home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT1001>
- <title>
- May 13, 1991: Bangladesh:Cyclone Of Death
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- May 13, 1991 Crack Kids
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 28
- Cyclone Of Death
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By James Walsh
- </p>
- <list>
- <item> The lightning flashes
- <item> and threatens, the
- <item> foam-fields hiss,
- <item> the sharp white
- <item> terrible mirth of
- <item> brute Nature.
- </list>
- <p> Sea-Waves by Rabindranath Tagore was published exactly 100
- years ago, but the great Bengali poet's subject is timeless. His
- April of cyclones, "blind forms of being," was this year's last
- day of April for Bangladesh. Twenty-foot walls of water.
- Demonic winds of crushing force. The horror left behind: 125,000
- lives lost, and still counting. A world used to human-scale
- catastrophes--plane crashes, say, that kill a few hundred at
- most--cannot absorb the biblical dooms that visit Bangladesh.
- Straddling the conjoined mouths of the Ganges and Brahmaputra,
- two of the Indian subcontinent's mightiest rivers, the country
- is regularly drowned by flood crests surging downstream or
- scourged by whirlwinds from the sea. Of the 20th century's 10
- deadliest storms, seven have devoured their victims at the head
- of the Bay of Bengal.
- </p>
- <p> In the twinkling of an eye it ended! None could see
- </p>
- <p> When life was, and when life finished!
- </p>
- <p> The aftermath of a fierce cyclone looks like a judgment.
- But no reasonable attempt to comprehend Bangladesh's
- afflictions could find a moral in them. In 1970, a year before
- the birth trauma of the Bangladesh republic, a cyclone may have
- taken half a million lives. The number was only a guess:
- survivors, typically poor rice farmers and fishermen on exposed
- delta islands, can never afford to count the lost. Their
- suffering--starvation, cholera, typhus--is just beginning.
- Tagore identified April with Rudra, the Indian storm god, but
- Sea-Waves is really a meditation on "brute Madness." Wonders the
- poet: "Why in its midst was the mind of man placed?"
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-