Indian
Railways: Lifeline of the Nation
There is well used
adage, “If wishes were horses, men would fly”; maybe it is a voguish
predisposition of humans to transcend mountains, skies and water bodies like
the avian species. Humans through the innovative ability and ingenuity of the
Wright brothers realised the cherished dream of being airborne.
Delving
further, the wheel is an acclaimed invention that engineered and triggered the
growth of transportation. Humans navigated rivers and oceans by constructing
boats and ships. In today’s world mankind has crossed farther frontiers by
launching spaceships and rockets. But the quest for more efficient and superior
transportation remains relentless. Tesla is audaciously working to transport
humans to Mars; simultaneously the company is working on the Hyper Loop to haul
cargo and men within minutes across sizeable distances.
Rewind
to April 16, 1853; a truly momentous
day when iron trudged on iron. It appears aeons ago. Yes, 165 years to be
precise. This was day when Sahib, Sindh and Sultan, three
robust steam engines hauled 14 carriages on broad gauge track over a distance
of 34 kilometres. This historic journey took place between Boribunder (in
present day Mumbai) and Thane. Perhaps few railwaymen are cognizant of the fact
that initial plans to lay railway infrastructure in the subcontinent were
conceived as far back as 1832 in Madras (now Chennai).
However,
the First War of Independence in 1857 (or the Mutiny of 1857) had rattled the
British in a chilling manner. Thus it was that the East India Company gave way
to the Empire of Her Majesty, and India was conquered and enslaved by England.
The ‘natives’ became subjects of the British.
Astutely, the British realised that to
subjugate the Indians they required muscle. And this brawny flesh was organised
in three forms - the defence forces, the railways and the postal services. But
it was the railways that developed into the lifeline of the nation providing
the wherewithal to spread the Empire.
Today
Indian Railways (IR) operates around 23,000 trains daily to move approximately
3 million tonnes of freight cargo and more than 23 million passengers; no mean
achievement! IR has become a crucial
driver of the Indian economy. To run these trains, passenger and freight, the
organisation has a gargantuan fleet of resources. At the apex level the
organisation is headed by the Railway Board, which is further segregated into
17 Zonal Railways, 67 Divisional offices and several production units. The
apparently monolithic organisation has an assemblage of 10,000 locomotives,
58,000 coaches with aggregate seating capacity of 50 lakh, 2.5 lakh wagons with
aggregated freight carrying capacity of 13.5million tonnes and about 66,000
route kilometres of network.
Two
singular events are etched in the alcoves of my mind. While working in MILRAL,
a unit of Indian Railways housed in Sena Bhavan, I was involved in
transportation of our troops to the borders. It was a riveting and thrilling
experience. Remember Pokhran 2? The year was 1998 and Indian Railways and the
defence forces worked in tandem to transport our forces to hedge and safeguard
various vulnerable areas against inimical forces.
A few years later, I was posted at Bikaner
when the dastardly attack on the Indian Parliament took place. Once again it
was the lifeline of the nation, the Indian Railways that mobilised all
available resources to help safeguard our frontiers. All cargo (except thermal
powerhouse rakes) and all passenger carrying trains were terminated. The only
movement that took place on the Indian Railways was mobilisation of troops,
Operation Parakram. I do feel a sense of pride, even if it was only a ringside
participation.
In
good times and in bad, it is this lifeline that weaves the nation together
through the criss-crossing network, connects the entire nation into a common
thread.
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