hidden image

Train Travel Was Once Safe!

Robert Clements Robert Clements
05 Aug 2024

"..Three rail accidents, 21 dead in two months.." 31st July, Times of India.

In a second-class compartment somewhere in India, a grandmother looked out of a train window with fear in her eyes. "Once upon a time," she said as she looked down at her two little grandchildren, "train travel was safe!"

"Grandma," said the children together, "you told us never ever to lie, didn't you?"

"At every station," continued their grandma, "passengers used to get down and stretch their legs."

"Stretch their legs!" cried out the elder of the two children. "You mean their limbs were still part of their body? They were not cut off in accidents? Grandmother, this is a fairytale, isn't it?"

"People used to take out their pack of cards and play!"

"Didn't they keep a watch at the window? Didn't they always look to see if the engine was still attached and hadn't fallen off?"

"We even shared our food with each other," continued the grandmother nostalgically.

"Didn't you keep it for later grandmother, when you would need it at some remote place where you would be lying with dead people around, and bogies piled on each other?"

"Some of the people used to retire to bed early," said the old lady, "We climbed up onto our berths and within minutes were in the land of nod, gently rocked by the swaying of the train!"

"Grandma?" cried both the children together.

"What is it my dears?" asked the old lady wearily.

"You're making it all up aren't you?" shouted the children.

"No!" whispered the grandmother, "Once upon a time, rail travel was safe."

"You lie!" shouted both the children angrily together.

"Signals were checked," said the old lady softly. "Lines were inspected. Tax money was spent on safety!"

"Isn't safety important anymore?" whispered the two children fearfully.

"No," said the old lady sadly, "Not as important as showing off fast trains and fancy bullet trains!"

"But the money for those new lines, those bullet trains, shouldn't it be spent on safety instead?" asked the elder of the little children shrilly.

The grandmother nodded sadly, "And if there was an accident, the minister in charge took the blame and resigned immediately!" She then looked out of the window fearfully.

The other passengers in the same compartment also looked out, afraid. A woman held prayer beads and chanted her prayers incessantly, forgetting lines as she stared at a young man standing at the door, ready to jump if the train derailed, hit another train, fell into the river or just fell apart!

The two children looked up fearfully at their grandmother and screamed as the train suddenly rocked, rolled and rose like a plane. "Once upon a time,' she whispered before blacking out, "train travel was safe...!"

Recent Posts

Once a unifying sport, cricket has been hijacked by politics and power. The BCCI now mirrors the regime's arrogance. Global bullying and stoking jingoism domestically have turned the gentleman's game
apicture Mathew John
03 Nov 2025
ML Satyan, a prophetic voice of conscience, lived and wrote for the poor and the Church's renewal. Fearless yet compassionate, he blended faith with activism, challenging hypocrisy and comfort while i
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
03 Nov 2025
The Election Commission's Special Intensive Revision of voter lists reeks of hidden motives. By demanding fresh citizenship proof and ignoring its own past rolls, it is disenfranchising minorities and
apicture Joseph Maliakan
03 Nov 2025
The Election Commission's Special Intensive Revision (SIR) in West Bengal to update the 2026 voters' list has sparked political tension. Evidently, it is a BJP-backed bid to disenfranchise minorities
apicture Isaac Gomes
03 Nov 2025
Migrants form the invisible backbone of India's cities, yet they remain politically voiceless and socially excluded. They are denied fair housing, healthcare, and even voting rights, written out of In
apicture Fr. John Felix Raj & Prabhat Kumar Datta
03 Nov 2025
Once a Modi admirer, Sonam Wangchuk now languishes in jail under the National Security Act. The people of Ladakh, once promised empowerment, are silenced, jobless, and disenfranchised. They were betra
apicture Chhotebhai
03 Nov 2025
The Taj Mahal, a timeless symbol of love, is now a target of hate-fueled revisionism. Despite overwhelming historical evidence, right-wing propaganda persists in recasting it as a Hindu temple.
apicture Ram Puniyani
03 Nov 2025
Trump missed the Nobel Peace Prize, for which he had ardently longed, making no secret of it and loudly claiming he had prevented 7 wars. The fact remains that he has been supporting the inhumanity of
apicture Thomas Menamparampil
03 Nov 2025
I am in for correction. With a word like 'reaction,' we have no power to stop in the middle. We have to see things through to the very end. Moreover, it never works alone but in a chain. Reaction cann
apicture P. Raja
03 Nov 2025
From Harappa's drainage to Hampi's aqueducts, India once built cities in harmony with nature and purpose. Today's chaotic urban sprawl betrays that legacy. A single monsoon is enough today to expose t
apicture Pachu Menon
03 Nov 2025