Sold down the river : THE HINDU
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Between the glaciers and the sea lie the vast plains. And that’s
where the Ganga, shackled by faith, rituals and tokens of modern
development, looks out of character
They have put the magical mountain river inside a tunnel. It is still
called Bhagirathi in the hills of Tehri Garhwal, Uttarakhand, where it
mixes in serene synthesis with Bhilangana, another deceptively deep and
diabolical river with currents that can suck you into whirlpools faster
than you can blink. The old Tehri town is under water, it has
disappeared. There is no trace left of the River View Hotel run by
anti-dam activist Jagdamba Raturi across the dilapidated bridge where
they first made the cofferdam, even as they submerged vast tracts of
pristine forests, meadows, valleys, fertile land and mountains to build
the Tehri Dam.
That the multi-crore dam supplies only an iota of what was promised in
terms of electricity, or that its water is allegedly being used to flush
toilets in Delhi, proves how big is still beautiful for the
giant-killers of development and mass displacement. Indeed, if you ask a
local, or an official, what if there is an earthquake above 8.5 Richter
scale in this seismic fault line across the big dam, and what if
Haridwar and Rishikesh disappear in case of an earthquake, they simply
wink and look the other way. One of them said, “That will be apocalypse
now. There will be nothing to say once it happens.”
Hindu ‘saints’ claim that Bhagirathi — still not called Ganga in the
Himalayan hills — should flow unshackled. That its water never rots;
there is an inner eternity and medicinal purity in its water. Exactly
the opposite has happened in Tehri, where it has become an artificial
reservoir, damned into cages.
After Tehri, the Bhagirathi moves into the hills and foothills like a
tamed river, cannibalised by machine and man. And as the plains move in,
like the hydra-headed serpent with bestialities and brutalities, beyond
Rishikesh, where it still flows and is blue, the river disappears
inside the holy city of Haridwar, and turns into a dirty, shoreless
nullah, loaded with faeces, remains of the dead, puja samagri,
non-biodegradable garbage, plastic, chemicals and effluents. Hence
after, it is tamed, domesticated, turned into a goddess, a mother, a
deity, a divinity, into whom the whole world can dump filth and
ugliness. From this point on, there is no redemption for the river: she
is now Mother Ganga, Ganga Maiya, Namoh Ganga, Namami Ganga.
Not so beyond Uttarkashi, Harsil, Darhali and Gaumukh, very close to the
Tibet border, where the sound of waterfalls drowns your voice. And
where the young, fragile, vulnerable Himalayas move into the sky, even
as the waters of the river enter deep inside gorges, gurgling through
zigzag mountain rocks — fierce, free and fast at places, and serene at
others. The water shimmers with the sunshine, changing contours and
directions and turning wayward, following no map, no calendar or
compass, as untamed, primordial as ever, celebrating the most elemental
freedoms of a sublime river in full, unbridled flow.
The river becomes a thousand streams and waterfalls, becomes thesis,
antithesis, catharsis, synthesis, refuses to follow a defined
trajectory, completely at home in its turf. At Harsil there was a
Mandakini Dhaba near a bustling waterfall that would swell during winter
nights and only men drunk on country liquor would dare to cross a thin
tree branch that posed as a ‘wooden bridge’. The dhaba has disappeared
and the landscape has changed. The dhaba was named after actress
Mandakini of Raj Kapoor’s Bollywood hit Ram Teri Ganga Maili;
she, it is said, shot for a wet dance under the waterfall here, dazzling
and ‘pure’ in a white sari — a recurrent obsession of the filmmaker.
From Yamunotri on one side of the Himalayas, the Yamuna begins its epic
journey, and is savagely turned into a sewage drain in the plains. From
Gaumukh and Gangotri, on the other side, the Bhagirathi makes its
beginning, finding its finale in the Bay of Bengal: Gangasagar. Does the
Hindu soul really find redemption in the swirling bowels of the ocean?
Beyond Darhali, Gangotri is the temple town beyond which there is a
long, dangerous trek to 10,000 ft, where the origin of the river becomes
a moment of magical realism. You have to cross Bhojwasa and Chirbasa,
two points of rest in this trek of about 18 km. The glacier is rapidly
receding due to global warming. Experts have made a dark prophecy: that
one day the river will become a monsoon river — it will only flow when
it rains, since the glacier would have disappeared.
Bhojwasa is named after the tree on the leaves of which ancient
manuscripts were written. The trees disappear, and so does the oxygen in
the air, as you trek beyond Chirbasa, and a vast, empty, silent expanse
arrives. There is nothing but the magical cruelty and beauty of the
Himalayas, almost bereft of trees. Only the river flows in its many
avatars.
As you trek up, you can see the river moving through thousands of
cracks, becoming twin sisters — one dark and muddy, the other clean and
sunny — chatting with each other, rippling through the meadows and
valley, losing its body and flesh into the waterfalls which appear and
disappear as magically. All rivers, from Jahnavi to Bhairavi, and,
later, Alaknanda and Mandakini, they are all Bhagirathi here and there;
they all must become one in their unruly journeys.
She is in her elements here at her birthplace. She is free. Indeed, if
you look at the architecture of the Himalayas between the glacier and
the temple town, you can see that she is wild and young, flowing through
the million locks of Shiva. This is Shiva-Bhagirathi territory. And it
is a rollicking love affair.
At Gaumukh, the blue and muddy glacier is constantly cracking under your
feet, even as chunks of ice float through the huge mouth inside the
glacier. If you are courageous enough to walk through this trembling and
melting mass of ice, you might reach Tapovan. There used to be a story
that a woman tapasvi lived alone at Tapovan; and even if 20
people landed up, she would have food for them in her handi. Later,
locals say, she had a kidney failure, and had to be transported through
this deadly downhill trek to the plains for emergency care. Life is
extremely tough here for wanderers and seekers in exile.
Of the many mythical narratives about the river, one is magical. That a prince called Bhagirath sat on a long tapasya
to bring Ganga to Earth in order that his ancestors find salvation at
Gangasagar. He realised that she will come with such force that will
destroy the planet. So he started tapasya, pleading with Shiva to take her in his locks and control the impact of her arrival.
Shiva agrees, falls in love with this wild beauty, celebrates open
adultery, and refuses to release her. Hence, Bhagiratha goes on another
fast to get her released, which Shiva accedes to, and she arrives on the
day of Gangadashami at Gaumukh and Gangotri. The myth goes that the
moment she descends, she is so furious and fast that the water rises at
Varanasi.
Hence, as she follows Bhagiratha’s rath, she ditches him yet
again and disappears in her playfulness. And dismantles the samadhi of
Jahnu, a saint. Angry, he gulps her down and imprisons her in his navel —
another subtle, erotic revelation of sorts. So Bhagiratha goes on a
final tapasya to free her. And, thereby, her epical journey
begins to the ocean, even as she is caged, domesticated, ravaged and
brahminised in the plains.
Amit Sengupta is a Delhi-based writer and academic
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