Who are you?...
The next morning my porter, a grinning young man named Ragu, hair neatly parted, clothes immaculate, shouldered my pack. In it were a sleeping bag, mat, sweater, rain gear, water bottle, flashlight, Sierra cup, Buck knife, medicine, power bars, wool trousers and assorted other advantages of the technological trekker; in addition to all this I wore the latest in light-weight foot gear, and carried a walking staff. Sharma wore only his robe and plastic lounge boots without laces, and in a cloth bag over his shoulder carried a toothbrush and extra undershirt.
The next morning my porter, a grinning young man named Ragu, hair neatly parted, clothes immaculate, shouldered my pack. In it were a sleeping bag, mat, sweater, rain gear, water bottle, flashlight, Sierra cup, Buck knife, medicine, power bars, wool trousers and assorted other advantages of the technological trekker; in addition to all this I wore the latest in light-weight foot gear, and carried a walking staff. Sharma wore only his robe and plastic lounge boots without laces, and in a cloth bag over his shoulder carried a toothbrush and extra undershirt.
We took
the trail east from Gangotri, past the mule drovers' bivouac and the naked
baba's. Already women bathing in the river had spread their saris on the stones
- bright swaths in glorious, angled sunlight - and ahead of us the mountains
revealed massive granite corridors above the line of deodars and birches, a
uniquely Himalayan landscape. Some pilgrims teetered on mule-back, bound for the
glacier at Gaumukh, about 20 kilometers distant and 2,500 feet higher.
Two
half-naked sadhus with their metal tridents sat with a plump sannyasi in an
orange robe, on a level spot below the trail. They waved us down. "Chilam
babas," said Ram Sharma, a reference to the pipes - chilams - used by the
Shaivites. These wore beads and pendants; their hair was wrapped in soiled
white cloth and their eyes glassy. They had mixed ganja - pot - with tobacco
and wrapped a wet cloth around the mouthpiece, as a filter. One lay on his
side, the chilam pointed toward the sky, and took great lungs-full of smoke. He
passed the pipe along to the other one, who chuffed and offered it to us.
We
declined did not seem to bother them. Small amounts of drugs were seen as an
aid to meditation, although none of that was going on at the moment. Leaves of
the same plant were mixed with milk in a drink called bong, used in some
religious ceremonies. One chilam baba asked to see my binoculars and then held
them inches from his face; I don't think he saw what I had seen.
Sharma
estimated that there were 250 sadhus in and around Gangotri. Almost all of them
took free food from the ashrams, begged, and sold a few items when possible.
India's religious institutions, with cooperation of the government, supported a
vast contingent of such holy and less-than-holy, in what admirers cited as
proof of the country's spirituality and what critics considered an
unprecedented drain on resources and productivity.
Later, we
stopped for parathas and ginger tea at a canteen - canvas and sticks - set up
beside the trail, in a place called Chirbasa, "place of pines." I
asked Sharma about the authorities' tolerance of drugs in the land of the
pilgrim, where even the boy squatting over the wood fire, next to stacks of
biscuits and containers of mango juice - Frooti - had a twist of hand-rolled
hashish in his shirt pocket. "In India," said Sharma, "there are
no laws, and no accidents." By accidents he meant violent crimes. "In
America, there are many laws, and so many accidents."
That
afternoon the valley broadened, and the sky, alternately blue and gun-metal
gray, spat rain. We hiked under the Kedarnath range and Shivling, a striking,
claw-like up-thrust reminiscent of the Matterhorn, with a crest of snow
smoothly sculpted by light and distance. Like most everything else, the
mountain was sacred, intimately bound up with the god of destruction and
rebirth, graphic in both religious and carnal associations. Shivling was
symbolic of Shiva's penis, and maybe more than symbolic, the lingham revered
all over India.
From our
slope we looked down at Bhujbasa ("place of birches"), a
government-run way station and a neighboring ashram, backed by bare, tilled
earth. Stones held down the corrugated metal roof, and white mattresses aired
in the thin light of early evening. An old man in glasses with thick, scarred lenses
sat on a stone wall reading the Bhagavad Gita in Sanskrit, an episode in
the ancient legend, the Mahabharata.
We drank
sweet tea from metal glasses and then passed under the low eaves of the kitchen
where huge brass pots hung over a cooking fire. A dozen sannyasin in turbans
sat against the wall, their ringed fingers dipping into mounds of steaming
rice, the whites of their eyes illuminated by the flames. We walked on to the
government dormitory, where we chose beds from a dozen lining the wall, under
wooden shutters that opened onto a courtyard full of mules and their owners. Pilgrims
and porters sat in a room at the end of the dark hall, the lanterns barely
penetrating the depths of a kitchen where men in filthy clothes labored over
the wood stove.
Sharma,
Ragu and I ate dal and curried vegetables, the eternal combination of Garhwal,
grateful for the warmth and the ballast. It was a medieval scene: bundled pilgrims at communal tables, in the
gloom of candlelight, none relishing the night ahead, tough old crones resting
their chins on their metal-tipped walking staffs, determined men resisting
fatigue and the cold, a pretty young Indian woman covering her mouth with a
corner of shawl and wiping away tears with another.
Back in
the dormitory, I burrowed under a coverlet redolent of someone else's feet.
Sharma, the Brahmin, talked softly with two engineers from balmy, southern
Mysore, members of the Kshatriyas caste, one level below his own. Until this
trip these men had never even put on sweaters; now they were wrapped in
everything they had, including garbage bags, speaking English because they knew
no Hindi and Sharma knew no Kannada. "We practiced walking on a hill
behind our house," said one, daunted by real mountains.
I awoke
before dawn to see Sharma sitting up in bed, cacooned in his coverlet,
meditating. I got up while the mules were being harnessed in the courtyard and
went for tea; when I returned, Sharma was standing on his head, in his
underwear.
We took
the trail to Gaumukh and the Ganges glacier, a mass of ice and up-heaved earth
indistinguishable from the mountain itself, under a bright sun. At almost
13,000 feet a few entrepreneurs still sold Frooti; pilgrims bathed in
just-thawed water that contained the first blush of what would become the
awesome sedimental load of the Ganges. Then they headed back toward Gangotri.
We kept
climbing. The ground looked solid but was in fact ice and dirt, scored by
crevasses. The retreating glacier had left a towering moraine, and we paused
often in the long, near-vertical ascent, blowing in the rarified air and gazing
back at broad, dun-colored valleys and scree slopes like mile-long tendrils of
broken rock; the people below dwindled to invisibility.
Near the
top, Ram Sharma said, "I am about to go to heaven."
Tapovan
means "valley of meditation" but was in fact a high, grassy plateau
at the edge of which stood a stone house built into over-hanging rock, with
paneless windows and a low doorway. Empty rice and lentil sacks were spread on
the dirt porch like welcome mats, and on them sat four blanketed sadhus, not
Shaivites but followers of Vishnu. A dark figure emerged from the house, woolen
cap pulled down over a mass of hair: it was Mata Ji, the woman I had come
thousands of miles to see, carrying a blackened pot in one hand and a rag in
the other, wearing a blanket coat with holes at the knees, red wool socks and
floppy, high-topped sneakers.
She hugged
Sharma, who presented her with mangoes and cucumbers purchased in Gangotri. She
pressed her hands together in the traditional Hindu greeting when we had been
introduced, her eyes quickly taking in my western clothes and, I suspected, all
my limitations. Then she went back inside, urging us in Hindi to relax and take
some chi - tea - before lunch.
It arrived
on metal plates: rice, dal, clarified butter, more rice, more dal, more chi,
all dispensed by Mata Ji, with the help of two resident sadhus. Her name meant,
roughly translated, "respected mother," and the maternal aspects of
hermitry became increasingly apparent. Another group of sadhus came and dumped
their bundles unceremoniously, expecting chow; Mata Ji fed them and then swept
the porch, fetched water, washed clothes and spread them on rocks to dry. This
was, for all practical purposes, a high Himalayan hostel for which Mata Ji
charged nothing, but she did accept donations. "You just come here for
sleeping," she told Sharma, who was gazing up at lenticular clouds
whipping past the beacon of Shivling. Her gap-toothed laugh resonated like the
swami's.
She eyed
my notebook with skepticism. Her natural reticence auguring against the
traditional interview, but gradually some facts emerged: she was 65, an orphan
who had grown up in an ashram in the south of India devoted to Krishna, one of
the nine incarnations of Vishnu. Krishna had been raised by peasants and had
special appeal for the working classes of India. Mata Ji had come to the
Himalayas - as had the naked baba, and Ram Sharma - because a guru advised it,
sufficient motivation in India, a journey made 13 years before. She had spent
the last six winters alone in Tapovan with her Gita and kerosene stove.
What I had
imagined as a remote, empty place supported a steady stream of traffic: more
sadhus carrying bundles with head straps from Bhujbasa to temporary encampments
up-valley, where white flags flew; a Nepalese climbing party bristling with
equipment; two western women in beads and blowzy skirts, sun-burned, walking
barefoot over the plateau with shoes in hand. "Hey," said one, recognizing
Sharma, "can you change a traveler's check?"
She was
American, her friend British, both formerly of the ashram at Pura, still in
search of the proper guru. They were for the moment chilam baba hopping, taking
advantage of India's cheapness, its broad acceptance of the unconventional, its
respect for the religious quest, and the ready availability of chemical
substances.
I asked,
when they had strolled on, what Mata Ji thought of the increasing number of
western swami wanna-bes seeking pleasure and high-priced holy men in India. She
said, "It is bad for the country," a bit of conservative logic from a
celibate, abstemious Vishnuite living in the massive shadow of Shiva's
reproductive organ. But she was a Vishnuite, and Vishnu was the preserver, an
aspect of Hinduism that inspired Mata Ji's devotion to the people around her,
whatever their proclivities, proven by the arrival of a party of young
professionals from Delhi.
They
crowded into Mata Ji's little house and sat with their resplendent gear bunched
around them, like children, not sadhus or even casual seekers after the truth
but the Indian equivalent of yuppies - an advertising executive, a computer
salesperson, a bank clerk suffering from altitude sickness, and three others,
plus porters - and they clearly expected to be provided for.
The sun
was setting. The air felt charged with the bleak promise of the Himalayan
night. One of Mata Ji's assistants prayed in the adjoining cave, his gaunt
frame silhouetted against the candlelight. By my count there were 19 people in
space equivalent to the inside of a Airstream trailer, with smoke emanating
from incense sticks and the cooking nook. I rued the absence of a tent.
The
respected mother barked out a single order in Hindi that drove her guests backs
against the walls. A sadhu rolled black plastic sheeting down the middle of the
floor: our table cloth. Soon it was crowded with tin plates full of streaming
rice and vegetables, and cups of chi, all whipped up on the single-burner
kerosene stove and a smoldering pile of charcoal. Then Mata Ji dispensed
blankets. The bank clerk disappeared beneath his ration, and the rest of us
stretched out, shoulder-to-shoulder, hip-to-hip, all shyness mitigated by the
frigid air that soon filled with coughs, snores, and the mutterings of troubled
dreamers.
At 2 a.m.,
worried about the oxygen supply, I crawled outside and lay on the stone porch,
piled with everything I owned. Overhead was a southern, star-pierced sky I
didn't know, scored with meteors seemingly falling out of Tibet. Shivling,
back-lit by the moon, trailed cloud across broad, luminous snowfields. At dawn
the tip lit up like a light bulb, the knife's edge of the descending warmth
etching vertical lines between ice and rock.
The bank clerk miraculously recovered and he and his party left, full of chi and goodwill. I and Ram Sharma were unexpectedly invited into Mata Ji's cave, which served as her temple, and Sharma confided, "I told her your daughter studied the Hindu religion."
The bank clerk miraculously recovered and he and his party left, full of chi and goodwill. I and Ram Sharma were unexpectedly invited into Mata Ji's cave, which served as her temple, and Sharma confided, "I told her your daughter studied the Hindu religion."
The little
altar supported a framed painting of Krishna, a conch shell - symbol of Vishnu
- a kerosene lantern and a basket of scarves, Mata Ji's only sartorial variant.
She rarely had heat even in winter, when the rarified air made fires, and
breathing, incompatible. Then the temperature could descend far below zero;
sheets of ice often covered the front of the house. Hallucinations tended to
precede spring thaw.
A malla
hung on the wall, the wooden beads turned dark by the touch of her fingers.
Prayer, and chanting, helped her endure what was to me unimaginable. "If
the soul is satisfied," she said matter-of-factly, "the body doesn't
matter."
She lit
two incense sticks and prepared an offering: scented paraffin in a metal cup,
set atop the lantern to melt. She twisted a wick from cotton strands and lit
that, too, and opened a notebook so battered it barely hung together. With a
ballpoint pen from a carefully husbanded stash she recorded the date, a daily
ritual that allowed her to keep track of religious holidays. Then she took a
mirror from an ancient wooden case, dipped a fingertip into a tin of sandlewood
paste and, studying her dark reflection surmounted by the ragged wool cap, made
two bright orange streaks from eyebrows to hairline - the color of
chrysanthemums floating on the Ganges.
I asked if
there was anything Mata Ji desired. She thought for a moment. "To have no
desires, and nothing to break the rhythm of life."
I could
think of only one really appropriate question, sophomoric perhaps in the world
at large but quite natural, asked in a smoke-scumbled cave at 14,000 feet, in
one of the most beautiful valleys on earth. "Life," she answered,
putting away her mirror, "is for discovering who you are."
To see my bio, click on: http://cjonwine.blogspot.com/2013/02/heres-concise-bio-for-those-who-have.html
To order my novel, Nose,
click on:
No comments:
Post a Comment