It’s HOT in
Delhi in April.
The
sidewalks are dusty, each persons strides bring up whirling dervishes that bite
at the ankles and coat the skin. The traffic fumes in the city hover above the
roads and cloak the people in fog as they go about in cacophonous, frenzied
activity, unabated by the rising mercury. In the countryside lakes are drying
up, as though their edges are being chased back by the sunshine itself,
shrinking into themselves until cooler winds prevail.
At
night-time we retreat to the city rooftops to seek solace in the wispy evening
breeze, waiting for a breath to lift the heavy calm under the starlit sky.
And, as I
journey on, I find myself in Varanasi ,
by the shores of Mother Ganges.
‘A holy
river in a holy city’.
The heat
does not abate, but keeps on pounding down.
I am here
to explore, to learn, to ‘be’, to read and write and dream in this intoxicating
landscape of otherness.
But, I am
thwarted.
Thwarted by
my normally Cast Iron constitution that allows me to eat or drink anything that
takes my choosing, which has obviously found the heat too intense and decided
to up and go, leaving me at the mercy of whatever bug is ravaging my system.
It could
have been the bread I shared in the park with the family who were so intrigued
by my hair and insisted I join them, taking sneaky pictures on their mobile
phones when they thought I wasn’t looking.
It could have been the not-quite-boiled tea that the Chai-Wallah
pedalled to me, singing his lilting refrain as he came down the carriages of
the train, swinging his metal can of sweet and fragrant goodness. It could have
been the sticky sweet pastry I ate at the station, drenched in sugar and
visited by a fair few of the army of flies that the seller was valiantly waging
war against with his rolled up newspaper.
Whatever it
is, and wherever it came from, it wins for a fair few days.
It’s all I
can do to leave my room to walk up the lane to the bakery and then sit in the
shade of the trees by the Ghat on the river and sip at flattened Soda and eat
small pieces of warm fresh salted paratha, watching the boats and the people
washing in the river, gently bidding my system to restore its balance and
afford me the freedom to wander and explore, unabated.
I pass a
chap each morning as I wander to my bakery of choice. He sits on a mat at the
corner of the lane, his withered legs tucked under him, a bowl set out on the
mat for those passing to throw their change into. He smiles at me as I walk past, and I smile
back. And he never asks me for money. Maybe he sees the wan look on my face and
the slightly awkward gait of a person who is not sure how her insides will
choose to behave at any given point. And he gives me grace in the moment.
It’s not
until three days into my gentle restoring of self that I stop and sit down by
his mat and ask him his name, explaining that I’ve been out of sorts but that
I’ve appreciated his smiles each day. His name is Ali, and he tells me some of
his story – about how he gets up early and gets a friend to help him onto a
Tuk-Tuk to come down here and unroll his mat and sit at the corner of a well
trodden way to the riverside. He talks
of how he never asks, never cajoles, never uses guilt to motivate people to
give, but he smiles and offers the freedom to respond should people choose. And
he gets by. We share a paratha and I journey on.
It’s now a
couple of days later, and my strengthening body is affording me the joy of
exploring this place. The river with its colours and mayhem and characters, the
side streets with its temples and dust and watermelon sellers, the Ghats that
line the waters with their various functions, with the scent of cremation and
the sound of wailing hanging heavy on the air at Manikarnika Ghat, a sacred
place for the peoples to come and say their last goodbyes to their loved ones
before their ashes join with Mother Ganges on their journey to the ‘next’.
I head out
onto the waters in the dusk to watch the sun sink below the horizon and float
on the water, hovering at Dasaswamedh Ghat as the Ganga Aarti takes place,
where the conch is blown and the incense is waved and the lamps are swung in
hypnotic rhythms as puja plates are floated into the waters, filled with petals
and candles that transform the river into watery starlight.
I sit on my
bed and I sob.
Salty tears
are running down my cheeks as I wrestle with both the beauty and the darkness
of a place in which I’m finding it hard to see where Jesus is amongst the
offerings and the burnings and the rhythms of a life that ranks its peoples in
castes.
In that
moment all I want to do is to open up my arms and gather up the ‘untouchable’,
used by society for the tasks that are deemed beneath them, but ignored and
invisible whenever they have lost their usefulness.
I want to
gather them in my arms and love them and speak words to them of the person that
is Jesus, of hope and life and freedom. I want to speak to them of a world that
is bigger than this existence, of an ordering where the last come first and the
first come last, where they are invited to the table, in the best seats at the
banquet.
And I think
of Ali, sat on his mat. I think of his
quiet, gentle soul, deemed untouchable by those around him. I think of his
beautiful smile and his open heart, inviting people to sustain his life with
his well placed bowl, yet not demanding anything.
And I think
that I haven’t given him anything. We shared bread and stories, but I haven’t
given him anything.
And I ask
God what I should do because, at that moment, I want to head out into the night
to find him and speak the words of truth that were hidden in our encounters.
And God
reminds me of the lame man at the city gate known as ‘Beautiful’, placed there
every day to beg from those going into the temple. I’m reminded of Peter and John as they head
to prayer and encounter him, and see his story, and speak truth into and over
him. “Silver or gold I do not have, but what I do have I give you. In the name
of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, walk.”
And I’m
challenged right there, in my room by the river, with streams of salty tears on
my face, that I am to do the same.
As the sun
rises and the activity along the river starts, I get dressed and ready to head
outside to meet Ali, the words of my conversation with God from the previous
night still ringing in my ears. I will buy bread, ask Ali if I can join him,
and if he allows I will sit, share story and table and tell him of Jesus, the
one who brings life. I will ask him if he will allow me to pray. Because I have
nothing else to give him but my prayer, and the truth of the one I follow.
As I round
the corner to Ali’s chosen place I see an empty spot, a spot normally filled by
a gentle, smiling soul, sat atop a ragged mat. I ask where he might be, and the
people shrug. I go back later to find
that the place is still without Ali. And the next morning too.
And then,
it is time for me to leave this place, and Ali is nowhere to be seen.
As I pack
my sack to head for the trains I ask God some questions about those moments in
my room that night, where my heart was broken wide open and, in the breaking, I
glimpsed truth and beauty and life, and was invited once more to be a bearer of
the Kingdom.
In that
moment I am rendered breathless as the whisper of God speaks, ‘it was me. When
you saw Ali, you saw me. You were
looking for me everywhere in the chaos and beauty and darkness of this place
and I was right there, sat on a mat down the lane from you.’
And I
wondered why I hadn’t seen it sooner. I
wondered that, like the disciples who only recognised the resurrected Jesus
when he broke the bread, were my eyes so closed?
‘To love
another person is to see the face of God.’
The lesson
stayed with me as I wound my way back to Delhi ,
to join the Sisters of the Missionaries of Charity at their orphanage.
And there I
meet Jefriel. A small, beautiful albino boy, abandoned and alone except for the
care he received from the sisters and the rough and tumble of his room mates,
living side by side in the many cots that lined the walls.
He has some
learning difficulties and a twisted hand that, after but a brief moment in the
presence of his smile, you don’t notice anymore. And the sisters explain to me
that he will go to Kolkata to live with the brothers there when he gets older,
because…oh, because…no-one wants him.
Who would adopt this little one with his pale skin and his twisted hand
when there are perfectly formed little ones, ready for a home.
And my
heart broke open again.
But this
time I was more ready for it.
Because I
was in the presence of Jesus.
For the few
days I was there, as I held his hand and loved him and cuddled him and prayed
in my heart for his future, I saw the face of God.
And, oh, he
is so very,very beautiful.
Beautiful words!
ReplyDeleteLoved this. Love your heart. Love your words.
ReplyDeleteI just love this. So much.
ReplyDelete