a three people on a motorbike, cutting across the road just twenty meters ahead. The
tires screeched on the road and I braced myself for a collision, both hands on
the dashboard and heart beating madly.
The car hit the motorbike before
coming to a halt. In that one second, in slow motion, I can still remember one
of them flying off the motorbike onto the bonnet and windscreen before rolling
off on the road and the other two sprawled on the road - one of them bleeding
and motionless for what seemed an eternity before showing signs of being alive.
I called one of our friends
and they drove back to accident scene. The windscreen had cracked but was intact
and a crowd had started building up. Someone suggested that we take them to a
hospital a few kilometer away at Najijabad. Even though we were shocked, we
bundled two of them in the car and the third one followed on the bike. Our friend and his family were an unshakable support and helped us throughout the ordeal.
The drive to the hospital
took twenty minutes through a closed railway crossing and by-lanes of
Najibabad. Two men lay, it appeared, dying on the backseat and bye-standers
peeping in to see why the windscreen was smashed. I didn't want anyone of them
to stop breathing and in fact was keenly following their groans of 'Allah…
Allah'!
Those twenty minutes were the
longest twenty mintutes we had spent in our lives!!
At the hospital,
the accident victims were declared fine with no lasting damage. The wounded men (they were
local labourers) and their families were very courteous and thankful to us since we didn’t
run away and brought them to the hospital and paid for their treatment.
As we waited, for the final
X-ray report of the man who had fallen on the windscreen, a crowd of Muslims
clad in white kurtas and net caps began to form in front of the hospital. I began
to panic and called up one of my friend’s brother-in-law, who was in Police posted in Delhi. He assured me nothing would happen. And I heard someone to my
right addressing me, “Madam, iin logon ne to apne aadmi bula liye hein, aap bhi
bula lijiye.” (Madam these people have collected their well-wishers, you also
call yours.) I ignored him.
I was astounded at the
virtual stranger, who had been listening to my phone conversation and was
deliberately instigating me to gather a crowd of my own. For what? Did he
realize I was a Hindu? What was his motive to talk to me and give that
particular advice? If in my place there was someone else, would they have
gathered their supporters?
Is this how riots happen? A person looking to spread trouble, for what intent and end? Were there these kind of people recruited just to find and incite unrest and chaos?
Is this how riots happen? A person looking to spread trouble, for what intent and end? Were there these kind of people recruited just to find and incite unrest and chaos?
These questions always rankle in my
mind whenever I hear any news about riots in any part of the world.
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Disclaimer: The pictures are from google images.
Disclaimer: The pictures are from google images.
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