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Are all our rights reserved?

Annie Zaidi shares her experience of an arduous but very interesting train journey.

Are all our rights reserved?

Some months ago, I undertook an arduous but very interesting train journey. It happened like this: I was booked on a night train between Lucknow and Delhi, but the vicious winter fog played up. My train was delayed four hours, then six, then seven. Trains were getting cancelled and I was panicking since I was committed to an event in Delhi, the same evening.

So I bought a new ticket and boarded the trusty old Gomti, a daily up-down express that only offers seating. It was huffing gently as a girl pulled me into her coach. She said I must throw myself at the mercy of the TTE. I must wave my ‘AC ticket’, sadly unused, in his face. I must beg for the Ladies quota. Only when all attempts to get a ‘pukka’ seat failed must I shift to the ‘general’ coach. Meanwhile, I could have a few minutes of peace in this near-empty coach.

The train left the station. No TTE. At Kanpur more people got on. Still no TTE. Conversations swirled around me like the thick mists of a December dawn. Most of the passengers were young men and they were talking about a police sub-inspector examination, which they intended to appear for today.

A couple told me I was on their reserved seat and I vacated at once. On and on the train rolled. I stood an hour, two hours. A large contingent of young men boarded. They were headed to the centre for this police exam, and judging from their conversation, they were ticketless.

Firozabad, Aligarh. More students, more families. By now, the coach was so packed that it was impossible for people to get in or out. One family managed to put the kids on board, but failed to board themselves. The chain was pulled.

There was no longer any hope of the TTE coming by. Even if he wanted to, he couldn’t enter the coach, much less go around checking tickets. And if tried, he risked a mini-riot. From childhood journeys in western UP and parts of Bihar, I knew that many young men do not quite believe in train reservations, especially in daylight hours. If they want to sit, they sit. Hang your reservations. If you complain, you are politely threatened. Students travelling in large groups might quickly turn into gangs. People got thrown off the train; people got killed for fighting over seats. Most of us accept that it is better to be uncomfortable than dead, or even endlessly frustrated. So we sigh and ‘adjust’.

But one Sikh family was now fighting for their seats. They pleaded, bullied, shoved. The fierce matriarch somehow wrenched seats for her husband and son. She herself loomed over the young men on her seat.

The men seemed amused. They told her they were sitting for the police exam, as if that was a valid excuse. They said it was the government’s fault for setting up a center so far from Lucknow, or even Barabanki. When the matriarch continued to scold, the men finally said, “Aunty, come sit on our lap.”

At my feet squatted two men and three toddlers; two pregnant women had managed to find seats. I realised that I was the only passenger who — ticketed or not — had actually vacated a seat. Everyone else had remained firmly seated. If a reservation-wala came along, they just squirmed until six inches of free space was created. Then they said, “Come, sit.”

The matriarch’s scolding voice was silent now. I turned to look and found that she was finally seated. In the bony lap of an aspiring sub-inspector of police.

— Annie Zaidi writes poetry, stories, essays, scripts (and in a dark, distant past, recipes she never actually tried)

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