Muri is one of those easily-forgettable, falling-off-the-map kind of
nondescript places. It was my first proper venture into Jharkhand and I
looked forward to it with a gusto everyone around me found completely
unwarranted and unsettling. The manner in which I managed to find projects
in farflung areas baffled all. My family wrung their hands in despair as
harried wellwishers rattled off tales of naxalite horrors. M, (my
“expedition partner”) and I shrugged nonchalantly. One’s got to do what
one’s got to do. Period.


After a week of another set of utterly worthless exams, I looked forward to
some Jharkhandi respite. The trip began. With an ill omen. Some days just
don’t go right. The India-Australia match got washed out. The auto guy tried
to fleece us thinking we were not from Delhi (that’s a new one). AND we
missed our train. After a dhakkemaar journey in a snail-paced,
fungus-infested train, we finally reached Muri.






As I got off the station, I was struck by the common-placedness of the
rickety little town (yes i have this annoying habit of making up words when
I can’t find the right ones). Had I expected Jharkhand to be a new land?
With different people peeing along the tracks? Different calamities facing
them? Different trees and birds? Different houses lining the roads?
Different potholes in those roads? Different smells? As the days passed by,
it sunk in. No matter where you go, the essential being of a people is the
same.



The trees will rustle in the wind. Dogs will stretch their paws, yawning the
days away. Cows will eject humungous piles of dung. The mud will smile each
time the rain tickles her. People will make small talk about the weather, no
matter how many fields they have ploughed or how many daughters they have
left to marry off. I will miss my mother and not be able to remember the
last time I hugged her. The clouds will pout into unexpected shapes against
the blue blue sky. And children will ride their bicycles through all the
puddles.



I find myself on a train again, rattling away from this land of the obscure
to a land where obscurity is one thing you strive too hard to get. –


Jharkhandi Ladki



*Jhalmuri” (jhal = mirchi/chilli + muri = puffed rice)*
*a papercone full of firey chillis, pungent mustard oil and scruffy fingers*

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