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Train Journey in the 70's

My father, a central government of India employee, made sure we made our religious LTA (leave travel allowance) when he was in service. Thought there was no IRCTC, my father almost always made sure we had all the tickets reserved in advance, which meant a trip to the railway station and long wait in the queue and with a finite probability of not getting your tickets after hours of standing in the queue. 

Once the tickets in hand, these journeys those days used to be great, especially because my father used to make it a point to write to all his friends about our train travel, the date and the likely time it would hit the station close to them. 

Invariably, we had someone or the other come and meet us along the way at the stations that our train used to stop, so this once in 4 years LTA meant we did meet our friends and relatives albeit for a couple of minutes on the platform. 

As kids the most interesting aspect, more than just getting to meet them, was the breakfast, the lunch or the dinner that his friends used to get; it was not so much not to eat outside -junk- food, but it was more to do with this aunties food or that friends breakfast. The well cooked and packed food was a show of friendship and in a way was a substitute for the warmth and affection that they would have bestowed on us as their guest were we to park at their place for a couple of days.

On one such LTA trip in mid 1970's my father had planned a trip to Jammu and Kashmir. As usual he had written to all friends who lived in towns and cities along Bangalore to Jammu via Delhi. The ongoing was as usual great, the train was in time (couple of hours of delay was usual!) and we met all our friends; to us kids, it was the food. On our way back from Jammu and Kashmir, we got to Delhi from Jammu and figured out that the train that was to take us back to Bangalore was a non-starter and as a substitute a couple of extra compartments were clubbed with another train; while this was comforting; however in this process we found our compartment (the extra bogie) to be almost invariably not on the platform or so far from the shops on the platform when ever the train halted at any station.

At Delhi, because of the uncertainty, my parents did not think of the food we were to eat during the journey and as night fell they panicked because we the kids were hungry. There was no food in sight and there was no pantry on the train. As night fell, my mother tried to put us to sleep on an empty stomach. It was, as often recollected by my mother, when we the kids were asleep, the train stopped yet again at some station. But luckily this time, she saw a group of people on the other side of the platform (they had booked a compartment for themselves and it was halted to be tagged onto another train the next day) and heard them speak out tongue; she walked to them and saw them finishing of their dinner on the platform. Very shortly she figured out that they were pilgrims and quickly the pilgrims got to know that there were these two hungry kids who were asleep.

What I as a kid remember, is the instance, where my mother is asking me and my sister to wake up with hot rice mixed with daal, mango pickle and ghee in front of us. I think that was one of the most fulfilling dinner that we had as kids.


To this date, we always recollect this incident, the kindness of sharing food by complete strangers in a distant platform.

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