Sunday, February 15, 2009

ONE NIGHT AT THE CREMATORIUM

Every incident, every situation and every moment has a significance of its own. 26th January was no exception. My grandmother expired and we (my dad, my relatives and I ) had gone to crematorium to complete her last rites. This was my second visit to the most dreaded place in the city, a place that sees the end of the journey called LIFE.

As I stood beside my grandma’s body waiting in a queue for our turn I saw many things which unearthed different shades of the society which are rare and surprising.

INCIDENT A

Inquisitiveness is one special quality of humans. Whatever may be the situation humans cannot resist from being Mr/Mrs, curious. Cant we resist ourselves from asking questions in situations of adversity? For example:- We only go to the crematorium when some close relative dies( barring the day when we would be carried by the rest for our last rites). It is no place for merry making. People are bound to be sad and emotional when some one close to you dies( that is what my common sense tells me but there can be few exceptions). How can someone go up to the grief-struck people and enquire about the reasons for their closed ones’ demise??? How can a person who has come to cremate his/her own relative’s body be interested about other people?

10 feet from my grandma’s body lay a body of a 14 year old boy. Surrounding him were his unfortunate father, family members and other relatives. The scene was pathetic. Nothing could compensate for the loss. No one could console the father. I looked away from the scene. Surprisingly I saw some people ( there is no dearth of people in a crematorium) go near the dead body of the boy to get a glance of him. Soon the true traits of human being were highlighted. Someone asked “ What happened? Was he sick? Was it an accident case?” Can you imagine the situation………..there a father who had lost his young son was mourning and the imprudent people were too interested in enquiring about the reason of his death. For heavens sake cant they leave someone alone even to mourn in silence?? Can they bring back his son if they knew the reason why or how the boy died??? That’s the inquisitiveness for all of you.

INCIDENT B

I did hear from my grandparents that people used to take pictures of their dead relatives just before performing the last rites. I even saw such a picture in one of my relatives house. Trust me its is awful. How can people look at such a photograph for the rest of their life reminding him/her of the day the beloved person expired.

If this was unacceptable, I honestly condemn what I saw on 26th January. I was aghast to see such an incident. To the right of my grandmother’s body lay a body of a very old lady. It seemed she was deep into her slumber and rested in peace. Many relatives had gathered to pay their homage to her. In the midst of all of them I saw one person roaming about with a camera. I did not take me much time guessing that he would surely take her photograph before she was cremated. But the next moment I was gaping at what I saw. I never expected to have such an experience in my wildest dreams. The photographer announced “ Lets take the photograph before the priest arrives.” All the relatives gathered. I could not understand what the hell was going on. Then, with the body in the fore front all the relatives stood in a huddle. It appeared they were going off for a tour( like our cricket team) The photographer said “READY” and clicked the camera. It was a family photograph to be preserved in the family album for the next generations to see how their grandma was cremated. I again raise the question are we really sad when someone dies?? Or is it a formality to express our grief because that is what the society demands?? How can people indulge in such things at the time of such immense loss??

May be the family members and the old lady’s soul would truly rest in peace now after her demise. After all someone’s pain/loss is somebody’s gain.

INCIDENT C

On 26th January the rush at the crematorium was comparatively less. There was a certain degree of calmness in the air amidst the mourning of the unfortunate families. Suddenly the silence was broken as a film star came to cremate his mother. The dormant employees suddenly became active.

It was surprising to find out that if you are a reputed person of the society you can even book a spot ahead of the normal people in a crematorium. One of the assistants of the star and came and said,” Mr. X’s mother has expired. We informed you on the phone. Is everything ready?” The employee replied, “ yes sir everything is ready. Please get the death certificate and we will serve you to the best of our ability.”

That’s the advantage of being a star or famous. And how can I forget the inquisitive nature of other people around. Every individual present at the crematorium tried to get a glance of the star’s mother. Did she look different from other human beings? Was she unique because her son was a film star. I have no answer because I did not have a clear vision from the side of my grandma’s body.

Many relatives of the film star had too come to the crematorium. All of them were crying( may be crocodile tears) and appeared to be very sad at the sudden demise of the old lady. As her son completed the last rites and put her inside the electrical chullah, all cried out loud. Five minutes later I saw one of them still shouting. May be she was still very sad lose a close relative. But the fact is she was angry because she was not served tea and biscuits and she waited for the old ladies body to burn to ashes. Is it not contradiction of emotions???

And for the film star himself, He sat in the crematorium office, sipped hot tea and chatted with the workers. 3 days later I saw him attending public functions. May be that’s what his profession demands. No disrespect to the great actor though

INCIDEN D

26th January 2009 11.30 pm , The electronic scroll board outside NIMTOLA crematorium flashed in bright green colour “ All the employees of the crematorium are paid workers. Please do not pay them any extra amount barring the cremation costs”.

But who cares. At every step or ritual you go through u have to be ready with some money to please the employees. Everything is this world has a value. The effort of the employees is no exception.

INCIDENT E

Last and the worst of all the shades of the society………….Once The rituals at the crematorium were over ,before we returned I saw people( including my own relatives) have hot tea and biscuits. Can someone explain is it a rule or some ritual to drink tea at the crematorium???? Do we ever drink tea late at night on normal days?? What is so special about the tea outside the crematorium?? Is it a moment of joy which we need to cherish and enjoy??

Moreover once we return, all have to eat sweets and sugar syrup before entering their respective houses. Who made this ritual?? Is it a moment of glory that we need to celebrate?? What is so special about someone’s death that we need to have sweets???

These were few eye-catching incidents that came to my notice in my stay at the crematorium for 3 hours. There might have been many more situations which I missed or overlooked but I guess these are more than enough to portray the true colour of the society. Cant we do away with such absurd, idiotic rituals?? Cant we control our inquisitiveness and allow people to mourn in peace??

Finally I hope amidst all the chaos, commotion may the souls of the dead people and my grandma rest in peace.

10 comments:

ICEMAN said...

What can I say abt this post.It is even better than the last one.The author is showing his true class with each of his posts and getting better and better.This was a fine take on a very sensitive social aspect and beautifully expressed I must say.Thank you for such wonderful posts.We expect more posts like this in future too.

anindyo said...

what u have written here is very true .. Calcutta needs a better way to dispose of the dead ..... And how can something which is should be so private n sacred for the relatives of the deceased be turned into a mockery by strangers ???? ...Bengali society needs to do away with the age old rituals.... sweet eating after cremating someone.... what joy will that bring..n to whom ?? but who shall start .... ?

Anonymous said...

ds is not the problem of kolkata dis is the shame or you can also say dat dis is our country's ritual......when a dead body is carried by some people have you ever hard the shout they make???if you still have not experiencd the scene then plzz experience dat.......i m sure dat you will be confused by the situation dat are they really going to the crematorium or any weddin party....

Unknown said...

Firstly I want to thank you for highlighting such a fact. Now I want to share with you people about an anecdote that I experienced on 22nd November 2003 the day my aunt( jethima) passed away .I and my brother went to the crematorium to do her last rites. As she didn’t had any child of her own , my brother had to do the all things from ‘ pindi dan ‘ to wearing the white cloth and all those rituals which I don’t want to see someone doing in my worst nightmare.
But what I saw that day was really stranger than the fiction. As she was a matron they put lots of SINDUR and ALTA and having that sindur on your head is really auspicious and good omen for the other matrons. I was watching them having that and soon they started making fuss over it .But above all I should tell you about that woman used to be my aunt’s lawyer .We were about put aunt on that electric chulla, I saw her running and shouting “wait I am hare “. She came within a minute and made a dive onto aunt’s feet and put that alta on her head and did the same thing with the sindur . Sometimes later I found her telling the other woman about the auspiciousness of those things. What would I say? Nightmarish.

Anonymous said...

Most of the facts written in this blog or in the previous comments are very alien and new to me..and definitely shocking..
I think man is drifting away from all signs of humanity..and whoever created the saying- "Curiosity kills the cat.."..I've never seen anyone abide by it..atleast not in this country..Most of us must have seen in news channels,where they interview someone,sad with the demise of a close relative..The questions go like this.."How are you feeling? Tell us something about the person.." Do the viewers really give a damn about that guy if he's not some celebrity?? All the time during this interview,people gather in front of the camera and pose..with huge smiles.. People have forgotten prudence..
One thing i'm familiar with is..the ritual of eating sweets..after a relative's death.. I have no idea how society justifies this act..many say that these rituals have meaning..does this ritual mean that I'm happy someone's dead?? How can people follow these rules blindly when we live in a self-proclaimed modern world?
Indians have a long way to go..that is if they want to move in the right direction towards humanity..
I'm happy that someone writes about all this..i wish everyone would read this..There are some rules society can do away with..i wish we,the youth can take the first few steps towards change..

Shubhajit Saha said...

Once again,a touching post I must say.There are many rituals in our society that seems to have no proper explanation or justification.still,we follow them even today.And speaking of the society,there are various kinds of people.Their thinking may not be in the same wavelength.Afterall, everyone can spell the word HUMANITY correctly,but that doesn't mean all of them possess it.This is the ultimate reality.Hat's off to the author.

Unknown said...

"To die will be an awfully big adventure".
Peter Pan

Throughout the world, death and the rituals that surround it are steeped in taboos. Death is celebrated, embraced and feared. Around death and the dead, cultures put in place diverse restrictions and practices associated with clothing, food and ritual.


but the rituals can be binding and seems to question our conscience....something so sacred..
and here we rare ..destroying the sanctity..

I don't know when we can break the bondage of rituals...the shackles that hold us back...

maybe you've taken the first step...question the tradition...


kudos...

SheDDeR v. 1.0 said...

Nice point Sutirtha.
in wooden funeral pyres, they beat the dead with sticks and rods so the rigor mortis duznt allow the bodies to slip out of the pyre. there are many other weird customs like binding the dead onto the 'khat', taping their fists with agarbatti..etcetera.
it's just a question of what u believe in. if u thnk it's wrong, dnt do it. fuck the world.
good point anyway!
keep the faith!
s.

Anonymous said...

all these idiotic and absurd rituals are the feudal concepts which exist in our "progressive(bullshit)" society which we(gen y...ultra-progressive) follow.....this is the first step taken by sutirtha which shud be complimented by us by raising questions in our own family who follow the same rituals .........these things have absolutely no reln with science and these things are anti-progressive.........sometimes i feel we still are stuck in the ancient feudal age and shamefully boasting ourselves to have entered a modern society.........

Kushal said...

ive been to a cremation before(of my grandfather's),but somehow never observed how sick the society is.awful man...this really sucks!