Skip to content Skip to navigation

Majuli Majuli

Nemati ghat in Jorhat. This is one of the three main riverine routes to reach Majuli, the largest river island in Asia. The other two river fronts being Luit-Khabalu ghat from North Lakhimpur and Dhakuakhana from Dhemaji. This Bohag Bihu, we planned a trip to Majuli and reached Nemati ghat in Jorhat to avail the ferry service of 4:30 p.m. It is the last ferry for the day. The road leading to Nemati ghat was dusty, but the sight of the ghat was disappointing. It was mud, potholes brimming with water and a bumpy, unkempt place all around. This was the doorway to Majuli, the proposed UNESCO world heritage site. Once an island of 1250 sq. km., today Majuli is a shadow of its former self with about 650 sq. km. From 65 Sattras at a point of time, it is only 22 as of now.


By 5 ‘O’ clock, the ferry was loaded; people in the basement, vehicles on the roof, and people on the roof. It started for Majuli at 5:10 p.m. One hour on the Luit. At dusk we were at the Kamalabari ghat. We got onto a hired taxi which came in the form of a Tata Sumo and embarked on the bumpy ride which never left our side during our stay in Majuli. From Kamalabari ghat, Nemati ghat looked rosier. This is the fate of Majuli. When it comes to roads, there is nothing called good or bad. It is blatantly worse and worst. Is it lack of funds? Simply No. Roads in Majuli is the best example of dearth of will, crisis of commitment and all pervasive corruption.


On our way to Dakhinpat Sattra, says our guide Prasanta Mili, “Last year this road was better. This time the construction has made it even narrower.” The muddy road didn’t allow him to drive the vehicle straight. The wheels just didn’t obey the steering. They kept skidding in the slippery mud. We had no choice but to walk through the slippery road to reach the monastery. The saving grace was that, unlike Guwahati, the mud was not slush from drains. We were groping through pure mud. My mother was given a strong branch as a stick to help her keep balance. Such was the situation. I wondered what would have happened if her mother (my grandma) too came along…bumpy rides, wading through slippery mud. A trip for the old is forbidden. Roads here will only escalate their back-aches. Nearby boys helped to get the wheels of the Tata Sumo over the mud and relocate the vehicle to a relatively better area on the road. That was far tough than pushing a vehicle through flooded lanes. The youths refused any token or money for ‘saah-paani’ (a term most familiar in government offices of Assam). Here lies the spirit of Majuli…and a Majulian.


It was at Notun Kamalabari Sattra that we came across a family from Bangalore who came on a vacation to North-East India and was there in Majuli for a day. Most of the tourists in Majuli are from France and South India (we met another family from Shimoga, Karnataka who came to see this form of Vishnu and Krishna worship in Assam). Said Ms. Laxmi, a well-qualified lady and a mother of two from Bangalore, “I was astonished at the horrible condition of roads. How can any government deprive such a large population living in this heritage island of proper roads? Thanks to mobile phones, this area would have been primitive otherwise. Infact, when I saw the dismal condition of Nemati ghat, I thought of stepping back but it was my husband who assured me that everything will be alright.” And we have policy makers talking of promoting Majuli as a site of tourism in the world.


Among the visitors at Auniati Sattra we met Kamal Hazarika, a resident of Kamalabari and a contractor by profession. Our topic of discussion was the dismal roads in Majuli. He let us know that work on construction of roads should be carried out in November. But the Chief Engineer released funds only 20 days before the rainy season. They start work in the first week of April, or a week before Bohag Bihu. This means the work will be washed away by rains and more funds can be siphoned off. Hazarika questions, “People blame us the contractors. But what about the engineers and the bureaucrats? We are only a part of this official red-tapism.” This is the reality. Majuli is not deprived of funds. Majuli is caught in the nexus of bureaucrats-engineers-contractors, not to speak of the people’s representatives who walk the corridors of power. Here the problem is not of fund. Casualty is whole-hearted implementation.


When asked about the communication facility to Majuli, said Lakhi Barua, who deals in mekhala-sador, “We don’t want a bridge from Nemati ghat to Majuli as proposed by some quarters. That would spell doom for the unique culture of our island. Majuli will only be reduced to another Tinisukia. We will witness huge number of people from different communities from other parts of India and Bangladesh usurping our pristine environ. We just want that the three ghats of Nemati, Luit-Khabalu and Dhakuakhana be renovated and uplifted with modern facilities. The ferry services should be improved. This will help retain the heritage of Majuli and attract tourists, as well as limit the flow of migrant settlers.”


No doubt Majuli has all potential to become a centre of Religious Tourism as is Vatican city or Mecca. But with such dismal river-ports and horrible roads in the island, where does Majuli stand? As aptly said by Mohini Mohan Deka, a visitor from Nagaon whom we met on the ferry way back to Nemati ghat, “Majuli is not a world heritage site. It has been reduced to a site of fund exploitation where the concerned slice off their share of the pie.”


Khorali (autumn and winter) is the best time to work on the roads of Majuli. But the construction work is deliberately postponed to and near barixa (rainy season). New soil, stones, raw-materials are dumped onto the roads only to be washed away as soon as possible. Then there will be brand new fund, fresh tenders, newer ‘percent’s to be shared. The cycle goes on…




(Some names have been changed with due respect to the reluctance of the speakers)



Comments

smrity/Namrup's picture

Not only Assam , Majully is a great property in North east India. If Government expend properly some money to develop this heritage of Majully it will be a huge way to eco-socio development in Assam.
smrityrekha/Namrup's picture

now Majully is a big tragedy only....... we will be lost our heritage MAJULLY

Pages

Add new comment

Random Stories

Satellite phones seized

8 Feb 2014 - 10:18pm | AT News
Customs officials seized altogether 22 satellite phones from two foreign nationals in Jalpaiguri bordering Assam on Saturday.According to information, the phones were seized from a hotel during a...

CM cancels Germany visit

23 Sep 2014 - 6:04pm | AT News
Chief minister Tarun Gogoi has cancelled his Germany visit. This is for the second time, the chief minister has skipped his proposed visit. He was scheduled to visit Germany from September 28 to...

Arvind Ojha Desert Fellowship

23 Oct 2022 - 5:43pm | AT News
Arvind Ojha was an experimentalist choosing to dedicate his life to social changemaking through education, working with children, making institutions and keeping people and organisations together....

Illusion prevails over DHD peace talks

25 Aug 2010 - 7:57pm | Daya Nath Singh
With the threat of Dima Halem Deogah (DHD) serving ultimatum upon the Government of India to concede to their demands before October 2, 2010 and delay in holding peace talks, situation in the...

Other Contents by Author

In 1916, a boy reportedly beat and thrashed one of his British professers E. F. Otten in Presidency College, of then Calcutta. The professor made a racist remark against the Indian students. Result, the boy was expelled from the Presidency College and banished from Calcutta University. The incident brought him in the list of rebel Indians. Later in life he was placed fourth in the Indian Civil Service Examination with highest marks in English. This boy is none other than Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose. I would like to ask the student who tried to commit suicide because of the torture and insult meted out to her by the vice-principal of her school for speaking in her mother-tongue Navanita...
The sight of a stereotype Muslim with a trademark beard and round cap evokes mixed feelings in a crowded area in many parts of the world, not to speak of India. The Akbar as portrayed in ‘Amar Akbar Anthony’ of the 1970s has well been reduced to ‘Amar Osama Anthony’ down the years. Apart from the growing fundamentalist forces in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Middle-East, the diplomatic, conniving West; their politics, the corporate and media have fired a phobia of Islam. The ‘demonization’ of Islam is complete. But, a greater terror is crippling the lives of innocent civilians in India. This is less talked about, or infact never taken up or highlighted...
On January 9, on the occasion of Pravasi Bharatiya Divas, PM Manmohan Singh expressed the hope that Indians living abroad would be able to vote in the next general elections. Responding to the frequent plea for voting rights to non-resident Indians, most recently made by members of his global advisory council for overseas Indians, Dr. Singh termed the desire legitimate. He said of the ongoing work on this issue and sincerely hoped that non-resident Indians will get a chance to vote by the time of the next regular general elections. In fact, he assured to go a step further and asked why more overseas Indians should not return home to join politics and public life as they are increasingly...
The case of molestation of a 14 year old girl by a senior Haryana police officer, S.P.S. Rathore has raised serious questions as to the integrity of the institution of ‘Police’ in the country. D.I.G. Rathore not only harassed the family of the deceased Ruchika but also framed false charges of murder and theft on the victim’s father and brother when an FIR was lodged against him 19 years back. There are numerous cases all over the country where the police has been leveling false charges according to their whims, either to settle personal scores, or under the direction of powerful lobbies or as ‘disguised’ extortion. In Haryana it was a Director General of...
1st January 2009 witnessed blasts in Guwahati ahead of Home Minister P. Chidambaram’s visit despite high security, as claimed by the state government. In the wake of the blasts, P. Chidambaram said that the Assam government had clue of miscreant activities but, were not able to able to avert the blasts. As such, the law and order situation of the state had to be handled by the Union Home Ministry. Whether CM Tarun Gogoi and his council of ministers felt pinched is not known, but mature citizens have understood the tone of sarcasm in the Home Minister’s remark. It also reflects that P. Chidambaram has gouged the lack of will of the state government to tackle insurgency in earnest...
New Aruna Nagar, Delhi – 54. One of the oldest Tibetan colonies in India. The settlement dates back to 1959. Being from the North-East, I often hear stories of discrimination of the students and people from the region in Delhi. I have been always curious whether it is a mental block ingrained in an average North-Easterner, an illusion/ a myth promoted by jingoistic regional media or a reality. This urged me to find out what is it for the Tibetans who have been in India since the Chinese clampdown in Tibet. The area is near the Gurudwara Majnu ka Tila along the Grand Trunk Road, on the banks of the River Yamuna. The present Chief Minister of Delhi, Shiela Dixit has named the colony...
For most of the folks who have been brought up in Guwahati. Delhi is not something to be charmed with. Girls and boys from villages or small towns might be swept away, but the life-style is no different from a medium-sized city like Guwahati. Infact, I have only a few square feet area to call my 'home' in this metro (far less than the spacious room in my home city). At times, I feel I am in Delhi only when I go for walks in Central Secretariat, the area near India Gate, Rashtrapati Bhawan et al......otherwise most of the areas are like any other locality in any medium-sized city like Guwahati. Infact, in many places, there are no proper footpaths....yes, the capital Delhi, this is it...
August 12 sees an earthquake measuring 5.6 on the Richter scale. August 19 is witness to 4.9 on the Richter scale. August 31 brings in 5.3 on the Richter scale. September 4 ropes in 5.9 on the Richter scale. Being situated at the junction of two great geographical plates, the most affected is Guwahati and Shillong. Guwahati is one of the best examples of how human ecological mismanagement and haphazard constructions can usher in man-made natural disaster and climate change of the worst kind. Since Guwahati is a valley surrounded by hills on three sides, it becomes a flood plain in the wake of dense human habitation and encroachment of the bogs and fresh water lakes...
Sunday afternoon, August 23, 2009; meeting on the Annual Report. A lady enquires, “What are the expenses covered under the category of establishment expenses as shown in Page 17 of this report card? We would like to see the detailed account of this expenditure which totals upto Rs. 89,131.00” She is a member of the managing committee for the year 2008-2009. Now this is a meeting of a kind. It only reflects the transparency in the functioning of the Assam Sishu Kalyan Sadan, a home for orphaned and destitute children. One hardly comes across such annual expenditure reports in any NGO, be it in Assam, other states of North East India or be it any ‘national’ level...
Lunch time. A boy in his teens helps his friend have his tiffin. He feeds him and pours some water from a bottle for his friend to drink. Next he cleans the boy’s lips with a napkin. This boy likes to help his friends have their tiffin. He is known by the name of Parag Jyoti Barman (16). He lives with Down’s syndrome. However he is in a position to help his classmates some of whom show signs of autism. Principal Mr. Satyendra Thakuria let me know that he loves to feed children who cannot help themselves. These are students of Mon Vikash Kendra, a centre for children challenged with autism and spastic symptoms. Established in 1988, Mon Vikash Kendra is an offshoot of...