26/11 and a True Story

Today is the twenty sixth day of November. I shall remember this day to my grave. Probably, many other Mumbaikars would do the same. This is one of the darkest days in the history of Mumbai and for me this is the scariest day of my life. This day gives me shivers even nine years later.

 

464990-26-11-attack

26th November 2008 started like any other day. In the morning Mumbaikars had no idea what was lurking in the shoreline of this maximum city. My Hubby D left for office as usual.  I was six months pregnant then. When he left in the morning I like any other Mumbaikar was unaware that simultaneously a group of armed men were also sailing towards Mumbai to launch the deadliest of all attacks.

In the afternoon I went to the market and bought Hilsa fish. November is not really the season for Hilsa but I was having a hormone induced craving for Hilsa therefore under compulsion I bought some heavily priced frozen Hilsa from Hypercity. After coming back home I grinded mustard, slit green chillies and prepared my steamer to make Ilish Bhapa, a dish that always reminds me of my Thakuma.

At 6pm D gave me a call and said he would be late as he was heading for a meeting followed by dinner. Thus, I switched on the TV and settled myself on the couch for a long evening. D finished his meeting and went with two of his clients cum friends to Leopold Cafe. They initially ordered starters and beer. A happy evening of friendly banter and drinks started. One of them S was due to get married the following month, so they started teasing him, pestering him to throw a pre-wedding bachelor’s party.

Just before ordering main course D called home once again just to check if everything was fine with his pregnant wife. He casually asked me what was for dinner at home and when I said ilish bhapa D faced a dilemma. D loves fish and like any Bong ilish is his favourite fish and the temptation of ilish bhapa was too enticing to ignore.  In a blink he asked his friends not to order main course for him as he was heading back home to have dinner with ‘wifey’.

He came out of Leopold and took a taxi to reach CST. Minutes after D left Leopold two young boys in their twenties dressed in T-shirt and jeans carrying rucksacks entered the restaurant. They looked like college goers looking for few drinks at the cafe. Nobody gave them any attention. However these boys knew how to gain the attention of not only the customers of that cafe but also scare the entire nation and the world.

These two boys took out AK 47 and started shooting haphazardly. S who had not yet started eating his dinner was the first person to fall prey to the bullets. He died instantaneously. The other friend M suffered severe bullet wounds. He died the following day unattended in a Mumbai hospital while his family was frantically searching for him in every hospital and every morgue.

D was unaware of all this. He was happily coming back home to the smell of mustard and green chillies.  D entered CST and boarded a train from platform no. 1. It was the last train to leave on that fateful night before CST was turned into a death zone. Soon after Pakistani gunmen Ajmal Kasab and Abu Ismail entered CST and started rampant firing.

I was surprised to see D back home so early. Ignorant of what was happening we happily sat for dinner, we relished our ilish bhapa licking mustard paste off our fingers. After dinner we sat to watch TV and saw breaking news of some firing in CST and Leopold. Things were not yet clear. D tried calling his friends S and M but their cells were switched off.

After the uneasy night, the following morning we came to know that the wedding of S has been replaced with his funeral. His fiancé who was looking for honeymoon hotels would now be sent to a mental rehabilitation centre in Switzerland to get over the trauma. It took three days for M’s old and ailing parents to claim his “unidentified” body from the morgue. I went into paranoia and had to be immediately hospitalised and put on sedatives. Thankfully my baby was safe. However, his premature delivery was linked to my trauma post 26/11.

It is nine years but the memory is fresh as if it happened yesterday. Each day when I wake up in the morning and see my husband and child I thank God. However I am always anxious till the time they come back home. We live in a time when our life depends on the crazy whims of people with guns and bombs. We are not safe in roads, restaurants, shopping malls and even in schools and hospitals.

On this day I pray for their souls and for all others who lost their lives in this mindless killing. I thank almighty that D had a narrow escape. I also pray for all those jihadis who died. My Christian missionary education taught me “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do”. May this mindless killing stop! Amen!

24 thoughts on “26/11 and a True Story

  1. Alana Mautone (@RamblinGarden) says:

    I remember the events – please know that people all over the world watched in horror. We sometimes forget we are an interconnected world. I grew up in New York City (home of the 9-11-01 attacks on the World Trade Center) and still have family/friends there. A cousin’s husband lost his best friend and two neighbors. A part of his heart died that day. One of my co workers lost his son. Because of their pain, I feel I know a little (just a little) of yours., May you and your husband find peace today, and always.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. vishalbheeroo says:

    Balaka! There was a hand of destiny in that and he was saved by destiny. Your love played a role. I feel sad for both of his friends and tears the heart. No Mumbaikar can ever forget 29/11 that changed the city’s landscape forever. The scars remain. I hope his friend’s fiancee is better now but yes, the scars shall remain. I was saved by an unknown force during the train blast in 2006. The 26/11 still send chill down the spine.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Alice Gerard says:

    My heart breaks for your husband’s friends and for their family, as well as you and your family. It is sad to think that, in our beautiful world, there are people who are so full of hate that they would just kill strangers who are doing nothing more than enjoying a meal in a restaurant. I pray for peace in everyone’s hearts and for an end to that horrible violence.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Mayuri6 says:

    As a Mumbaikar this is one day I will never forget.
    Yours is a positve story that made ME send up a prayer of thanks to God.
    Really sad about your husbands friends and their families. May they find peace and strength.
    May you and your family ma always be protected.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Moon says:

    Your story sent a shiver down my spine. I too feel thankful for the phone call that changed his decision to order main course. I can see God’s blessings in his decision to call you. I wish the friends who are no more had received similar calls too.
    Thanks so much for sharing your story. Reminds me how much more grateful I should be for each day and how I shouldn’t Take my days for granted and what a miracle it is to be merely alive in this torn world.
    I remember all those innocent lives that were lost to hatred and barbarism on 26th November 2008, with a tear and an ache . I join you as you pray to God to mend the souls that are now abodes of hatred.
    Love, hugs and prayers..

    Liked by 1 person

  6. the bespectacled mother says:

    Reading your post sent chills down my spine. I remember watching the horror on TV and it was unbelievable to accept this was happening in our country and that too in a big metropolis, Mumbai. I could never have imagined what it must be like with people who went through that ordeal themselves or through their loved ones. Hugs to you Balaka.

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Dipika Singh says:

    Balaka, I and many can relate to this pot, I got married on 25th November 2008 and 27th evening we were supposed to fly to SriLanka from Mumbai International Airport. But when we saw news LIVE telecast of what those devils have done to our city the travel plans and peace of mind all burnt together.
    My partner lost colleague at leopold that day, and whenever we visit that place – a sudden chill creeps inside me.
    It saddens me to learn how many innocent lives were lost just out of this sheer cowardice.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Balaka says:

      You won’t believe Dipika in last 9 years we have not been able to step into Leopold Cafe even once. Even passing by through that cafe is harrowing for us. Even now if my husband visits that area I remain in panic mode. Few traumas just do not heal with time, I guess this is one such. I can understand what you and your family have gone through then, as a young bride you must have had expectations and then all this must have caused so much pain and agony.
      Thanks for reading and commenting.

      Like

Did you like my post? Please let me know

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.