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Imdadul Haque Milan
Translated by: Abedin Quader
Publisher by: Mazibar Rahman Khoka
Biddya Prokash, 38/4, Bangla Bazar, Dhaka.
First Edition: 1993
Munim dropped in the
evening and asked. "You are home in a Friday evening!"
I had come back from work at five. It was six-thirty and
I was still lying flat on the bed without changing.
April had arrived, the beginning of Summer. A soothing
breeze had started blowing over Germany. Winter was
about to be over. The skeletal trees had begun to dress
up green with the advent of Summer. Air in the gardens
was getting thick with aroma. Good days were coming!
Germany was getting greener. It would soon turn
colourful. For the Germans, it was a lovely time no
doubt.
But I was not feeling well that day. I was depressed,
despondent. After getting back from work, I had opened
the letter-box, like any other day. No letter, no one
wrote to me for a long time. Mother, sister, brother,
Setu, no one. Looked as though everyone had forgotten
me! On the way back home, I had thought at least one
letter must have come. But it didn't know why. I
expected one that day. But it didn't. I was very upset.
Letters from Bangladesh usually came on Tuesdays. So
many Tuesdays had passed without any letters from home.
I don't know why. I expected one that day. But it didn't
come. Why didn't Setu write? A full year was not yet
over. Had Setu ditched me in such a little time? I
climbed the stairs slowly, woblingly, and got into my
room on the sixth floor. I put the key in the lock,
opened the door out of habit, with automatic hands. I
felt more tired climbing the stairs than working the
whole day. Felt completely exhausted, the most tired man
on earth. I threw myself on the bed with my work-dress
and shoes on. I felt really tired, disgusted. I couldn't
like anything at the moment.
Munim asked, " why are you lying in the bed like a
Shaheb? What happened?" Then I realized that I had not
changed. Summer had come, but it was still quite cold in
the morning. So I usually went to work wearing a coarse
corduroy trousers, a jacket and long shocks and
sneakers. I was wearing all these. I felt a bit
embarrassed.
I got up from the bed and asked, "How do you do, my
friend?"
"I was fine even a little while ago. Climbing the stairs
was tiring, you know, I feel tired."
Really! Working the whole day is less tiring than
climbing these stairs! I am always apprehensive when I
reach your home." I felt embarrassed, and sat up on the
bed.
"Have you noticed friend that the foreigners always get
poor residence in Germany. All the Bangalees are
condemned to live in the same type of houses. Old, damp,
dilapidated. None of the houses has heating or lifts or
hot water and the bathrooms are dirty. They consider us
beggars. Really."
I could sense Munim's anger at the Germans since I
arrived. He often spoke against the Germans, but had
lived on here for all these years with a sign of
returning home.
I asked, "How about a cup of Coffee?"
"No, lets go out."
"Didn't you have lunch?"
"No. Never felt like cooking after coming back home. I
usually take bread, omelet and Coffee."
"What do you take for dinner?" "Rice?"
Munim looked surprised, "You take rice only once?"
"Yes, we are served a good lunch in the canteen."
"We have turned into perfect labourers." Munim burst out
laughing.
Munim is fair in complexion and slightly corpulent. His
cheeks look like the boiled potatoes. He is short and
stocky. His specs give an aging look to him.
He is of my age. We used to study in Jagannath College
in Dhaka in the same class. That was a different life,
we hardly remembered.
"I cannot help taking rice," Munim said. "I've a
shifting work. The noon shift is wonderful. I get up
from the bed at about twelve, prepare my food and then
start work from two thirty. I prepare vegetables for
both lunch and dinner. And after I come back I only boil
a packet of rice. It takes only ten minutes. Night shift
goes in the same routine."
"I prepare my meals in the morning and take a lengthy
nap in the afternoon. I get up at nine in the evening,
boil a packet of rice and take my supper. Then take the
Asban (first train). The morning shift is however,
really troublesome. I have to make up at four in the
morning and run twenty-four kilometre in no time. I
don't like it at all."
"Where's your factory?"
"Eslinggum. Let's go out."
"where?"
"Let's get out first, then we'll find out."
"Wait a bit, let's have a cup of Coffee."
"How about having something at the MacDonald at Bunhop
(Junction Station)!"
"I feel hungry now."
"You just told me your canteen serves good food."
"Well, that was one o'clock."
"How many times do you get tiffin break?"
"Twice."
"We are more lucky. Ten minute break for tiffin after
every single hour. It's because we work at a hot
machine. We make car brakes for fifty minutes standing
up all the time, and while away ten minutes for puffing
cigarettes."
Munim fished out a packet of Marlboro from his pocket.
He put a cigarette between his lips and offered me one.
I lighted the cigarette with an orange coloured lighter.
He asked. "Do you have to work for fixed time."
"No, we don't have a shift system."
"Do you work for overtime?"
"Not even for a single minute."
My stern answer surprised Munim. He stopped lighting his
cigarette. Then he asked, "Why?"
"Oh, don't like it."
"What's your hourly wage?"
"Ten forty-five."
"Then definitely you don't get more than thirteen of
fourteen hundred marks?"
"That's about it."
"How much do you save?"
This question annoyed me. I don't like discussing money
and salary.
Munim continued, "My wage is eleven. And then I work two
hours overtime daily, which brings me about two
thousand."
"Good, let's go."
"It's really stunning that we earn about fifteen
thousand taka a month. Certainly we could not have
earned four hundred a month in our country. Four hundred
which equals forty marks. Hah, hah. . .!"
"We swig beer worth about three thousand take a month
here."
I changed into a round necked T-shirt and a blue coarse
chord trousers. I put on a pair of new shoes, and threw
away the stinking socks. I took a Cigar packet. When I
climbed down the stairs, it was ten past seven.
Strolling on the street, Munim asked, "Can you remember
when we met Kaisar?"
"About two months back, I think."
"Yes"
"I had been to Stutagart twice during this period but
couldn't drop into your place."
"Is Velan Dorf out of Stutgart?"
"No, possible in the outskirts. Like Mirpur is to
Dhaka."
I chuckled and said, "You are quite O.K. It's better to
stay in the outskirts in a good accommodation. You will
never find a good place in Stutgart. Luckily I got one,
but it turned out to be no good any way."
"What do you mean by 'No good'. You live alone, isn't it
enough?"
"Don't you see the condition of Tubinger Strasse? Eight
or Nine guys live in single room and you wouldn't even
find a floor space during the night. Benglaees are
horrible creatures!"
"What else can they do?"
"I heard a large number of Niksot Arbiters (those who
don't have work permit) are living in hotels now a
days".
"Yes".
"Where do they take their meals?"
"They usually make arrangements with a Bengalee Family
for lunch and dinner."
"How much do they get as Socialamoth (allowances from
the Social Welfare Organisations)?"
"I believe its three hundred thirty six marks."
"Oh god!" Can they live with it?
"Why not? Only food costs. They live in the hotel free
with their Socialamoth Paper. Some Guys save enough from
this to send home. Some work illegally in some hotels
which earns them about three or four hundred marks."
Munim heaved a long sigh and said, "We would have faced
the same terrible situation if we did not come here
earlier."
I kept silent.
Munim said, "I'll be back home at the end of this year."
"Oh, you will !"I've been hearing this since I arrived."
"One day we will have to go back. The German Government
will drive us out. Don't you see the outslanduRaus
(Drive away foreigners) processions already beginning?
And why shouldn't they? People are coming into this
country in streams. They are playing havoc to the German
Economy. If it continues, racism is bound to grow here
as in England. I will move out before that. When my
savings will reach three to four lakh I will be back and
start a business in Dhaka."
"What I'll do in Dhaka with out having some savings! You
know about the condition of my family!"
"Don't you send any money home?"
"I used to send two thousand, now I send five thousand.
My father has gone into retirement, house rent and other
expenses have also gone up."
There were many people in the street, as it was Friday
evening. Cars with flashing colours were moving in
silence. Buses with number plates at the top were
stopping at their stoppages. Letting off and taking in
passengers. Blonde youths were walking past at great
speed, babbling distinct sweet sounds. People crowded on
both sides at the approach of Thlinger Strasse.
Pedestarians waited for the traffic light to turn green.
On the other side of the road sex kinos (sex cinema
halls) displayed pictures of copulating couples in red
and blue light. There were peep-show halls on one side.
They charged a mark a minute to see a nude woman. The
place was overcrowded. Countless Pubs were scattered in
the place which were getting crammed by thirsty
customers from the early evening. Shops got closed at
six sharp. Bars become full of customers after a short
while and the Descotes (Disco) had then rush after nine.
It's the heaven for young boy and girls. We passed
through all these like helpless onlookers. Everyone
around us were unknown, none asked "How are you!" The
Bengalees have peculiar characteristic look. They can be
easily recognized by other Bengalee. Even the Pakistanis
and the Indians could be recognized at a glance.
But that evening we came through a long way without
finding a single Bengalee, Pakistani or Indian,
Presently I saw a very bright, fair-complexioned German
girl coming with a black American towards us. The
American boy was more than six feet tall, pitch-black,
wearing a skin-hugging white Jeans-trousers and shirt,
talking in a rough noisy voice with the girl.
Walking briskly past us he said in a relatively low
voice," Hello."
Munim answered back, "Hello."
The German girl didn't even look at us.
It's a proud nation.
Munim said, "The Blacks are really good. They talk to
the coloureds and always behave in a friendly manner. A
black American works with me in my shift. The rest are
all German. The black man gives a damn to the Germans."
He made friend with me. The Supervisor can't even submit
to the Mistar (A higher post than supervisor). His name
is Allan. The factory's frightened of him.
"The Americans are the fathers of the planet. Shouldn’t
they be afraid of him?" I said.
We had already reached Banhop. Munim lighted his
cigarette. I did the same but I felt very hungry. I
didn't relish the Cigar.
Munim forced it on me.
"Let's puff the cigarette, then we will get into a
Macdonald. Smoking is prohibited in Macdonald.
"Is it?"
"Yes, Macdonald doesn't allow smoking inside."
"Since when."
"About three months, don't you know."
"No. I haven't been there for a long time. The Macdonald
Company has already sensed that large number of
foreigners had got into Germany. The buggers order for a
cup of coffee and chat for hours and smoke ceaselessly."
On the half way through smoking I threw away the
Cigarette. "Let's get in." I said, "I am very hungry."
In front of the burger place there were three steps
leading to the footpath with a long queue of different
shops.
The curved "M" of the Macdonald was lit a dazzling red
before the shop's displayboard and the crowded customers
were having their mouths full of chow.
Munim crushed his cigarette with his foot and said,
"This is rush hour, may be we'll not find any table."
Inside, we looked around. No table was empty. People
were eating in a terrible crowded, small room. Most of
them were young men and women. Some boys and girls were
also having bigmacs. Some foreigners waited in the queue
before the counter for cheaper priced dinner.
German youths do not have a lot of money. They eat at
Macdonals because it was cheaper. Foreigners earn fairly
enough money, still they get into Macdonald. They cannot
afford to be extravagant. They come here for earning
money and would go back with sufficient savings. So they
have to be penny pinchers.
Munim said with exasperation, "Heh ! what can we do,
there's no table".
At that moment a table with a single Bengalee sitting
near the toilet caught my eyes. All the tables around
him were full. But he was sitting alone.
I nearly shouted, 'There's an empty one."
"You go and sit there, I am bringing the food," Munim
said.
"Let me go, I am really hungry', I said.
Munim smiled, "I have not yet become a foreigner. The
Bengalees turn into practical fellows after they go
abroad. They sit with you, even go on smoking but never
offer you anything. Never, nothing. Sometime I do like
this. But you are my friend. I should not pull the same
thing with you"
I smiled and said, "please stop your lecturing, go and
bring food, I am dead hungry."
"What do you like?"
"Whatever you choose."
"Bigmac."
"No, fishmac for me."
Munim moved towards the counter and I started walking to
the table with the lone Bengalee. Suddenly it occurred
to me that Munim talked too much now a days. Certainly
much more than when I arrived. His talkativeness grew.
Two or three other Bengalees I found in Germany talked
endlessly. Why so? Do the people living abroad for a
long time become talkative? Shall I also be talkative
like Munim after two or three years? Once I start I
shall never stop?
"Is it a curse of staying abroad? Immediately I tried to
recall whether I used to talk as much as I did then".
I felt a chill inside me. The Bengalee youngman looked
at my face when I took a chair. He held a hamburger and
two more were on the table with a big glass of coke. The
youngman was deeply, absorbedly in eating. I sat in
front of him but he didn't look at me any more.
But why was he taking so many hamburgers! I began to
notice him, scrutinizingly. A painfully broken face. His
cheek bones were bulging out, his eyes were in the
socket and with deep black rings around. The body was
shielded by the dress but it could be assumed that the
bones were coming out of his flesh like the
iron-structure of dilapidated house.
It surprized me. The Bengalee boys get healthy after
coming to Germany. Why had this boy suffered so much !
Everything here goes with the watch, meals, work rest
and sleep. On top of that the foods are absolutely pure
without the slightest adulteration. Bengalees get greedy
about ghee, butter and honey. A large basket of fruits
cost only three marks which is the price of a packet of
Cigarette. Nobody drinks normal water but fruit juice or
beer. Some people regularly take red wine.
"Why was this boy so thin and obviously in bad health?"
I couldn't really guess.
Munim was still at the counter. There was a long queue.
Another ten to fifteen munites before food arrived. I
furtively looked at the counter and found Munim behind
about fifteen people. Young counter girls were passing
red plastic trays from the kitchen. They didn't stop for
a moment. Still they put on a decorated smile. So
artificial as to invite-desdai...
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