Buddha's Orphans by Samrat Upadhyay
Author:Samrat Upadhyay
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Part III
* * *
A Woman Grieving
FROM THE MOMENT she got up in the morning to when she went to bed, Nilu felt a weight clamped to her chest; sometimes it moved up and down or migrated to the top of her head, making her vision cloudy, and she felt disoriented. When she told Raja about these experiences, he waved his hand dismissively. âThatâs all you talk about these days. Donât you have anything else to say? Iâm so sick and tired of hearing about how your world has gone dark. Fed up! I canât listen to it anymore.â
Thatâs how heâd become over the past few weeksâquick to anger, callous about Niluâs feelings one moment, then apologetic and weepy the next. In sharp contrast to their gloom, the newspapers were filled with celebratory headlines. No one had expected King B to cave in so readily. Heâd retreated! Heâd given up! Well, not exactly, some pointed out. He was still the king, although only ceremonially, like the British crown. Did you forget the sacrifice we had to go through? A few hundred killed in the process, gunned down by the police and the army. But the losses suffered by those who risked themselves as protesters were accompanied by several tragic accidental deaths: a boy in Biratnagar was trampled to death by a herd of cows barreling away from agitators who in turn were escaping the police; a diphtheria-stricken girl with a swollen neck had passed away in Bir Hospital when all the doctors left their posts to join a burgeoning rally.
SomeoneâNilu didnât remember who, because everything had turned blurry and weepyâsuggested that Nilu and Raja petition the government to declare their son a martyr. This advice was given during the grieving period, well after Maitreyaâs small bony body had turned to ash on the filthy banks of the Bagmati River. Martyr. âHad it not been for that julus, nothing would have happened to Maitreya,â the man who suggested it continued, softly, patiently, as one would talk to dumbfounded parents who were, understandably, incapable of clear thinking. âMaybe thatâs what God had in mind, to sacrifice this poor boy for the good of us all.â
His words reminded Nilu of one of the Christian prophetsâAbraham?âwho had been willing to sacrifice his son like a lamb, to please his God.
âEvery single person who died in the past few months is a martyr,â said one of Rajaâs colleagues, emphatically, angrily.
Nilu nodded; Raja nodded. But what would the label martyr do? How would it change anything? But she was too weak to raise this question, didnât want to ask it. She looked at Raja, who, head lowered, was staring at his lap.
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