I came
across a very interesting bit of news today. It appears that the
residents of an inner-Sydney suburb in Australia were quite shocked
and startled Yesterday morning, to see two water buffaloes racing
down the city streets over a distance of about 2 Km. The pedestrians,
disbelieving, what they were seeing, just stood still, while car
drivers scurried to get out of the way.
Reuters
reports that the two buffaloes looked agitated, having escaped from a
city park, where an advertisement was being filmed, in which they
were supposed to play a role. Firefighters rushed to the scene and
finally rounded the animals using ladders and firefighting gear to
corral the animals into a makeshift pen, while live tweeting the
operation. The operation was over when at the end handlers from the
film set took the animals away.
This
news immediately connected my mind to some of my childhood memories,
when such encounters with buffaloes used to be extremely common. The
first incidence that came to my mind was, when my father was badly
injured in an encounter with a band of buffaloes. My father had a 250
CC AJS make motorbike, on which he used go around the city. Once,
when he was riding back to the house with my mother on the pillion
seat, he saw a large herd of shining black buffaloes further on the
road. They perhaps had just finished their bath in the river and were
returning to their pen happily. Normally, water Buffaloes are very
docile animals and just continue on their way silently. That day
however, they were not in such happy state of mind and there was some
sort commotion with the result that the herd suddenly changed gear
from slow walk to a canter. My parents were absolutely dumbfounded
and scared as these huge beasts ran ahead barely brushing past them.
Mean while, as the confusion reigned supreme, one highly agitated
buffalo hit the handlebar of the motorbike and my father and mother
both fell down. Luckily the cow (or buffalo) boy arrived at the spot
and managed to retrieve the situation with my father getting heavy
bruises. Luckily my mother escaped unhurt.
Water
Buffalo is always considered as almost the ultimate standard of
laziness and stupidity for no plausible reason. Buffalo milk and
products made from milk, form a significant portion of our daily
diet. Yet the source from where we get this earthly elixir, or a
water buffalo, is often scorned, slighted and often taunted. In
Indian villages or even in towns, a herd of Buffalos quietly crossing
a road or walking along it, is a very common sight. In the first few
years, after I had started my business, I used to move around on my
Lambretta scooter in the small by lanes of Pune city, where most of
my suppliers were located. I can still remember one narrow patch of
road, where I used to encounter regularly, herds of even 100
buffaloes. This patch of road was very near the river and the owners
took their Buffaloes for a wash through here. Those days, there were
many buffalo pens within the city itself and the pen owners very
casually drove their herds on the streets, without bothering at all
about the traffic. On one day, I encountered one such herd on the
narrowest part of this street. I had no choice but to park my scooter
on one side of the street as scores of black beasts, their freshly
washed black skins shining in the late morning sun brushed past me.
It must have taken that entire herd about 5 minutes to pass me.
However for me, those harrowing 5 minutes had turned into hours. In
the later years though, the local Government decided to shift all
buffalo pens from the city to outside of the city limits and this
most weird kind of street menace, disappeared from the Pune city
streets forever.
My
worst encounter with a buffalo happened long time ago. I had gone
some place with a grandmother of mine. My grandma wanted to go to a
temple and asked me to come along. As we were walking along, we saw
one huge black beast suspiciously looking at us. My grandmother was
scared and told me that we should quickly move to the side and keep
quiet. I however did not agree and continued walking with much
bravado. Withing next few seconds, this beast suddenly charged
towards me and before I knew what was happening, I found myself
lifted in air at least a couple of feet. My grandmother shouted and
some bystanders ran for help. Luckily for me the beast just dropped
me back on ground and disappeared. I was just plain lucky that day or
otherwise I would have found myself lying on roadside with few bones
broken.
Ever
since that day, though I very much cherish my glass of milk, I
studiously avoid any kind of contact with buffaloes of any type or
kind. It is said that it would be hard to find another four legged
creature, as dovish or pacifist as a buffalo. In south east Asia,
water Buffaloes are used even for ploughing fields and for pulling
carts. Yet, whatever people may say, most of us feel scared, when we
come across a herd. I am no exception.
27th
March 2014
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