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Down Memory Lane

๐—” ๐—Ÿ๐—ถ๐—ณ๐—ฒ ๐—ถ๐—ป ๐˜๐—ต๐—ฒ ๐—›๐—ถ๐—น๐—น๐˜€

What do the mountains mean for someone who grew up in the Himalayas? Our member Ms D. Bhattacharya, who spent much of her life in the North-East, speaks to us about her abiding love for the hills.
Many people go to the Himalayas to travel. The mountains are a nice break from city life for them. But for me, a girl who grew up in Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, and Meghalya, the mountains are home. Now that I live in Kolkata, in West Bengal, it might appear strange that I have never visited Darjeeling. When I used to mention this to my husband, he would joke that I donโ€™t need to go to the hills anymore since I know a place like Shillong so well.
I have spent a lot of my early life in Silchar in Assam, where I was born, and, later, in Shillong, Meghalaya. I have been to Arunachal Pradesh, to Bhalukpong and Itanagar, during my early years. After getting married, I lived with my husband in Kohima in Nagaland, where he was posted, for close to two years. There we spoke Nagamese, a creole language spoken by most inhabitants of the state. One of the places I liked to visit was the Kohima War Cemetery, a war memorial dedicated to the soldiers of the 2nd British Division of the Allied Forces. I used to read with interest the epitaphs, beautifully composed and inscribed on plaques and headstones. In those days many places in Nagaland were quite remote, so I wouldnโ€™t travel too far from Kohima. Towards the end of my husbandโ€™s career, we spent 10 years in Guwahati.
In 2010, I travelled to Kashmir, and neither my husband nor I thought that it surpassed in natural beauty the sights we saw in Arunachal, except for the Dal Lake in Srinagar. We took the opportunity to go around the lake in a shikara. The waters were pure, pristine, and the mountains reflected in the lake were enchanting. We then travelled to Pahalgam and Sonmarg, where we saw snow, even in the summer! I did not take the chance of riding on a horse, and because I had my daughters with me, we decided not to trek to the peak.
The fact that I grew up in the mountains and have been accustomed to them does not mean that I find them mundane or in any way ordinary. On the contrary, having grown up there, I have come to appreciate its true worth. For me the Himalayas continue to symbolise unspeakable beauty.
(As narrated to Support Elders by our member)