Read The Weary Generations Online
Authors: Abdullah Hussein
âProbably for officers.'
âIf they told me to bring my horse, I would.'
âAsk your wife to bring it,' someone in the carriage said. âYou will have two bodies to ride then.'
Abdullah ignored the taunt. He pulled a wheat ear from underneath him. âLook,' he cried,' look what I found. The bastards took away somebody's ripe crop and threw it in here.'
Naim quietly took it from Abdullah's hand and rubbed it between his palms. The grains separated, and he blew away the chaff from his hand. âThe odd grain goes with the straw, doesn't it?'
âThe odd grain? What about your whole crop, and mine? Who knows where it is? Thrown into trains like this or eaten by the pigs â who knows?'
âMaybe we too will be eaten by pigs soon,' a morose-faced soldier said.
âStop talking like that. Here,' Naim offered the grains from his palm to Abdullah, âeat them.'
Abdullah reluctantly took a few, leaving the rest for Naim. The wheat kernels were tasteless although slightly bitter, but crushed between strong teeth and mixed with saliva their flesh turned into sweetish milk. The two men's jaws were working in unison like the limbs of soldiers on parade.
âThis turns into pure blood,' Abdullah said after a while.
Naim nodded in agreement.
Swallowing the thick liquid of raw wheat, Abdullah uttered an anonymous oath to the air. Four men playing cards laughed loudly at the very moment that the sick man emitted an agonizing cry, punching himself in the belly. He turned over and began to grind his teeth on strands of dry grass.
âBe patient,' the huge peasant, who had been telling a âtrue story' to his companions, said to him. âThe train is going to stop soon.'
âHow do you know?'
âI know. I have a feeling for these things.'
âSo you can tell whether you are going to be killed or come back alive?'
âStop this idle talk,' another said. âGive the man some water.'
A soldier put his water-filled canteen to the sick man's mouth, but he pulled his face away, letting out a scream of pain.
âHey, don't stand there looking at him like donkeys. Stop the train.'
âWhy stop the train? You want to throw him out?'
âYes, yes,' others agreed with the first man. âPull the chain.'
âThe chain?'
âYes, the chain. I have heard there is a chain and if you pull it the train stops.'
The story-teller took the lantern off its hook and went around the carriage looking up and down the walls. Many others followed him. Completing the round, he returned to announce: âThere is no chain.'
âThis is a goods train,' a quiet-looking young boy said. â Not for people. Goods have no use for chains, don't you see?'
The sick man had turned over on his back and lay straight, partially calmed, his groans now reduced to soft moans. After about a half-hour the train stopped. The soldiers congregated round the open door.
âWhat station is it?' They asked the usual question.
âWhy do you ask which station it is? What does it matter?' the sad-faced men said.
âI would like to know,' the questioner said.
âYou are not leaving the train here or anywhere. You're staying on it.'
âSo?'
âSo when your station comes you'll be taken off. That's it.'
âOi, why are you blocking the door?' the sick man's attendant said. âClear a way, let the air come in.'
No one moved from the door. Abdullah got up and poked his elbow in the ribs of a man standing in the door. âGet away. Let me out.' He jumped down. Several others followed him.
It was a small rural station. A dim lantern hung by the single door of the station building. Soldiers were jumping out of all the carriages on to soft, slightly damp earth that smelled freshly of rain. The steam engine, after emitting a couple of sharp hissing puffs, had fallen silent. They knew there was to be a âcross' there, and they were sauntering up and down the station. A sudden noise arose from a carriage: âKill it. Kill it.' Shortly afterwards a soldier emerged with a small snake hanging by his bayonet. Everyone examined it and expressed his opinion: âVery poisonous. Full of venom.' The man walked down the station and stopped in front of a carriage.
âHere, Bhopalis,' he said, offering them the snake at the point of the bayonet. âA gift for you from Balochis.'
Someone from that carriage fetched the lantern to the door. After a moment's silence, there was laughter from the men. The man in the carriage knocked the dead snake off the bayonet with a kick of his boot and went back in.
âWhat regiment is this?' asked Abdullah.
âNinth Bhopalis,' Naim said.
They walked on. Machine-gun barrels poked out of the MG Detachment carriages in their cloth covers. Soldiers, their legs sprawled
across the barrels, slept. Next came the stretcher-bearers' carriage, where they sat talking against the stacked-up stretchers. The last ones were horse carriages. The passenger train coming from the opposite direction thundered down and passed without stopping, whistling furiously. Only a few of its carriages were lit, their ceiling fans whirring. In them the passengers were sitting up, reading newspapers or just looking out. A woman in a first-class compartment stood, bent over in the window with her head and naked shoulders out, looking at nothing. Only one fat man, who seemed to be sucking something, looked vaguely astonished to see a goods train full of soldiers in uniforms.
âDid you see her?' Abdullah asked afterwards.
âWho?'
âThe woman.'
Naim quietly smiled.
âThere was a woman in the train, I swear.'
âYes,' Naim said.
They were unrolling their beds. The story-teller, his hand cupping his ear in the usual village-singer fashion, was singing the legend of Heer. As the train started to roll once again, the men began gradually, in the small hours, to fall asleep.
At Karachi harbour they boarded HMS
Weighmouth.
Naim's company was on the upper deck while the machine-gun detachment and half of the Bhopali Brigade were accommodated lower down. Most of the peasant soldiers quickly fell victim to seasickness and spent their days sucking on lemons and throwing up. Their first stop came at Aden. They stopped for twenty-four hours while shiploads of soldiers kept arriving from other Indian ports. Out of Aden, they became part of an armada of thirty-five ships. In the Red Sea they were joined by three battleships. Once they got over the sickness the peasants, coming from the water-starved plains, were wonderstruck at the sight of the sea. The limitless expanse of water that altered its colour with changes in the sky overhead, the seagulls that dived into it, the fishes of all colours that broke the surface and sparkled in the sun, the movement of water that went on and on until it met the horizon, and floating on this the dozens of ships, with their muffled hooters, each ship fifty times bigger than the village they had come from, ships like cities â all this excited and enthralled them and drove thoughts of war from their minds. But soon the voyage ended. At Port Said they disembarked and boarded railway trains that took them to Cairo. They encamped at Heliopolis Race Course outside the city. On one side were low yellow and grey stone hills on which goats roamed delicately under a naked sun, on
the other was spread out the city, its roads traversed by bedouin driving their donkey- and camel-carts, some selling vegetables, fruit and milk. On another side could be seen a desert landscape. On the tinder-dry boulders of the hills and the shimmering cityscape, and upon the tired and tense faces of the soldiers too, a fierce sun rose each morning in full blaze, reminding the plains Indians of home. Once again, there were parades and more parades.
The company, having fallen in a half hour before, stood at ease awaiting further orders. Eventually, Captain Maclean appeared in the middle distance on a horse. The havaldar shouted âAttention!' The soldiers shouldered their rifles and put out their chests to stand erect. The captain took two rounds of the company on his splendid Arab horse.
âI once had a horse like that one,' Abdullah whispered. âIt swelled up with bad wind and died.'
âKeep quiet,' Naim whispered back.
The captain had some difficulty controlling his mount. Finally able to calm it down, he addressed the company.
âMen, because of certain circumstances we have to stay here a few more days. I trust that we shall soon be on the battlefront. Keep yourselves fit and fresh. And you need not worry about your folk back home, they are being well looked after by the government.'
Through bared teeth, an angry sound came from the horse as it reared up on its hind legs. The captain, trying at the same time to control the horse and slip his hand back into the white glove that he had earlier taken off, dropped the glove to the ground. The havaldar ran to pick it up and hand it to the captain.
âCompany, route-march,' came the shout from the havaldar's red face.
âI would fix that animal in a day if it was under me,' the soldier standing next to Abdullah said while Abdullah was saying to Naim, âIt is sister-fucking hotter here than at home.'
Route-marching, they crossed a stretch of sand and came to an oasis. A farmer, tilling a tiny area of land, stopped to look at them.
âDoes it ever rain here, or is its piss quite enough for the crop?' a soldier asked, pointing to the plough-camel that cast a crooked silhouette against a blinding background.
Seeing the soldiers laugh, the Egyptian farmer smiled broadly, showing a gap where his front teeth once were.
âNo talking,' shouted the havaldar.
âSwine,' a soldier said under his breath.
They returned from the route-march at noon. Abdullah took off his
sweat-soaked shirt and flung it to the ground.
âIt's four days since I last had a bath.'
A Punjabi soldier laughed bitterly. âMy nose is full of sand.'
âHow do you breathe?' Abdullah asked him. âThrough my arse,' the soldier replied.
A Pathan soldier, spreading his shirt out to dry in the sun, said to him, âCome and lie down here, you fill the tent with foul smell.'
âThe officers get water to bathe every day,' someone said.
âThey have to, because they only wipe their arses with newspaper,' said the Pathan.
They removed their clothes down to their underwear and lay down to smoke cigarettes.
Next morning, Naim was called up before the Brigade Major. He entered the major's office, a green canvas tent that housed the tables and other paraphernalia of the major and his havaldar clerk.
âI see that you are educated,' the major said to Naim.
âI have passed senior Cambridge, sir.'
âFrom where?
âSt Xavier, Calcutta.'
âHad any machine-gun training?'
âNo, sir.'
âWell, you will. I am promoting you to the rank of lance naik. Report to the section commander, MG Detachment.'
From Cairo, after six days, they were moved by train to Alexandria, where they did little else but route-march for a further few days before once again embarking on HMS
Weighmouth.
Finally they all had a bath aboard the ship, which was now part of a reduced armada of twenty vessels. The Bhopalis were left behind. An English battalion was travelling with them on the ship. One sunny day, amid much hooting and whistling, their ship dropped anchor at Marseille. Cigarette-smoking men and women in bright dresses welcomed the English officers by kissing them on the cheeks, the officers in turn asking them amid loud cheers, âWe are not too late, are we?' They were followed from the ship by the officers commanding the Indian troops: Captain Maclean, Captain Asher, Lieutenant Browning. The sun's pale rays out of the French sky slithered down the high brows and gold hair of the white officers whose nervous chins and blue-grey eyes shone with youthful life and health. These were the young men, some of them mere boys, for whom love burned eternally in many bosoms and whose rings gleamed many a year on young women's fingers. Within a few months they would all be dead, killed or reported missing in action.
âLes Indiens,' said the French to each other, pointing to the dark soldiers.
The 3rd machine-gun section was made up of two guns, ammunition, twelve mules, sixteen soldiers, Lance Naik Naim, Havaldar Thakur Das and Section Commander McGregor.
âThe water here,' said Thakur Das, head thrown back and mouth pressed to the small round canteen, âis sweet. And the food,' offering the canteen to Naim, âis powerful.'
âPowerful?' Naim asked with a smile.
âYes,' said Thakur Das. âMakes blood in the veins. And the women.'
âThey make blood in the veins too?'
âHa ha ha!'
After weeks of travelling in ships and trains and living in grey, sunbaked lands, the dark, fertile earth and green vistas of France, its brightly dressed women and men who raised their hats in greeting to the troops, had brightened up the soldiers' mood, despite the tiredness in their limbs.
âWe are going to get new ammunition tomorrow,' Thakur Das remarked.
âWhat kind of new?' Naim asked.
âNumber seven bullet.'
âWhat happens to number six?'
âRejected. Condum. Look,' he took a bullet from his belt, âyou see, this is pointed. Number seven will be flat in the front.'
âWhat difference will it make?'
Thakur Das paused for thought for a long moment, revealing his ignorance, before answering, âListen, this one goes like this,' he made an arc in the air with the bullet in his hand. âThe new one goes straight as an arrow.'
âWhat's the advantage?'
Thakur Das was beginning to show signs of irritation at Naim's questioning. He paused again. âThe one that makes an arc hits nearer than that which goes straight.'
Naim wasn't convinced by the argument but kept his counsel.