Catastrophe
Vidhwans
Vidhwans
In Banaras District
there is a village called Bira in which an old, childless
widow used to live. She
was a Gond woman named Bhungi and she didn't
own either a scrap of
land or a house to live in. Her only source of livelihood
was a parching oven. The
village folk customarily have one meal a day of
parched grains, so there
was always a crowd around Bhungi's oven.
Whatever grain she was
paid for parching she would grind or fry and eat it.
She slept in a corner of
the same little shack that sheltered the oven. As soon
as it was light she'd
get up and go out to gather dry leaves from all around to
make her fire. She would
stack the leaves right next to the oven, and after
twelve, light the fire.
But on the days when she had to parch grain for Pandit
Udaybhan Pandey, the
owner of the village, she went to bed hungry. She
was obliged to work
without pay for Pandit Udaybhan Pandey She also had
to fetch water for his
house. And, for this reason, from time to time the oven
was not lit. She lived
in the Pandit's village, therefore he had full authority to
make her do any sort of
odd job. In his opinion if she received food for
working from him, how
could it be considered as work done without pay?
He was doing her a
favour, in fact, by letting her live in the village at all.
It was spring, a day on
which the fresh grain was fried and eaten and given
as a gift. No fire was
lit in the houses Bhungi's oven was being put to good
use today. There was a
crowd worthy of a village fair around her. She had
scarcely opportunity to
draw a breath. Because of the customer's impatience,
squabbles kept breaking
out. Then two servants arrived, each carrying a
heaped basket of grain
from Pandit Udaybhan with the order to parch it right
away. When Bhungi saw
the two baskets she was alarmed. It was already
after twelve and even by
sunset, she would not have time to parch so much
grain. Now she would
have to stay at the oven parching until after dark for
no payment. In despair
she took the two baskets. One of the flunkeys said
menacingly, 'Don't waste
any time or you'll be sorry.'
With this command the
servants went away and Bhungi began to parch the
grain. It's no laughing
matter to parch a whole maund of grain. She had to
keep stopping from the
parching in order to keep the oven fire going. So by
sundown not even half
the work was done. She was afraid Panditji's men
would be coming. She
began to move her hands all the more frantically.
Soon the servants
returned and said, 'Well, is the grain parched?'
Feeling bold, Bhungi
said, 'Can't you see? I'm parching it now.'
'The whole day's gone
and you haven't finished any more grain than this!
Have you been roasting
it or spoiling it? This is completely uncooked!
How's it going to be
used for food? It's the ruin of us! You’ll see what
Panditji does to you for
this.'
The result was that that
night the oven was dug up and Bhungi was left
without a means of
livelihood.
Bhungi now had no means
of support. The villagers suffered a good deal
too from the destruction
of the oven. In many houses even at noon, cooked
cereal was no longer
available. People went to Panditji and asked him to
give the order for the
old woman's oven to be rebuilt and the fire once more
lighted, but he paid no
attention to them. He could not suffer a loss of face.
A few people who wished
her well urged her to move to another village. But
her heart would not
accept this suggestion. She had spent her fifty miserable
years in this village
and she loved every leaf on every tree. Here she had
known the sorrows and
pleasures of life; she could not give it up now in the
last days. The very idea
of moving distressed her. Sorrow in this village was
preferable to happiness
in another.
A month went by. Very
early one morning Pandit Udaybhan, taking his
little band of servants
with him, went out to collect his rents. Now when he
looked toward the old
woman's oven he fell into a violent rage: it was being
made again. Bhungi was
energetically rebuilding it with balls of clay Most
likely she'd spent the
night at this work and wanted to finish it before the sun
was high. She knew that
she was going against the Pandit's wishes, but she
hoped that he had
forgotten his anger by then. But alas, the poor creature had
gown old without growing
wise.
Suddenly Panditji
shouted, 'By whose order?'
Bewildered, Bhungi saw
that he was standing before her.
He demanded once again,
'By whose order are you building it?' In a flight
she said, 'Everybody
said I should build it and so I'm building it.'
'I'll have it smashed
again. 'With this he kicked the oven. The wet clay
collapsed in a heap. He
kicked at the trough again but she ran in front of it
and took the kick in her
side. Rubbing her ribs she said, 'Maharaj, you're not
afraid of anybody but
you ought to fear God. What good does it do you to
ruin me like this! Do
you think gold is going to grow out of this small piece
of land! For your own
good, I'm telling you, don't torment poor people, don't
be the death of me.
'You're not going to
build any oven here again.
'If I don't how am I
going to be able to eat!'
'I'm not responsible for
your belly.'
'But if I do nothing
except chores for you where will I go for food!'
'If you’re going to stay
in the village you'll have to do my chores.
'I'll do them when I've
built my over?. I can't do your work just for the
sake of staying in the
village.
'Then don't, just get
out of the village.
'How can I! I've grown
old in this hut. My in-laws and their grandparents
lived in this same hut.
Except for Yama, king of death, nobody's going to
force me out of it now.
'Excellent, now you're
quoting Scripture!' Pandit Udaybhan said. 'lf you'd
worked hard I might have
let you stay, but after this I won't rest until I've
had you thrown out. ‘To
his attendants he said, 'Go get a pile of leaves right
away and set fire to the
whole thing; we'll show her how to make an oven.
In a moment there was a
tremendous racket. The names leapt towards the
sky, the blaze spread
wildly in all directions till the villagers came clustering
around this mountain of
fire. Hopelessly, Bhungi stood by her oven
watching the
conflagration. Suddenly, with a violent dash, she hurled herself
into the names. They
came running from everywhere but no one had the
courage to go into the
mouth of the blaze. In a matter of seconds her
withered body was
completely consumed.
At that moment the wind
rose with a gust. The liberated flames began to
race toward the east.
There were some peasants' huts near the oven which
were engulfed by the
fierce flames. Fed in this way, the blaze spread even
further. Panditji's barn
was in its path and it pounced upon it. By now the
whole village was in a
panic. They began to band together to put out the fire
but the sprinkle of
water acted like oil on it and the flames kept mounting
higher. Pandit
Udaybhan's splendid mansion was swallowed up; while he
watched, it tossed like
a ship amid wild waves and disappeared in the sea of
fire. The sound of
lamentation that broke out amidst the ashes was even
more pitiful than
Bhungi's grievous cries.
by premchand
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