Sea
Journey to Liverpool and Arrival in Chicago
I
had neither taken the GRE nor the TOEFL conducted by the ETS, the standard
requirements normally insisted by the US universities for admission to their graduate
school. I received communication from the University of Chicago that I should
get my communication skills in English tested by the Educational Wing of the US
Embassy in New Delhi. I went to the USEFI office in Barakhamba Road near
Connaught Place. They were satisfied with my performance and communicated the finding of their assessment directly by TELEX to the University of
Chicago.
Obtaining
a US visa was a smooth process then. No prior appointment with the consulate
was required. I went directly to the main building of the US embassy in
Chanakya Puri. Its counsellor section
received me with the courtesy due to a student admitted to the University of
Chicago. I was asked to leave with them my contact details as the Embassy had
planned to hold an orientation programme for students joining American
universities. The orientation programme was held in an auditorium in the
Indraprastha Estate. The main speaker was Mr. Chester Bowls, the ambassador of
the United States to India. He congratulated us on getting an opportunity to
study in the US universities. He called us the cream of the cream of India. He
cautioned us that if we thought that New Delhi
was a world class modern city we were in for a big surprise should we land at JFK
airport in New York City on our arrival
in the US. The other speakers who spoke to us in the orientation programme
briefed us on mundane matters such as how to use post office, banks, the social security number and
general dos and don’ts. Their
concern was that our conduct should
not become a cause of embarrassment to
ourselves or to our country. Our concern was
our ability to follow the American English accent. I was invited along
with a few other students from among those who had attended the orientation
programme for a candle-light dinner by one of the consulate officials to his
residence.
I
was now excited at the prospect of going to the US for higher studies. I have
pointed out earlier how I spent the period of four months between leaving the
Gwyer Hall and my departure. I decided to spend part of my journey travelling
by sea and the remainder by air. I was scheduled to start my sea journey on 1st
September 1964 from Bombay.
I am
amused to share that when sightseeing in Bombay before boarding the ship the
tallest building in the city was pointed out to me. It was either the LIC
building or the Reserve Bank building no more than ten storeys tall. But the
local folklore was that the pagadis of Marwari seths slip when they look at the top of that
building! Their pagadi would have
fallen off from their head had they tried to see the top of the Empire State
building. My first reaction when I saw the skyline of the New York City from
the plane before landing at the JFK airport was that New Delhi was indeed a small
town compared to this mega metropolis.
The
country’s foreign
exchange reserves must have been tight then. I needed some foreign exchange for
meeting sundry expenses during the
three weeks of the sea journey and for a week in London and Ithaca, New York,
before reaching Chicago. I met a friend of Pitaji's who was a senior officer in
the Reserve Bank in New Delhi for
getting permission to take out the princely sum of US$ 250, that too on
repatriation terms. I was to return to the country this amount in three
years.
I
and my friend Madhusudan Dixit, who was
also going to the University of Chicago, had made our bookings to Liverpool,
England, by the boat SS Cilicia. It was a single class boat and its passengers had equal access to all of
its facilities. Madhusudan and Ishared
a cabin in Cilicia for three weeks. The combined fare of the sea and the
air travel from Bombay to Chicago was Rs 3400. I used the saved amount of
scholarship money for meeting part of the cost of the passage and the rest was
covered from a financial grant Pitaji had obtained from the U.P. Government.
I
was the first person from the family
going abroad for study. Therefore, my uncle Shambhu Nath Chachaji came
to Bombay from Golagokarnnath in U.P. to
see me off. It was indeed a proud moment
to be given a farewell at the Bombay port by the Chachaji and many other
relatives. Soon after the boat moved
away from the dockside it entered the Arabian Sea by going around the Colaba
bay. As the boat moved away from the Gateway of India into the open sea, I had
mixed feelings. I felt uneasy that I was leaving the security of my country and
at the same was happy in the anticipation of life ahead in the University of
Chicago. I took the upper berth in the cabin as a porthole was at that height
and I could see sea waves from my berth. In the early morning of the day
following our after departure from Bombay, the boat reached Karachi. It had a
twelve hour stop in Karachi for new passengers to join. We were told that we
could disembark and go sightseeing in Karachi as long as we returned at the
very latest by 5 pm. The boat was scheduled to sail from Karachi at 6 pm.
Madhusudan
and I hired an auto rickshaw for the day for seeing Karachi. Madhusudan showed
me the stamp on his passport by Pakistani immigration. I had no such stamp on
my passport. I became worried that on my return to the ship I faced the
possibility of being detained by the immigration officer, and instead of going
to Chicago may end up as an illegal immigrant in Pakistan. This lurking fear of
ending up my life in a Pakistan jail took away from me the pleasure of spending
a day on foreign soil. Having seen the
Marine Drive of Bombay, the Karachi sea front appeared unimpressive. The auto
rickshaw driver took us around Karachi.
There were no Mughal monuments in Karachi.
I skipped eating lunch that day when I saw meat hanging outside the
eating places the auto driver had taken us to. I asked the driver to take us to
the National Museum of Pakistan in Karachi. The museum had on display an
impressive collection from excavations of ancient sites of Mohanjodaro, Harappa
and Taxila. I saw in the museum the original famous Mohanjodaro seals. We
finally returned to the port for getting back on the boat. My heart was racing
with anxiety as I faced the immigration officer on duty. He smiled at me and
asked whether I had enjoyed my day in Karachi. When I answered yes by a nod he
was happy and waved me in without asking for my passport.
Passengers
who got on the boat from Karachi were mainly students from Pakistan going to
England for studies. I made friends with some of them. The Pakistani boys were
excited about the Beatles and knew famous Beatle songs. I had not heard of the
Beatles in Delhi and did not know that they were the craze of the world in
1964. I spent my time in the boat
playing bridge with the Pakistani boys.
The
next port we touched was Aden. I was wiser now when I stepped out to see Aden.
It was a city of no distinction inside a volcanic crater. I saw people buying
some type of green leaves from the roadside. I asked why people are buying
those green leaves. It was explained to me that chewing those leaves known as khat
made the Arab males manlier and gave them a feeling of euphoria. It was their
favoured pastime to sleep in the afternoon after chewing those leaves. I did
not understand the explanation then.
I was careful with my money and did not want
to spend it on buying what I did not need. I saw a pocket Sony transistor radio
on sale for US$ 5. A hoarding prominently
displayed by the shopkeeper selling the radio was ‘As advertised in the Life magazine’. I could not go much wrong in
spending 5 US dollars. I made my first purchase using some of my precious US
dollar. It was a medium wave radio. From the boat I could receive only
broadcasts of Arab vocal and instrumental music.
The
life in the boat revolved around food. At 6am
bed tea with toast was served in the cabin. At 8am we went for breakfast
to the dining room. Around 11 am fruit juice and snacks were served on the
deck. Lunch was at 1 pm. At 4 pm high tea was served. A 8 course dinner served
with a printed menu of the day was the climax of day’s gastronomic activities. I
wish I had kept some of those beautifully printed dinner menus as souvenirs for
the amusement of my grandchildren now.
Passengers were invited to the captain’s table by turn. Live band and
dance followed the dinner.
I
could hardly enjoy the lavish meals served in the ship as they catered mainly to the non-vegetarian taste. In every meal there
was only one standard item for vegetarians like me. It was rice with Indian
curry. One day I went to the Ship’s doctor complaining of constipation. He
remarked, “You are a strange case. All other passengers are complaining of
complications arising out of overeating!”
We
entered the Red Sea. I signed up for a
sightseeing trip to the Pyramids in Giza and Cairo. It was offered at an affordable cost and
even a student like me did not want to miss this once in a life time
opportunity. At 5 am in the morning we were to take a coach from Port Suez. The
final destination of the sightseeing excursion was a drive along the Suez Canal
to Port Said. It took our ship 16 hours to cross the Suez Canal, a much shorter
journey from Asia to Europe than the three weeks that used to be spent going around the African continent in pre-Suez days. The Suez Canal was indeed an
engineering marvel and the fastest marine route linking Europe and Asia.
I
was impressed to see the pyramids. In one of the pyramids there was a crawling
passage to reach a chamber located somewhere in the middle of the structure. It
was moist inside the pyramid. The explanation for the humidity inside the
sealed structure was the trapped moist air exhaled by the visitors. In the
complex adjacent to the pyramids was the Sphinx. I did not have a camera and
nor did my friend. The visit to the pyramids has remained stored in my
memory. Cairo was more modern than
Bombay. It had impact of Europe on it. I saw the National Museum in Cairo. The
main gallery of the museum was the Tutankhamen gold. It glittered brighter than
the gold souk I saw in Dubai many years later. Each gallery of this museum was
a leaf from the book on the 5000 years of the Egyptian history. A meal was included in the tour package. We
were taken to a restaurant of a good hotel. A rumour that the meat served was
that of camel and horse discouraged many of my non vegetarian companions from
enjoying their lunch. I was served spaghetti with tomato sauce. It was my first experience of Italian food. I was amused to eat
slippery long noodles. The Cairo sightseeing ended with a visit to the main
mosque. There a Mullah told me that in this mosque no prayer gets unanswered if
asked from Allah with piety. I made a prayer and truthfully acknowledge after
fifty years that it was favourably answered.
From
Cairo to Port Said the drive was on a road running parallel to the Suez Canal.
The canal was one ship wide. Therefore movement in it was as per up and down
schedules. The side of the canal facing away from Egypt was desolate and was part of the Gaza desert. By the dinner
time we were back in the boat. The captain of the ship had arranged a magic
show for entertainment of the passenger on the ship anchored at Port Said. I
remember even today that magic show.
Now
our boat entered the Mediterranean. It was calm like a lake. We anchored off
the coast at Nicosia in Cyprus. By now I was well adjusted to life on boat. One
of the activities was to estimate the distance in nautical miles the boat would
cover in 24 hours. The captain estimated a figure and we were to make an
intelligent guess by looking at the sea conditions. Each day the winner who
predicted the figure closet to the actual received a prize from the captain.
Our boat went round the Rock of Gibraltar which we saw from a distance and
cruised towards the English coast.
We
disembarked at the Liverpool docks and went through immigration and customs.
Then Indian citizens did not require a visa to enter UK. The immigration
officer marked ‘valid for six
months on my passport' and waved me out. I had nothing to declare at the
Customs. I was on the land after enjoying three weeks of the sea. I took the
boat train to London from Liverpool. Sudhir had moved to London from Bombay. I
was looking forward to spending couple of days with him. I received a message
that he had gone out of town and had asked a colleague in the bank to meet me
on my arrival from Liverpool. Accommodation for me was booked by him in the
YMCA on Tottenham Court Road. There was a South Indian Restaurant nearby. I had
my first full meal of Indian food, which I had missed in my three weeks-long
sea journey. I made two useful purchases in London. I bought myself a Harris
Tweed jacket and a pair of Hush Puppies suede shoes. I had no sightseeing
agenda and enjoyed my first underground tube rides. I think I was strolling
in Hyde Park when a photographer
approached me to take my picture with pigeons for a few shillings and deliver
it to the YMCA. I got my picture taken to remember my London visit. My father’s
friend in Madras had given me two tins of canned mangoes for his son who was in
Madison, Wisconsin. He had said that I could eat these mangoes if I was not able
to deliver them to his son. I had never entered a kitchen during the five years
of the hostel life. There was no opportunity for me to use my mother’s kitchen
either. I neither knew how to cook nor knew how to use kitchen appliances. I
wanted to open one of the cans of mangoes. I did not know what an appliance
used for opening tin cans was called. I was too embarrassed to ask the
shopkeeper that I needed to open a tin can. I saw something I thought I could
use to open a can with. It had a small knife at one end and a screw like metal
piece at the other end. I struggled to open the can with what I had bought. I
managed to open the can of mangoes by use of brute force as I was hungry and
did not want to go out to eat. In
Ithaca my friend Nand Lal opened a can of chickpeas easily before me. I asked
him to show me how he did it. When I showed him what I bought in London
thinking as a can opener he had a big laugh. I had bought a tobacco pipe
cleaner! I did not smoke and so happily
parted with it by giving the pipe cleaner to Nand Lal. In London one evening I
walked to Piccadilly and saw a theatre that was showing Cleopatra starring
Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton and Rex Harrison. I spent money to see that
film for the second time. A doubt was
raised in my mind by the person with whom I had gone to see this film in Bombay
that in the censored print of the film shown in India, Elizabeth Taylor puts
her hand inside the basket containing an adder for her finger to be bitten but
in the international version she puts the adder inside her blouse. Come to
think of it, I spent both money and time for getting this
doubt cleared. The fact is both versions showed the same suicide scene in which
Elizabeth Taylor inserted her hand in the basket containing the adder. Our imagination had run wild.
At
the end of my stay I had to take a tube to the airport. I did not want to spend
money on a taxi to reach the nearest tube station from the YMCA. My suitcase
did not have castor wheels. It weighed more than 20 kg. I carried it in one
hand and in the other I had my brief case full of books. I walked by Buckingham
Palace and was in no mood to enjoy sightseeing.
I felt miserable in carrying heavy luggage and walking what seemed like
a mile.
I
flew from London to New York perhaps by Pan Am airlines. I was served non
vegetarian meal in the flight which I could not eat. I reached the JFK airport sometime around 3
pm and after going
through immigration entered the departure area for domestic flights. I had a
flight from La Guardia airport to Ithaca. I did not know how I would shift
from JFK to LaGuardia. I saw a counter
of Mohawk airlines I was taking for my flight to Ithaca. The counter was
unmanned and I did not know how to contact someone who could help me. There was
a telephone kept at the counter of the airlines. I picked it up and someone
came online. A person came out and arranged to send me by helicopter from JFK
to LaGuardia airport. I had my first helicopter ride, and that too, across
Manhattan. I saw downtown New York City from the helicopter. From the air I could identify the Empire
Estate and the Pan Am buildings and was indeed impressed by this surreal wonder
on Earth.
The
plane I flew in to Ithaca was not much different from the Dakota planes used
for flying to Port Blair. It was early autumn but upstate New York was colourful and beautiful from the air. I
spent two days with Nand Lal in Ithaca. He
had joined Cornell University a
year ago. I saw keenly how easily he prepared a meal. He opened a can of garbanzo
beans and stirred its contents in a pan in which he had fried onions. He also
put a whole egg plant wrapped in aluminium foil in the oven, and after it was
baked removed the pulp and stir fried it with onion and ginger pieces. We had choley and
baigan bharta for dinner. For bread he baked the Syrian bread in oven
and it tasted like the delicious tandoori roti of India. I was not only
impressed by his culinary skills but developed confidence that if needed I
would be able to cook such meals myself.
I landed
at the O'Hare airport in Chicago. From the airport I took a coach to the Palmer
House in downtown Chicago and by a taxi from there to the International House
of the University of Chicago. I felt happy to have reached my destination after
a month long journey from Bombay.
I was in for surprises soon after my arrival
in the University of Chicago. I had not opened a physics or maths book for the
past five months. I found out on reaching the Department of Physics in the
Eckart Hall that all the new entrants to the graduate course were to write a
placement test the following morning. My performance in the placement test was
a total washout. I could not even answer problems involving the application of
elementary physics. The Graduate Student’s Advisor, Sol Krasner, remarked that he had expected a much
better performance from me. I had come a full circle and discovered to my
disappointment that I was once again at the bottom of the class.
When I went for my first meal in the cafeteria
of the International House I could pick out of the available items only boiled
rice, boiled peas and carrots and butter milk which I could eat. The thought
that each day I have to make meals out of these items unsettled me. I was in
for a bigger shock. When I went for my shower I found to my horror that it was
a common shower and was being shared by persons who bathed naked. I withdrew
and decided to take my shower after 10 pm as I thought I would be alone then. I
discovered that many others thought like me and had come to take their showers
at that time. I was raised with a sense of personal privacy and was not ready
to adjust to the practice of common showers.
I
got a lucky break. I was visited in the International House by Keshav Dev Sharma
and Shyam Manohar Pandey. They were much older than me and had joined the
University of Chicago a couple of years before I did. Keshav Dev Sharma had
worked with my uncle, Krishna Murari Chachaji, as his stenographer. He subsequently did his M. A. in sociology from Lucknow University and
had joined the University of Chicago for graduate studies in social
sciences. Shyam Manohar Pandey was a
Ph.D. in Hindi and was on a teaching/research assignment in the South Eastern
Studies Center of the University. My uncle had contacted K D Sharma and told
him that I would be joining the University of Chicago. Mr Sharma had a
car. He took me to his apartment, which
he shared with Dr. Pandey, for dinner. Sharma and Pandey gave me a tasty meal
of the type of vegetarian food I was used to. They were living in an apartment
near the University. The apartment had a bedroom used by K D Sharma, a living
room used by S M Pandey, a dinning room and a kitchen. They anticipated from
the look on my face that I was keen to share an apartment with other Indians
living near the campus of the University who cooked Indian food like they did.
They deliberated and decided to offer me to move in with them. They shifted the
dinning table to the kitchen and vacated the room. It was spacious and had a
black and white TV which I could use. I readily accepted their offer. Next day
I met the Director of the International House and told him my intentions to
move in with two persons from India associated with the University of Chicago.
He discouraged me against moving out of the International House. He emphasised
that new foreign students by convention were expected to stay at least in the
first quarter in the International House. More over I had already paid the room
rent for one quarter to the International House. But I was firm in my resolve
to move out of the International House and moved to the apartment of Sharma and
Pandey. But I could not live with them for long. That is an interesting story
in itself. I have written it in the next chapter.