The Hump On The Road
The
Hump On The Road
I'm terrible with dates. While I need to shovel loads of fish down my gullet to simply remember even my date of birth, however the one date which is firmly etched in my memory is the 1st of January 1978.
Leaving the club post a hearty dosa breakfast, still in my formal dinner attire, I rode into Panniar just in time for my morning muster at 7 a.m. As the workers trickled in, they were assigned their work for the day and headed off to the allocated fields. Around 0800 Hrs, by which time normally all the workers should have reported for work, my conductor Mr Balia (Incidentally NEVER Balia – always Mr Balia) remarked that he found it rather strange that not a single worker from the No.5 line had come in for work. Odd indeed. So I got on to my bike and heading off towards the lines. Nearing the lines I noticed a whole lot of workers and kids sitting on the roofs of their houses. Seeing me they started shouting that I shouldn't come any further since there was an elephant sitting in the middle of road.
Did a quick about turn and drove up instead
to the main office which was on the hillock opposite the No.5 lines, from where
I could also sight the road leading up to the lines. Sure enough, there
it was - this huge fellow sprawled across the road with his massive head
slightly raised off the ground, resting on his tusks. On being asked, the
workers shouted back that he had been there since midnight in exactly the same
position. As to why everyone was perched on their roof tops, was told
that they were scared to come down. By which time Mr Balia having also
arrived on the scene, explained to me that the elephant on the road was the
same one which had been visiting the lines regularly to raid their kitchen
garden plots for banana and sugar cane which the workers had planted.
Whenever the workers would hear or see him heading their way they would
scramble up on to the roof and would start banging on the CI sheets to drive
the fellow away from their homes.
This particular time, probably fed up of being chased off all the time and being robbed off the juicy cane, the tusker had trumpeted and raising his trunk to its full height, had charged towards the lines and had likely tripped and fallen over to end up sitting on the road in the position he was in. In all the pandemonium and egged on by Mr Balia, one of the workers finally picked up courage, clambered down from the roof and approached the elephant with a large rock in his hand, got close enough and threw the rock which simply bounced off the elephants back with not so much as a twitch from the mastodon. That gave all the others, including me, the guts to approach the fellow. Which is when we saw the high tension cable firmly lodged, running across through his mouth above his lower lip and him obviously dead!
By this time Rajah Pooviah (red arrow) who was the acting Superintendent since Abid was away on leave, had also arrived on the scene.
After much discussion we concluded that when the big fellow charged the lines, his trunk which was very high up in the air, had probably hit the electric cable dragging it into his mouth. And there it stayed with the electric poles on either side of the sagging cable bent inwards and leaning towards our poor dead pachyderm.The matter being reported to the Divisional Forest Officer resulted in almost all the government functionaries in the district descending upon Panniar leading to two days of a merry-go-round with Rajah being threatened with arrest for having wilfully electrocuted the elephant. Two days of tension before the DFO finally accepted that the death was the result of an accident. Which led to a formal permission from the district authorities to the estate management to dispose of the carcass.
Ever tried to dispose off a 4 ton carcass? Easier said than done I assure you. 600 litres of diesel was brought in from the factory and poured over the poor fellow and from a very safe distance a burning rag was tossed on. Whoosh! A cloud of dense black smoke and a massive flame which died away as quickly as it had erupted. The smoke having cleared we saw that, barring only the hair on the elephants hide which had disappeared, the carcass itself was totally unaffected. After much deliberation and logistical planning a massive pit was dug across the road just behind the carcass. The estate tractor fitted with a winch cable and our two lorries were pressed into service to pull the elephant, dragging it into the pit. Following which the workers paid their respects to the tusker and conducted a Puja before the grave was covered over, leaving a massive hump in the middle of the road. Which mound, as the days went by, started settling down.
Fast forward to 2018. I had to visit Munnar for some work with KDHP and decided to pay a visit to my first estate. Went up to the office and looked down into the valley. Yup! Not quite as prominent as when we'd buried the hapless soul, but there it was – the hump in the middle of the road!





Always admired these gentle giants. So tragic for him. Long time no posts??
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