A River Carried Me Here
Where the
mountains will hide your sorrow
And the rivers
guide your spirit
The river that flows by the town I live in has many lives,
many avatars, many names, many stories, many legends, many worlds. The town I
associate with has its own legend, of great gods fighting over the love of two,
spilling blood into the river, giving it the name the City of Blood. So goes
the story, one of the many, as the river traverses from the high reaches of the
Himalaya, gushing down the plains is a vast braided expanse, a river taking a
hundred forms, no, a hundred-thousand.
But it is not this river that carried me here. It was
another, much smaller, much lesser known. This river I speak of is yet to speak
to me, but I’ve learned that without it the air doesn’t move, the ground
doesn’t breathe, the rain doesn’t fall, the elephants don’t walk. And indeed,
hell hath no fury like its floods.
Rivers, small or big, carry stories. They are its memories. The
difference lies is how we perceive them. One is as much likely to learn of them
by staying put along its bank for a lifetime as one is by traversing the whole
length of it. Both vastly different, both equally expansive. Fortunately,
people have done both, and it is for an impatient mind like mine now to absorb
it even as I wait to hear stories straight from the river. Patience is virtue
when waiting to be carried in the sway of a river’s narrative. There are
countless, always-changing turns on this braided river, every turn a turn in
the pages of a book. And there are many pages to turn till I am caught in the
river’s flow.
It is one of the few rivers with a masculine name. It arises
from three headstreams of Kubi, Angsi, and Chemayungdung glaciers in the
Kailash range of the Himalaya, south-east of Lake Manasarovar, in Tibet. The
headwaters are called Dangque Zanbu, for the Horse River, and is known as
Yarlung Tsangpo, for the ‘purifier coming from the sky’ – a fitting name as it
flows straight west-to-east. It is also referred to as the Red River because it
is said the water appears a deep brown due to iron content. It drops about
4,500 m in the 1,700 km stretch before turning south and entering India, in the
state of Arunachal Pradesh, here it is known as Siang, for, as per the Adi
peoples, ‘the river that flows through our heart’.
Flowing with a wild rage, cutting valleys into mountains, it
twists and turns west. It is considered the most difficult stretch of the river
if one is to follow, with very few cane bridges straddling over it for local
commute – and it remains the most isolated part of the river to tread. It
bursts forth through the foothills as it churns its way through the
saucer-shaped state of Assam, creating a distinct ‘sleeping U’ cusp, its
eastward flow to the north and the westward to the south separated by about 200
km.
Now called the Brahmaputra, the Son of God, braided like a
maiden’s long braided hair, shimmering golden silver as the sunlight plays with
its white sands, creating gigantic river islands – the chaporis – it meanders,
slowly now, but in an expanse so vast one cannot see the other shore. It then
turns sharply south as it enters Bangladesh, where it is known as Jamuna before
merging with the Ganges, known as Padma, and meeting Meghna as they flow south,
forming the world’s largest delta. A 2,900 km long journey from the headwaters
of the Kailash Range to the Bay of Bengal.
If the river is mystical, the mountains are elusive. The
riverbank offers only glimpses of the high mountains far over the northern
horizon, a wall with jagged top running east to west. That beyond lay the many
rocky folds – the tallest in the world – is hard to comprehend. For the most
part, the Himalayan foothills remain hidden in layered clouds, yet here and
there they peek through, higher than one expects them to see. On clear days, they
appear as a gigantic dark shroud over the northern horizon, menacing, but
bewildering.
Far beyond lies Pakke Tiger Reserve, my friend announces as
we look upon the mountains from the shores of Jia Bharali. Far beyond lies
Eaglenest Wildlife Sanctuary, he announces as we look north from the Jia
Gabharu. And from here, along the coast of Sankosh River, they rise in Bhutan.
And farther beyond flows the Brahmaputra in the opposite direction. We stand in
the cusp of this river – it cradles this land between its two banks.
During winters, one may glimpse the high glaciers of the
Eastern Himalaya, ice and snow, melting and rolling down the rocky ramparts.
All rivers are unique, but Brahmaputra’s journey is unique among India’s
rivers, a trait shared by very few of the long-flowing rivers: its dramatic
turns. Only one comes to my mind, Ma Narmada, the river I am very fond of.
Narmada arises in the Maikal Hills of Central India, and after flowing north a
while like the rest that rise at Amarkantak, turns violently to the west, and
continues draining straight to the Arabian Sea.
Brahmaputra’s course turns violently south as it flows east,
then west, into a cusp that has captured my fascination ever since I’ve come along
its shores. There is no name to it, but between the east-flowing Brahmaputra
and the west-flowing Brahmaputra lies a line – a ridge – of peaks which split the
tributary rivers into two, those flowing north to the Tsangpo, and those
flowing south the Brahmaputra.
Such lines are a geological feature, separating two
watersheds apart, called a watershed divide. Brahmaputra’s has me in its awe
because it creates its own divide – the Brahmaputra Divide, a river splitting
its watershed into two watersheds, interacting only along the cusp as the river
turns – I don’t know the word for it.
Of course, one can make two arguments. One, that really,
Tsangpo and Brahmaputra are two different river systems, with different
identities and different origins – to this I argue that a river flows in a
transient phase of being the same and not the same water. Technically, however,
it is one stretch of a body of flowing water to which many other rivers merge
with – making it, in essence, one river. And two, that this is merely a feature
of the fold in the river which is seen along many rivers that bend gently about
– to this I agree to an extent, but the matter is of the sheer scale of this
riverfold.
I mapped this divide and compared it with the
Ganga-Brahmaputra Divide separating both the watersheds, and found something curious.
The Brahmaputra Divide is more-or-less the same, if only a little longer, as
the Ganga-Brahmaputra divide. In other words, the Brahmaputra divides itself
longer than the two watersheds do. This might not mean much, but if it’s not
about finding the secrets of the river, what am I even doing?
The Brahmaputra Divide lies roughly between two of the
tallest mountains in the world, the Khangchengyao at 6,913 m – a part of the
Khangchendzonga Range – to the west and the Namjagbarwa at 7,782 m, the
eastern-most tallest Himalayan mountain. The divide itself isn’t very
straightforward, with many north-flowing and south-flowing rivers giving the
ridge a zig-zag pattern.
It is curious that the western edge of this divide touches
the Ganga-Brahmaputra Divide, and the state of Sikkim is perhaps the most
unique to showcase this: it’s cube-shape is all-too-cute and difficult to miss,
its northern boundary is formed by the Bramaputra Divide, in the sense, all
rivers arising from Sikkim flow south towards Brahmaputra, and the northern
flow to Tsangpo, and Sikkim’s western boundary is formed by the
Ganga-Brahmaputra Divide, in the sense, all rivers to the west of this flow to
the Ganga, and to the east flow to the Brahmaputra. Similarly, the western-half
of Nepal’s northern border is formed by the Ganga-Brahmaputra Divide, in the
sense the rivers in Nepal flow to the Ganga and north of it to the Tsangpo.
This play of rivers and mountains shaping our imaginary
political boundaries is not unique, but in case of this divide, it is not
merely a line drawn on a river or a mountain range, it is drawn in a way the
natural features have divided these watersheds.
The high-resolution PDF version is available here. |
Of course, I have not travelled with the river to grasp even
one of its stories, yet to know that I live along its northern shore less than
a kilometre away, and point straight to its southern shore hundreds of
kilometres north flowing in the opposite direction, gives me a tingling sense of wonder and awe. I hear
the river here, and I imagine the Tsangpo gurgling far up in the lap of the
Himalaya. I see its waters flow seamlessly, and I imagine its rapids
through the rocky mountains.
A little over a decade ago, it was the wind that blew me thither. As I explore this land of the rivers, new words begin trickle through my mind, as a river now carries me. This is hopefully a new beginning of the Brahmaputra Diaries.
--
This was the longest break I have been on, but it was not
for nothing, I hope. The news will be out in a few months as I return to
writing on Sahyadrica more frequently.
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