“Water is Life” is the title of an album by Tinarawen
desert dwelling Touareg supergroup,it is also a saying in Somalia, another parched
land.
On the other hand Fela Kuti wrote a song called "Water no get enemy" and those are the words that apply to the
angry torrent 200 feet below me at the bottom of the near vertical sides of a
rocky valley.
The water equivalent of lightning, this river knows no
opposition, it is a force as strong as an element can ever be, surging
relentlessly on, it certainly has no enemy nor charm nor beauty, just untamed power.
There is a fury here, as if the water is livid at being held in a frozen state
as a glacier for hundreds of years and is now free to vent, psychopathic in its
urgency to escape.
Rupesh from the Indian organization Pragya tells me
this is calm since the rains have stopped and is nothing to what it had been
just the week before.
I love rivers but actually fear this one. Normally I
will do all I can to get down to water level and dip in it but there is no
approaching this tempest. I want to leave it well alone.
We are upstream
from Rudraprayag in Uttarakand in northern India - the scene of terrible
flooding in June 2013, I am here to film the work that Rupesh and his
colleagues from Pragya have achieved to try and remedy some of the human and
physical losses that occurred - no small job it was a total cataclysm.
It's a 6 hour drive from Deradhun up the valley that
channels the sacred river Ganges out of the Himalayas and eastwards across the plains
of India where it acts as a font, grave and dustbin until it secretes its
poisonous self through a delta into the bay of Bengal .
We are following an ancient route up to the Himalayas,
scattered along it are temples and sites of pilgrimage all part of a trail that
ends in one of Hinduism’s holiest of shrines; Kedarnathji, dedicated to Shiva
the destroyer up above the winter snowline.
For thousands of years Hindus have made this journey
as part of the Charta Dham a route round four holy shrines devoted to the three
major denominations of Hinduism. The people that live along the route make a
living from the pilgrims as guides, porters and by running rest houses.
In the past many pilgrims started their journey knowing they would not return, it was is like a final trek to start the next cycle of life. They may well die en route and it was fine with them and had
said goodbye to their families already. How perfect, how economical.
Imagine starting a company offering a pilgrimage and funeral service in the UK.
Canterbury to Santiago de Compostela, full board, shoe repairs, funeral with
the wake thrown in. I would like to think I would go that way rather than
slowly running out of life amongst strangers, handing my life’s savings onto some
leeches that own an old people’s home. I’d rather the opportunity of an
honourable self effacing death under my own terms. It is odd how we concentrate
on the right to life but not death
In the past many pilgrims started their journey knowing they would not return, it was is like a final trek to start the next cycle of life. They may well die en route and it was fine with them and had
Three hours up the valley we reach Depraprayag - where the Bhgirathi and Alaknanda tribrutaries meet to form the Ganges, it is a special place. Two deep and narrow v shaped valleys converge below huge mountains.We crossed a cable footbridge with cows sat mid way seemingly chewing the view and descended through an ancient village with steep and tight alleys down to a spit of land with a river either side I sense a breeze blowing on my face and my back as I look downstream. One river is a milky green the other an opaque blue they meet but stay separate for a distance making a line in the middle of the new watercourse like a nervous couple on the first night of an arranged marriage.
There is a temple to Shiva there and two caves on the
shore one for each river one representing the moon the other the sun. I repeat
a blessing made to me by a holy man and get given some marigold petals to cast
into the water whilst praying for those that I love. It makes sense to me but
that’s a lot of flowers mind.
Later we pass a large solitary plinth sitting in the middle
of the channel. Rupesh tells me that this is where a shrine to the God that
looks over all the shrines from the Chota Char Dham stood.
It was decided to move it somewhere more accessible
and locals say that the day it was moved on June 13th 2013 was when
the torrential rain started. The rain was unlike any that anyone had known and
lasted for 3 days as a deluge. Monsoon rain is more water than air;cups of
water being thrown every second by a stadium of supporters onto one spot.
So water came from the sky, down the slopes and along the
river itself making a flash flood sweeping down the valley washing away
anything that stood in its way. A Himalayan Tsunami it was called. The
small makeshift shelters and restaurants that lined the paths to the shrines and
villages were wiped away and most terribly the people in them. The water level
rose and cut off settlements and then submerged them .Entire sides of mountains
slipped down to bury what and whoever was below. The devastation was complete.
What would take humans years to do was finished in moments.
This was just the start, the horror that followed was
an international rescue operation that was hindered by further appalling
weather and an inability to get to the areas needing emergency help. Roads,
bridges and dams were gone, relief teams could not get through, the area was
completely cut off, marooned.
I remember seeing news reports and images, another humanitarian
disaster with ruined lives and homes, misery and horror. People I could
never meet, in a situation I am lucky enough unlikely to find myself in. The
sympathy I felt was real but not really connected, instinctive compassion, care
by proxy, part of the reason why we watch the news and part of being human I
guess.
The story was in the headlines for a week or so,
helicopters crashed and relief workers were killed, tragedy upon horror upon despair.
The relief and emergencies community rallied while the rest of us reeled. As
with most disasters the public eye soon turned in its satellite dish socket to
focus on another issue like a civil war somewhere hot or another MP committing
buggery whilst denying it. Life on Earth.
5 months later and I am heading into this same area to
look at the work Pragya has done to help communities that have lost so much
that they no longer function properly. They were quick to attend the scene as
they had workers in that area as they concentrate on helping the marginalised people
of the high Himalayas. They are organised, efficient and most importantly have
a local base.
We drive up roads that have had bites taken out of
them like an apple, perfect tarmac with a piece missing, a vertical drop of 100
ft where the road has just fallen away. A few stones are placed by them to mark
the drop. Elsewhere the entire side of the mountain has slipped away and a
passage has had to be hewn out of the hill again. There is only enough room for
one vehicle to pass at a time which of course seriously challenges Indian
driver's ability to give way. We have to wait several times whilst there is a
face off between buses, only resolved by someone having to reverse back with
imminent death on one side.
The Himalayas are a young mountain range and in a
constant state of flux and this area is vulnerable to landslides and earth tremors.
In places as quickly as the road is rebuilt the loose rubble and shale soil
gives way again. It is similar to a child making channels and sand castles on
the beach that constantly collapse.
Where repairs are being made are low rusty corrugated
shacks that are home to families of migrant workers from Nepal or the poorer
states of India. Perched on the edge of cliffs looking out over wondrous views of
the valley and up to the high Himalayas they are still desperate places to
live. With just a door to admit light they offer nothing more than a shelter
from the road. Completely unserviced by the necessities for a normal life,
whole communities live up here without water, sanitation, schools or transport.
The monkeys that live around them lead a better life than these souls, at least
they are free and not encumbered by dreams and a desire for a different life,
the kind of life that passes them by in cars and buses on the road they are
mending. Children no more than 6 or 7 staggering with sacks of stones that
their older siblings or mothers have broken up with hammers. Older children
with pick axes and sledge hammers doing adult work prizing rocks out of the
hillside to be put into metal cages used to shore up the slope or splitting
them with steel rods. Infants without toys and a very short childhood play with
mud and sticks on the edge of perilous drops oblivious to the danger and the
dust from passing trucks and buses.
The workers are paid about a dollar a day which is
less than a local receives, pure and
honest discrimination in the world's so called largest democracy. I am
conscious of what I buy and who made it where, but this is child labour on a
different scale and being used to rebuild a damaged country.
Nowhere in Europe or America would such conditions be
tolerated, but this is a country where it can even get worse than this.
Pragya are aware of the problem and have a mobile
health and education unit that visit these makeshift camps. They do what they
can but these people need the work and the country needs their work. These
people are not registered and do not exist on paper so it is not known how many
were killed in the floods. The government estimates deaths in the region
are at about 5500 but Pragya puts it nearer 8000 if you include migrant workers
Everybody I meet who lives in the flood stricken area
has suffered a tragedy; lost a family member, their house or livelihood, often
all 3.
As roads were rebuilt there was a rush of people to
come to the towns and villages looking for their kin and local resources were
further stretched and chaos intensified.I hear one story of a group of Sikhs
who after finding themselves cut off and unable to move forwards or backwards took their
4 wheel drive to bits and over three days carried over a mountain and
reassembled it “Fitzcarraldo” style
On the walls of houses and shops in the villages we
pass through are badly photocopied images of lost children and relatives.
Smiling faces from marriages or graduations, a captured moment taken in another
time with no thought that their images may end up on a wall as the last hope
for a grieving family. The saddest smiles I’ve ever seen.
I speak to Pratap a local man who is employed with
Pragya he told me he had lost his brother and another fellow worker had lost both
his parents and siblings. Both had run to higher ground as the rising waters
began to flow through the market place where they had their restaurant business.
From the hill above, those that had made it there watched the entire market
place and everybody in it swept away and the land where it stood crumble into
the abyss below.
As night fell, he climbed up high to escape the rising
water.
And for three days he and hundreds of others wandered
terrified around the mountainsides, living off plants whilst trying to get to
villages and find their families. Two boys I met said the only reason they had
survived was because they had seen Bear Grylls programmes on TV, I must let him
know and that alone is worth my TV license fee.
All roads, bridges and paths were gone and there was
simply no place to go until the water subsided. As it did it revealed the
extent of the tsunami’s damage.
For many anything from their former lives had been
erased and where their houses once stood was now air, the land was gone. Even
after 5 months the ground is still sliding down the hill and houses are
splitting in two and valuable farmland crumbling away. If you survived the
flood you were lucky but still not out of danger.If you lost your entire house
the government gave you about £2000 but if you only partially lost it you got
nothing .
Rupesh and Pratap take me up to where some families
have been forced to resettle at the too of a mountain because their houses are
collapsing. Pratap says it's a bit of a walk which concerns Rupeesh he says a
bit of a walk for the locals means a long walk for us.
It was.
We left the roaring river below us and climbed a 2 km slog up a mountain side, we passed small picturesque coloured houses with roofs made of thick brown slate. They had terraced farmland laid out before them with spectacular views of the village of Kalimath in the valley below and the snow peaked mountains above. Under a clear blue sky lemon, lime and peach trees offered some shade and in amongst the dense greenery wild marijuana leaves waved at me. In Europe these places would be exclusive holiday cottages and I simply wanted to just stop there for a month or so. But up close all the houses were broken. Large cracks left walls at unlikely angles, roofs had collapsed and the land was riven by fissures. These were the homes that the families we were going to see had to leave to move up the mountain.
Carrying my camera kit between us the walk became
increasingly tougher. I always think life is like walking up a hill: the older
you get the harder it gets but the view gets better.
I was beginning to think I was getting old in fact I
was no longer sure what I was thinking as my heartbeat was drowning my
thoughts. How would the elderly manage this though?
As I pulled myself by a tree root over another false
summit I was greeted by a gummy grin from an old lady. Her age made her beautiful,
in the same way time gives beauty and value to an antique piece of furniture.
Perfectly old and not trying to be anything else. She was as natural as the
scenery.
With some bemusement and curiosity she let me pass and
then proceeded to set a pace from behind that I could hardly maintain When I
stopped so did she, refusing maybe out of modesty to go ahead or simply testing
my fitness.
My memory fails me for much of the latter part of that
ascent all I remember is flash frames of a path, tree roots, rocks, lichen and
my own feet and a gummy grin set against a backdrop of such beauty it made me
insignificant.
Unbelievably at the top there was a group of guys from
Pragya making some prefab toilets every element of which including bags of
cement had been carried up there.
There should be an Olympic event for carrying things
up impossible slopes, so much more impressive than bowls or polo.
This was the only place that these people could move
to. They are living in tents and canvas awnings with no agricultural land or
means of income since the temples are closed and they will receive no money
from the government for the loss of their old houses .
Mothers and children sit inside shelters around a
cooking pot on a fire, the smoke filling the space, tormenting my aching lungs.
Their future is bleak, just a view down on a world
that has no place for them. I am completely distracted by the location and the
wonder of the situation but of course it means nothing to them, I am seeing a vision
that we as westerners long for and spend a lot of money to gaze at for a short
while. Then I will return with my useless camera and equipment to my civilised
life where wheelchair users are mugged for their pension and my monthly mobile
bill is more than these men could possible earn in a year, leaving these
unfortunates that fate has singled out, to suffer a winter that is coming. The
snow line will come down to a few hundred metres above them and no one knows if
they can survive the winter.
It’s true climbing hills can put a strain on your
heart.
Don’t waste your good luck on gambling and bingo, save
your good luck for the lottery that is life.
Two days later back down roads that are barely
passable, with the constant threat of landslides and collapses, I see schools
that are first floor deep in silt and, broken dams. and bare hillsides where
there once were villages. Destruction spread down the valley left behind by the
floods like revelers leaving rubbish
after a festival.
Gradually we come across signs of modern life, white
water rafting camps line the banks of a still youthful Ganges, settlements with
guest houses and yoga retreats, ashrams and temples. Wide eyed westerners seem
to sleep walk through Rishikesh made famous by the Beatles, a town spread
across both side of the Ganges and joined by another chain footbridge. Gone are
the posters with photos of lost souls, they have been replaced with adverts for
enlightenment, ayerverdic treatments and meditation retreats. A western
couple knock me with the handlebars of their Royal Enfield motorbike, not
looking back or apologizing, too busy living the dream and pursuing a
higher path.
I appear to be the only Caucasian who hasn't adopted a
semi holyman dress code, and isn't warring a bindi or some Hindi accouterment. All
the Indians here on en route to a pilgrimage are smiling happy and carefree,
taking photos in front of shrines and bathing in the water, uninhibited and
openly excited. I hardly catch a westerners eye and see no smiles as I pass
them I can’t figure out why, is the path to enlightenment and self
discovery that painful? They are so fortunate to be here, to dip in to a
culture, commune and then jet off home
again. It is a rare privilege to taste another life,let alone change your own.
One of India’s biggest attractions and exports is spiritual enlightenment, westerners throng here to re-charge their souls or find themselves whilst most the people I have just left further up the valley in Kalimath would do anything just to make a living. I reckon the best thing is the displaced families set up a few stalls alongside the therapy dealers, karma merchants and trinket sellers and in Rishikesh and offer a know yourself service.
You walk through a silk drape into an candle lit room
with the low murmur of praises being offered. Sweet incense fills the air, and
a holy man dabs a turmeric Tilaka on your forehead. You sit in a lotus position
before an altar, the sound of bells chime lightly as a richly embroidered drape
is gently parted to reveal a mirror with a small motif engraved on it as your
face gets larger as you peer at it you read the motif it says ” KNOW
YOUR LUCK"
It is full moon and I am due for my dip - how lucky am I that I'm by the Ganges - the holiest of rivers. I ask if we can stop so I can go down to the river and make my puja. We pull over above a sandy bank and I climb down to the fast flowing but calm river. It is the same watercourse that 90 km up stream was so frightening and 5 months ago killed 8000 people but now is just a manifestation of a latent power, a symbol of things being greater than the self and more eternal than my soul, thanking my luck I submerged myself in the element that gives life and brings death.
It is full moon and I am due for my dip - how lucky am I that I'm by the Ganges - the holiest of rivers. I ask if we can stop so I can go down to the river and make my puja. We pull over above a sandy bank and I climb down to the fast flowing but calm river. It is the same watercourse that 90 km up stream was so frightening and 5 months ago killed 8000 people but now is just a manifestation of a latent power, a symbol of things being greater than the self and more eternal than my soul, thanking my luck I submerged myself in the element that gives life and brings death.
Sent on the move