Help Came from Strange Quarters During the Chennai Floods

In the deluge, surrounded by a raging river, and when all hope was lost, help came from unexpected quarters

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In the deluge, surrounded by a raging river, and when all hope was lost, help came from unexpected quarters

IT HAD RAINED through the night. It was as if someone had viciously ripped open the skies to start the deluge. Daylight broke but the pouring rain showed no signs of letting up. It was the first day of December 2015. Memories of a flooded Chennai on another December day, 10 years ago, came rushing back to me. But somehow, this time, everything seemed worse. The power lines were down, plunging us into darkness, the landlines went dead and even mobile phones had stopped working. My husband and I, both senior citizens, were cut off from the rest of the world.

Every year, the north-east monsoon lashes Chennai from October to December. Its severity is unpredictable, and with poor infrastructure, power cuts and traffic jams, normal life comes to a standstill. Chembarambakkam, a mammoth rain-fed reservoir about 29 kilometres away, supplies water to the city. When the lake fills up, the sluice gates are opened and the surplus water is let out into the Adyar River that originates here. But it isn't as smooth as it sounds.

In December 2005, too, the city was flooded. There was an announcement on 3 December that water would be released from Chembarambakkam Lake. We did not know what to make of it, as we were new to the area. Our neighbour had advised us to park our car elsewhere. Thank goodness we did, because the water rose steadily. By the next morning, it threatened to enter the house. Some helpful young boys carried me on a chair to safety, while my husband walked through chest-deep water to join me. It had been quite an experience, but being married to an engineer from the Indian Air Force and living in remote locations, I was used to the vagaries of nature. When we returned the next morning, there was no trace of water; only the slush remained.

Ten years later, on 2 December, we took a deep breath as we found ourselves surrounded by muddy water.

MY HUSBAND AND I had spent a sleepless nig...

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