Personal Experience
 |
Personal Experience
I
never set foot in Bangladesh.
Still, I was there.
By Jon Letman
|
If you asked me if I've
ever been to Bangladesh, it would be easy to say "no," but I will answer "yes."
Indeed, I have been to Bangladesh.
Okay, so it was only a
45-minute stop-over on a flight from Singapore to Kathmandu, but those 45
minutes and the hour of flying time above that water-logged patchwork of green
rice paddies sticks in my mind like Chittagong mud.
When I first saw
Bangladesh from the plane window, I nodded and thought, "So that's why this is
the land of endemic flooding." As far as I could see, a mosaic of fields was
crisscrossed, bisected and dissected by ribbons of silver waterways — the rivers
that flow from the glaciers of Tibet and the Himalayas, snaking through Sikkim
and Nepal, tumbling over rocks in Bhutan and Meghalaya, weaving braids of water
across the highlands before finally emptying their silty, muddy contents into
the Bay of Bengal.
The land was flat as a
chapatti and porous as a sponge. It seemed an incredibly cruel joke to squeeze
131 million people into a flood plain slightly smaller than Iowa. But where were
all the people in the world's eighth most populous nation? From my window I saw
no signs of habitation. No cars, no buses, no houses, no schools and no
hospitals. I saw no men, no mosques, no roads nor rails. Overpopulation? It
looked like pre-history.
But then we flew over a
small hamlet, and another and another. They were collections of squat mud red
buildings huddled together, surrounded by the verdant earth and everywhere
flowing water. And then a human form could be seen, a child running along a
small track, thin and straight as string. The small boy was pushing a large ring
the size of a hula hoop with a stick, guiding it as he ran. No one else was in
sight in this flat green world of rivers and rivulets, banana patches and palm
trees; just one boy alone running across the floodplain on that hazy morning in
May before the monsoon.
Beyond this pastoral scene
rose Dhaka, the capital and a home to some 9 million people. Viewed from the
plane, the city appeared literally out of nowhere, as if it had sprouted from
the earth, a weedy jumble of concrete and steel, monstrous and imposing, as tall
as the countryside was flat. From the air Dhaka gave the impression that once
entered, one would be swallowed up, escape impossible.
Landing at Zia
International, the Singapore Airlines jumbo jet came to a halt, and three
security guards, men in black berets with razor-thin moustaches and machine guns
slung over their shoulders, entered the cabin. And then, in a scene reminiscent
of the railways of India, the sweepers came in. Scraggily thin women, dressed in
pink and green cotton saris, these small hunched figures with faces hidden swept
the floor of the airplane, removing bits of rubbish from beneath the passenger's
feet. They worked quickly and in silence and were gone as fast as they had
appeared.

We never had the chance to
leave the plane. I never made it onto the tarmac, let alone into the terminal. I
never met the crush and crowds of Dhaka, nor did I hear the call to prayer from
the minaret of Baitull Mukarram. There was no time to stroll in the clouds of
dust raised by the masses in old Dhaka.
I was only there long
enough to see a lone boy rolling his hoop down the muddy track, and the sweepers
clean our plane, which minutes later would roar into the sky, crossing the
alluvial plain where the Ganges and Brahmaputra rivers flow like arteries
through the flat green land of Bangladesh, beating with life.
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