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20 YEARS AFTER 1984
The little boy with spiky
hair who could not speak.
The 20th anniversary of the anti-Sikh riots
of 1984 is approaching.
The highest riot death toll since Partition, not
a single conviction, 1984 remains India's forgotten
genocide.
Thirty-six hours after more than 300 Sikhs in that
basti had been lynched, burnt and flung down from
upper floors in the presence of their families,
pushing back the women and children who rushed to
embrace the targeted men, Delhi police had found
one bus to bring out the terrorised survivors from
their looted homes with just their clothes on, to
the police grounds.
A 12-year-old boy sat alone apart from his kin,
on a large stone, brooding, head held firm on a
straight spine. The knot of his kesh had been lopped
off but the remaining hair, glued spiny stiff and
erect in a bunch, proclaimed his continuing identity.
``He has not spoken a word since he saw his father
and uncle being burnt to death and flung down from
first floor,'' a relative informs.
A desultory conversation begins. A middle-aged sardarni,
still dreaming of the gory killing of her husband,
softly asks, ``Is it possible to rescue my brother-in-law?
He is all burnt but there is still some breath in
him. He is sitting in a chair for the last 40 hours.''
The woman withdraws into herself.
I ask for a guide to locate the house. A polio-affected
youth moves closer. ``I will. The police left behind
my wife. Her thigh and shoulder were scorched as
she threw herself on my eldest brother when they
set him on fire live. She is mute and young, childlike
really...''
An athletic sardar, kesh cut, clean-shaven, accompanies
me. Few hours ago, like many Sikhs in that colony,
he had paid several hundred rupees to a barber to
raze an integral part of his being. Since October
31, `kesh' marked not a glorious inheritance but
a victim to be torched alive.
With the doctor's team and first-aid, we enter the
colony and pause by a wounded elderly man lying
on a cot. He would need an ambulance. We do not
have one. ``Now you come,'' screams a woman. ``After
bodies have been thrown in the nullahs.'' A Sikh
grabs my arm, ``Curfew laga dijiye." Our guide sprints
into a lane. Mounds of junk placed across the road
every few yards, the lynchers' barricades to prevent
victims escaping in their taxis. The young doctors
trail. The guide breaks into a run and leaps over
front steps of a house. ``Anyone there?'' I call
out a few times, then step in.
The house had been looted clean, no furniture, no
utensils, no clothes. ``There is no one inside,
I checked thoroughly,'' he says. Depressed, we stand
still in the stark living room. A mob of 200 men
and women has arched around the house while we are
inside. They watch us silently. ``What have you
done with him?'' I yell. ``Didn't burning him satisfy
you? His bhabhi told me that Dilbara Singh is sitting
in a chair. Where have you hidden him?'' `
`Oh Dilbara Singh!'' a man steps up saucily. ``Come
here. This pile of ashes, that's him. His wife broke
up the chair and gave him a live funeral, with flowers
and everything.'' he grins wickedly.
The chowk is now blocked by a mob of 150. The news
of a rescue team has travelled. I notice brass knuckles
on a fist and cycle chain in a hand and discover
that our guide is missing.``Where is the man who
came with us?,'' I yell.``He was with us 2 minutes
ago. What have you done with him?''
An armed sub-inspector comes running. ``He is safe.
He was recognised. He ran for his life. He asked
me to inform you.'' The officer was the sole policeman
on duty for 48 hours.
The sun begins to set. Someone hails us. An elderly
thick-set sardar in a wheelchair pushed by two youngsters.
``Take me out please,'' the sardar pleads. We walk
away but a few steps later, I abruptly halt. The
disabled Sikh is not safe, he's in danger. We turn
and stride to the disabled man. ``Come,'' we say.
But the three young men have their hands firm on
his wheelchair. ``We'll take him. We are with Nandita
Haksar.'' I believe them only after sighting Nandita
300 meters away.
That evening I hitch a ride in a press car. ``Fifty-nine
Hindus killed, some pulled in gurdwaras.'' they
tell me. ``But we are not printing that.''.
Police Commissioner Tandon refuses to see the press.
PRO Panwar sniggers, ``Hundreds killed in one basti?
How is it possible to burn people alive? We have
not received any complaints.''
Reporters decide to gatecrash Tandon's office. ``Please
order shoot at sight." He steps back into the unlit
shield of his chamber. His subordinates and guards
block the door.
Next day, I visit the morgue. A corpse wrapped in
a bloodstained brilliant white sheet is laid outside
the walled compound, in front of the gate. Not a
soul around. I ask a policeman if I can pay for
a few decent funerals.
In the compound, to my left, is an open shed with
hundreds of bloated corpses stacked 6-7 deep like
logs. In front of me, scores of rotting bodies heaped
in a truck. Nearby a dump of swollen, decaying remains
of men. Disconnected tufts of hair strewn around.
The policeman returns, asks me to come over. I take
a few steps over the bunches of kesh littering the
compound and blown around my feet.
Outside, I stand for a while with an anonymous,
unaccompanied body.
http://www.indianexpress.com/full_story.php?content_id=57863#
Please do not forget the SIKH LOBBY DAY on 11 November
2004 at the UK Houses of Parliament. <
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