KRISHNA'S MANDIR
The editors at ECS Magazine asked me to write about the Krishna Temple, and my experience there during the earthquake. This is what I wrote for the December 2016 issue.
KRISHNA'S MANDIR
Sushma Joshi
Lying on the bed of the B and B Hospital, I
tried to explain to people what had happened to me in the Patan Durbar Square
on the day of the earthquake. But try as I may, I didn’t know what had happened
to me. “The Krishna Temple fell on her,” my mother said, by way of explanation.
My nose and ears was stuffed full of the dry, dank smell of centuries old dust,
making me feel I was encased in burial and death. My head was full of wounds
and caked with blood. Doctors and nurses, breezing in and out and injected me
with antibiotics via the IV drip, didn’t seem to think the wounds needed
cleaning. They said airily: “Oh, don’t worry, that will fall out in a few
days.” But in those few days, I slept with a giant ball of hair full of dust.
The smell of decomposing blood got stronger as the days passed. At night, I
would awake with the feeling that something very heavy was pressing down upon
me, making it difficult for me to breathe. The women in my family finally found
a pair of scissors and cut the hair off.
My father handed me The Kathmandu Post, and I saw that in fact the Krishna Temple had not fallen on top of
me: the photograph showed the temple standing, intact, in the background, but
another temple next to it was gone, like an uprooted tooth. It was not until I
returned to my house, eighteen days later, and a friend of mine showed me a
photograph she had taken of the Square. The Mangal Hiti water complex was
buried in the detritus of the small pati that had collapsed on top of it. So
that, I thought, was what had buried me. I felt relieved to see the Krishna
Temple, where I’d often walked around the stone balustrades, was intact.
The Krishna Temple remains etched in my
memory of that day, if only because something odd crossed my mind as I looked
at it just a few seconds before the earthquake. I had stood beneath the Krishna
Temple, and noticed that somebody had painted the stone cornices of the temple
with gilded paint. I felt annoyed with what in hindsight appears to be uncharacteristic
pessimism—who, I thought, had done that? This was a historical structure made
of carved stone, and a glitzy paint of this nature showed a lack of historical
and archaeological knowledge. Almost, I thought, as if the gilt paint was a way
to mark the temple from some other location, from which it could be targeted.
Then, as I looked at this gilded cornice, this very un-Nepali fear crossed my
mind:
What if a terrorist attack is about to
occur in this place?
Reader, I have no idea why that fear
crossed my mind in that specific instance. But it did. As you will agree, this
is a very unusual fear for a Nepali, since we don’t have terrorist attacks on
religious places, as other countries do. Almost with reluctance, I took those
steps towards the water complex. Then, of course, the quake occurred.
I have no idea why the very specific sense
of unease arose in me in that instance. Talking to people later, it occurred to
me that the quake was already in motion when I started to move towards the
stairs—in other words, I must have felt the pre-quake, but it did not register
consciously.
Perhaps Krishna gives precognition to his
devotees. Whatever it was, it was clear the few seconds I spent lingering under
the eaves of the temple made the difference between my life and death-a few
seconds earlier, and I would be dead under the weight of the huge beams that
fell on my ankle instead. As it was, I fell neatly on a broad section of the
stairways, where the wooden beams made a little shelter for me, protecting me
from the debris. This position also made it easy for my rescuers to pull me
out.
It has taken me multiple operations and
eighteen months for me to be back on my feet again. When I take my elbow crutch
and go out for a walk towards a different Krishna Temple, I noticed how the
people would react to me. First, the babies held by their mothers who turned
and whose expressions change when they catch sight of me. Babies know
intuitively when somebody has been hurt—after all, the boundaries between their
own bodies and those of the other is still unclear, and for them, the hurt of
someone else is the same as being hurt themselves. Humans are born with
empathy, and this has been nowhere more apparent than in my walks, when I see
the face of baby change from joy to an existential sadness when they see me.
The moment I see the facial expression of a baby change from total happiness to
sudden dismay, it reminds me of the Buddha and the moment he learnt about
illness, aging and death. And this, I think, is also the reason why the baby
Krishna is so revered: because at that age, there is no hatred and no fear,
only love for the other.
Then there are the toddlers, who at two or
three know something is wrong when they see me with the stick. “Oo!” they say,
pointing. “What is that?” They are not saddened like the babies, but they are
not going to walk past ignoring my injury either. The answer depends upon the
diplomatic skill of the mother, who may try to hurry the child through,
pretending to ignore what he or she has just seen. Other mothers are more kind,
and will say: “Oh, didi has been hurt, see. She needs a stick to walk.” Often
they will smile at me, teaching the child the all important lesson: “look, this
is not so bad. She just needs a bit of support now.”
And then the human race starts to get
darker as they head towards teenagehood. One day I heard hysterical laughter
behind me and turned: a girl dressed in all black, in the manner of Angelina
Jolie, could not control her laughter at the sight of me and my elbow crutch.
Her laughter was so uncontrolled her boyfriend, embarrassed by her cruelty,
separated himself from her and started to walk on the other side of the road.
The teenager, seemingly oblivious to the ravages of time awaiting her pretty
body--operations, broken bones, cancers and hospitalization—pulled out a mirror
and checked her beautiful face, before being on her pretty way. There was
nothing Radha-Krishna about this encounter, although in the height of her
beauty this young woman should have reminded us about the beauty of love.
Instead, she made me think about the cruelty of teenagers, and she made me
wonder what it was about our society that turned loving babies into these
monstrous beings.
Another day, I was minding my own business,
walking with a bag of butter I had managed to buy after my first long trip to
the dairy, when I saw two men being disgorged from a long distance bus. The
men, big strapping young men with the face of those from the far or mid-west,
then stared at me and my crutch with unabashed contempt, and made some sneering
sounds. I looked back at them, amazed at their handsome oafishness. Did these
men not know how dumb they looked, harassing a woman with an elbow crutch? But
they seemed quite oblivious to how mean and cruel they looked. It occurred to
me that where they came from, sneering at a woman with a disability was
probably the height of manliness, and something that bolstered their status and
prestige. I glared at the man, but he only looked back at me with the most
startling emotion of all—a hint of hatred. They were only doing what had been
taught to them by a patriarchal Hinduism. That day I got a taste of what it
feels like to be a woman in a different part of my own country—the far-west, or
the mid-west, where women are still treated like animals if they ever have the
misfortune to ever need a walking aid. And this, I realize, is what is wrong
with Hinduism, despite all the love Krishna tells us is in our culture: unlike
the Christians, we never made a real effort to address disability, and to teach
people that these misfortunes can befall anyone. Having a sports injury is a
normal everyday part of life in America: even the worst behaved person in
America would not deliberately target those with disabilities. And yet, in Nepal,
it is obviously still something that we have not learnt to be practical about,
and deal with in a compassionate manner.
I do not want to blame Hinduism for
everything. If so, I would also have to blame it for the outpouring of love and
concern that people heaped on me the first few days I was able to walk again.
Strangers were stopping me on the streets to ask me what happened to me, and
how glad they were that I was walking again. One day, my mother and I went out
for a walk and a gentleman stopped me, said how he was in his seventies and
could almost be my father, how his own daughter had suffered in the same manner
and how she had finally recovered and gone to Australia, and how I should not
stop doing physiotherapy. “Hai baba, don’t stop physiotherapy hai,” he said,
before being on his way. Then a farmer carrying straw on his bicyle asked me if
I was now fine, almost as if he knew me, then more people started to stop me on
the way. “Humanity,” my mother said to me, using the English word by way of explanation,
and making me cry.
A few days ago, I had that glorious moment
when I realized I could stand up by myself and do a slow pivot around the
vegetable market. Dazzled by the sudden freedom and the colors of the market, I
took out my cellphone and was in the process of doing a 360 degree shot around
the market when I heard this little voice say: “What is this?” It was a boy
about ten, the mischievous Krishna age, and he was pointing to my elbow crutch.
Caught up in my photography, I tried to shake him off. In that voice you use to
two year olds, I said: “Oh, it’s a stick.” When I looked down after my photograph was done, he was
gone. Then I realized how I’d missed the opportunity: here was a little boy who
was genuinely interested and asking me, “What happened to you? Are you okay?”
And instead of giving him the answer he deserved, I’d brushed him off, much
like the mothers who hurried their toddlers past me, muttering “Lets go.” I had
missed an opportunity. To tell him that I was injured, but was now getting
better. And that this stick was an implement that helped me to be strong and
helped me to balance on my feet. And that yes, it could happen to him too, in
the future, but that he shouldn’t worry, because when a human being falls down,
the whole of humanity picks him or her up, and makes them walk again.
For those of you who can't get the hard copy of the magazine, here is ECS Magazine's table of contents:
http://ecs.com.np/issue/table-of-contents/188
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