ahh, the north-east

With Johnson at Lake Loktak.

It is remote. It is different. It is beautiful. Northeast India is a collection of eight states on the other side of Bangladesh, with a number of them sharing a border with Myanmar.

The purpose of the journey was to visit people, especially the ‘home-place’ of Johnson Raih, my colleague and friend. We flew into Imphal (Manipur, 3 days), travelled up to Senapati (Manipur, 3 days), before continuing on to Kohima (Nagaland, 4 days).

Such has been the political instability over the years that it is an area our parents were never able to visit. I feel blessed. There is so much to enjoy…

The cities
The flight into Imphal was spectacular, as the view stretched up to the horizon.

Senapati is midway between Imphal and Kohima.

Senapati

Kohima (altitude: 5000 feet)


The beauty
I am a lakes ‘n mountains person, but if you throw in a few terraced fields as well, I am a happy-chappy. Lake Loktak in Manipur is famous for the phumdis which float on it. The largest one is roughly 40 sq km in size, becoming the world’s largest floating park! While the day was wet and dull, the beauty was still evident.

In Manipur there are the hills and the valleys, with the relationship between the people in these different places often determining how peaceful life will be for everyone. Drive north towards Nagaland and the mountains soon welcome you, rising to a height just a few hundred feet higher than New Zealand’s highest mountain.

The Naga Hills – at 6am.

The fields, often terraced on steep hillsides, are always a marvel.

The people
Meeting Johnson’s parents was a highlight. After a lifetime of service of their Poumai Naga Baptist people, they are living in retirement in Karong (5km north of Senapati). In NZ terms their home had more affinity with a tent. Very simple. As is often the case this simplicity was associated with warmth and generosity. I loved hanging out at their place.

Johnson with his parents in their home in Karong

Johnson’s Dad reading my Dad’s biography, which I brought as a gift.

Having a laugh with Nehemiah about him being ‘the tallest man in the district’
until yours truly arrived for a visit!



The hospitality
Throughout the Majority World, hospitality is important. ‘The guest is god’ rationale is one you sometimes hear. I find Asia, generally speaking, is exceptional at it – with the peoples of Myanmar/NE India right up there, near the head of the queue.

The North-east is a tribal area. It reminded me so often of the Māori people in NZ, with their commitment to whanau/iwi and the way identity is formed by moving beyond just the nuclear family. When we walked in Senapati, every fifth woman seemed to be Johnson’s aunty and every third man seemed to be a cousin-brother. On one morning the uncles gathered to have breakfast with us …

… but not to be outdone by the men, some of the aunties showed up the next morning.

They had a little ceremony to thank me (and the people back home) who are standing with Johnson & Dinny – and their boys, Joel & Julian – through this time of doctoral study. Some of them became quite emotional (as did I!), as they shared.

Everywhere I went, there were gifts given – here they are, all laid out on the bed at home.
All woven by hand, taking hours and hours of time.

The food
Pork and rice are so big up there, they even name houses and hotels after them!

It is also home of the King Chilli – so royal in its impact that airport security searches for it. They are not allowed on a flight. They could be used to do too much damage. That is some kind of chilli, a chilli with whom I developed no intentional intimacy (but there was time for one moment of unintentional intimacy- ugh!). On departure, at the airport, I wondered why all the locals were being taken through a separate security line. “Had there been some recent political trouble?” No. No. They were just checking to see if they had any King Chilli in their bags…!

While I gave myself to all the food (more foothills of rice, it must be said, than Johnson’s himalayas), when the opportunity came for chai with puri bajji – this North Indian lad grabbed it gratefully.




The history
During World War 2, the Japanese advance eastwards was stopped in the Battle of Imphal and the Battle of Kohima (which I blogged about two years ago with the Battle of the Tennis Court). So on the very road we travelled. It is reasserting itself now as the key link, by road, between South Asia and East Asia. For decades it has been a politically unstable area, another one where British cartography was shortsighted and their promises left unkept in the final frantic rush to leave India. Insurgencies against the authorities have been going on ever since. The saddest incident of all being in Johnson’s home village, taking place when he was living there, a lad of just ten years of age.




The religion
Three of the eight northeastern states (Meghalaya, Nagaland, Mizoram) have Christian majorities, while Manipur is 40% Christian. In Nagaland 80%+ of the people would consider themselves to be Christian. A higher percentage of Baptists there, than in Texas or Mississippi. Incredible. However, reminiscent of the US, a nominalism and a nationalism (or, in this case, tribalism) work together to weaken the witness of the church in society.

All the Baptist churches on a 10km stretch of the main highway through Senapati. Eat your heart out, Dallas!

Kohima. Not many places in the world where you’d see a sign like this one.
Back in Senapati, Johnson’s father’s ministry makes a billboard in the centre of the town.

The workhorse truck in the Northeast is called a Shaktiman, where shakti carries the idea of empowering, or strengthening. Here is one that waited with us for seven hours as a landslide was being cleared…

The name of the truck is on the nose – but, look carefully, zoom in,
as the real empowerment is mentioned above the windscreen.


The roads 
Let’s finish where many people tend to start when it comes to conversation about the Northeast: the quality of the roads. A little unfair. One local captured it well: it is like driving on a dry riverbed. Another one was more positive: it is the free daily Naga massage! Sometimes you wonder if you spend more time in the potholes, than out of them. There is a lot going on below the surface (!) with the roading problem (corruption, prejudice etc) but there is some hope that central government may begin to resolve it soon. On the positive side, it provides a wonderful context in which to get to know your travelling companions…

The quantity of rain in Senapati contributed to this tragedy within 60 minutes of us passing through this very spot. Very sad. 
Imphal to Kohima is 125km and it takes close to five hours (if there are no landslides which we encountered going north and then coming south again). At one end of a little town called Charhazar is the sign “Jesus said, ‘Behold I come quickly'” – while at the other end the sign reads, “Prepare to meet your God.” Hmmm. Maybe one context-free application of these texts is that if you travel too quickly on these roads, you will meet your God just as quickly.
As mentioned, going north we waited seven hours for a landslide to clear. Coming south it was still unstable, the queues were long – and we had a plane to catch. So we called Nehemiah (see above) to arrange a taxi to meet us on the other side and off we went. In determining not to step the wrong way as we walked on the edge of the road (ie sliding down with the landslide), I made the mistake of leaving the edge for the road – only to sink to my knees in mud. Johnson came to the rescue! We had to turn back – and then try again…
Having negotiated the landslide safely, I was grateful for my friend carrying
my suitcase along the edge (see him in the distance).

Notice how the silly white guy is the only one with a significant mud problem.


nice chatting

Paul

[PS. Please excuse the quality of the photos. My camera had a close encounter with a car ferry on the Suez Canal last month – and is still being fixed. These are taken from may average smartphone.]

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About Me

paul06.16

the art of unpacking

After a childhood in India, a theological training in the USA and a pastoral ministry in Southland (New Zealand), I spent twenty years in theological education in New Zealand — first at Laidlaw College and then at Carey Baptist College, where I served as principal. In 2009 I began working with Langham Partnership and since 2013 I have been the Programme Director (Langham Preaching). Through it all I've cherished the experience of the 'gracious hand of God upon me' and I've relished the opportunity to 'unpack', or exegete, all that I encounter in my walk through life with Jesus.

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6 Comments

  1. Stephanie Christensen on July 30, 2021 at 9:05 pm

    I would love to read your father's biography. Where is it available?

  2. Varughese on July 31, 2021 at 3:59 am

    Beautiful. It's a pity that I haven't been to the Northeast yet!

  3. NEHE on July 31, 2021 at 11:11 am

    A very interesting read with engaging storytelling style. Glad that you came and it was very educative and inspiring to be with you. Looking forward to fellowship more with you and learn much more.

    Nehemiah, here.

  4. the art of unpacking on August 1, 2021 at 4:15 am

    Hi Steph — it is one of those print-on-demand options and so it tends to be expensive.

    Mary Tallon, Surprised by Obedience

    Next week it will be ten years since he died. I still enjoy going to this post to hear him sing (a little different from what goes around today) — https://paulwindsorblog.com/2012/08/one-year-on-remembering-dad.html

    blessings

    Paul

  5. the art of unpacking on August 1, 2021 at 4:16 am

    You must go, Varughese.

    I am sure Johnson can arrange a reason 🙂

    Paul

  6. the art of unpacking on August 1, 2021 at 4:17 am

    Yes, Nehemiah, although it was only for a few minutes and hours, I did enjoy meeting you and looking you in the eye!

    best wishes

    Paul

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