Hear no evil; see no evil
The tragic death of Pallavi Purkayastha is a
chilling commentary on urban life today
It’s a nightmare scenario that every woman replays ever
so often in the dark corners of her brain – along with the fevered prayer that
it never comes true. But for Pallavi Purkayastha, that nightmare became all too
real when she was attacked and killed in her Mumbai apartment by a building
watchman, Sajjad Ahmed Mughal, who had become obsessed with her.
It was sometime after midnight when the lights went out
in her flat; she called the building’s maintenance to complain. The
electricians came upstairs to repair the fault, accompanied by the watchman.
When the electricians had departed, the watchman saw his opportunity. He stole
the house keys, waited for a while and then let himself in to attack Pallavi,
who was by then asleep in her bedroom.
He tried to rape her, she resisted; he attacked her
with a knife, she fought back. He slashed her wrists and throat. Bleeding
profusely, she ran out of her flat and rang her neighbours’ bell (there are
four other flats on the floor; she is believed to have rung the bells outside
at least two). Nobody responded. Her assailant dragged her back into her flat
and continued to attack her. He then left Pallavi Purkayastha, a 25 year old
lawyer with a bright and glittering future ahead of her, to bleed quietly to
death. Her murder was reported only at 5.30 am when her partner, Avik Sengupta,
came back home and found her lying in a pool of blood.
I can only marvel at the bravery of this young woman
who fought so doggedly against a man who was holding a knife to her throat. I
can only salute the courage that led her to escape his clutches long enough to
run out for help. And I can’t even begin to imagine the horror of fear and
desperation her last moments must have been when nobody came to her rescue.
And while we all mourn for Pallavi Purkayastha today,
her death is much more than a personal tragedy for her parents, her soon-to-be
husband, family and friends. It is also a chilling commentary on urban life today.
It doesn’t matter how hard you try to stay safe. You
can live in a gated community, you can have private security, you can install
CCTV all around, you can have intercoms to summon help. But in the end, you are
on your own. You can’t rely on the security guards who are supposed to
safeguard you. And you certainly can’t hope for any help from the people next
door.
It has become something of a cliché now to complain about
how neighbourly ties are breaking down in our metro cities, and how people are
becoming increasingly anti-social. There is certainly no denying that everyone
increasingly lives in isolated silos, not caring to even know the name of the
person next door. We revel in the anonymity that city life affords us, allowing
us to do our own thing. And while we all have stories about neighbours from
hell (whose children deface our walls with graffiti; who throw garbage over
their walls into our backyards; who lure our staff away; who play loud music
late into the night) our choicest abuse is reserved for those who are perceived
as being ‘nosey’ – as in taking an interest in your life.
I have to confess that like most people of my
generation, I have always been leery about neighbours who try to pry into my
business. But today, as I sit down to write this, I can’t help but wish that
Pallavi Purkayastha had been blessed by such ‘nosey’ neighbours, people who
were curious enough to peep out when the bell rang late at night, and who would
then take the trouble to investigate if anything was amiss.
Instead, the people living on Pallavi’s floor seem to
be part of the ‘let’s not get involved’ fraternity, who turn a blind eye and
deaf ear to the goings-on next door, on the grounds that it is none of their
business. But even so, I imagine it takes a special sort of indifference to not
respond to a blood-splattered woman ringing your doorbell in the early hours of
the morning; to turn away and go back to sleep even though the landing outside
is soaked with blood; to not even pick up the phone and call the police control
room or emergency services.
We do not know whether Pallavi’s life could have been
saved if her neighbours had intervened – if not personally than by summoning
help – but at least she would have died knowing that she was not alone. The
knowledge that there were people out there who cared enough to come to her
rescue may have been of some comfort to her as life bled slowly out of her.
And at the very least, if her neighbours had been
vigilant enough – leave alone caring enough – they could have helped apprehend
her attacker who dumped the murder weapon and fled the scene. It was a stroke
of good luck that the police caught up with him at the train station before he
boarded the train to Kashmir. But he could just as easily have gotten away –
and that really does not bear thinking about.
I can only hope and pray that those people who claim to
have not heard the bell ringing in the dead of night never find themselves – or
their children – in trouble. And that if they ever do, they are not met with
the same indifference with which they treated that desperate, frightened young
woman.