I have walked for hours. Into deserted villages. Not a human being in sight. I see houses have been made secure homes of arcane has weaved a wonderful webs from crumbled wall to wall.
This may have been used to cradle a child. The child is not seen anywhere. Nor the mother. The saree hangs from the ceiling.
The pumpkins must have been stored for consumption for a later date. Despite the hunger and destruction, it looks like this has been safe. It also shows that no one in the village thought to take it away for themselves.
Hanuman Stands at peace
The god a mute spectator to all suffering around
It is ironical that the temple has been untouched with any of gods fury.
The people of the village had only recently
built the temple.
All the worship
had gone into building the temple strong
Only if their house were built with similar faith.
I suddenly see colour.
My eyes look further. I see an old man walking with a stick in his hand. He stops.
I reckon, it is a difficult walk down memory lane for him. That is the only pink I see around me.
He walks quietly. Slowly.
Minding his steps. He takes great care not to look at the ruins around him.
My eyes are fixed at him, until he disappears...
Muted Silence
They must be now all too familiar with “outsiders” coming to see their village. I wonder what they think of “curious” onlookers like me. I see the same curiosity in their eyes...
They ask me if I have had my lunch. They offer me lunch. But I politely decline.
I know that if they serve me lunch, then they will go on an empty stomach that evening. The women have managed to salvage a little onion from their fields. This is the only house that has stood the test of the floods. The women tell me that they were saved only because the house is newly constructed.
Innocence and Experience
The more I spoke to them, I realized the more students came out from their classrooms. The smiles on their faces, despite the difficult times were the hope I carried with me. I did not have the heart to ask them about the struggles that they would have known or seen through their elders. I just stuck to asking them what they study in school. Do they like coming to school. Most of the children had lost their books in the floods.
Each of the children want to be photographed. And in all of the noise and giggle and fun around me, I try to capture some!
A midday meal brings children to school. They eat a little and take the rest for the other sibling at home.
The classroom has ben converted into a make-shift dwelling. Here is a mother who was rescued from the floods and delivered her child in the school.
Tinned dwelling
Myopia
These people affected in a similar catastrophe in 2007 are living a life in a limbo. They continue to live in make shift, tined, temporary shelter. There is no way the civic authorities are going to listen to the demands, now that there is one more on their plate. These men and women continue to wait for compensation and alternative houses.
Will it be an endless wait for her?
5 comments:
Quite a relevant take on the ruins of hampi.Where is this though? Kamalapura? I like the photo of the man in pink very much.
You have made a good choice Lavanya. What you do must be getting you a very good nights sleep. I enjoyed your article, please write more.
Can visualize the devastation floods have created. Very well written!!
Ya fine work
No words to express....was able to visualize the havoc.....nicely written...and what I felt was..
If the only prayer we said in our whole life was, "thank you," that would suffice.
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