March 2, 2014
Nightmare in Ariyalur, a brave tale from 1956
A survivor of a major train disaster in Tamil Nadu shares the trauma she passed through, all of 57 years later
As a fortunate survivor of one of India’s deadliest railway disasters,
the Ariyalur train accident, it is time to lay my story and the
nightmarish ghosts to rest, by putting my experiences down in writing.
It occurred on November 23, 1956, leaving 142 passengers dead and 110
injured. An estimated 200 people were buried in the debris. Many were
missing, their bodies never to be recovered.
Torrential rains had swollen the river Maruthaiyar to a level where the
waters almost touched the rails on a bridge between the Ariyalur and
Kallagam stations, breaking the embankment to a length of nearly 20
feet, causing flash floods.
Off the rails
About 2 miles after leaving Ariyalur station and 20 miles away from Trichinopoly (Tiruchirapalli), the train slipped off the rails. Its steam engine and seven timber-built carriages including the parcel van telescoped and fell into the river. The eighth coach derailed and four carriages in the rear remained intact.
About 2 miles after leaving Ariyalur station and 20 miles away from Trichinopoly (Tiruchirapalli), the train slipped off the rails. Its steam engine and seven timber-built carriages including the parcel van telescoped and fell into the river. The eighth coach derailed and four carriages in the rear remained intact.
Then aged 21, I had boarded the Thoothukudi (Tuticorin) Express at
Madras (Chennai) at 9.50 the night before, with my aunt. Like Santa in
his gift-filled sleigh, we were laden with our Christmas shopping from
Moore Market, an old-fashioned steam engine deputising for the reindeer
for our journey to Trichinopoly. We were the only occupants of a bay of
the eighth compartment of the 13-coach train, one having been detached
at Virudhachalam to go on to Salem separately. After a light meal, we
settled down for the night and soon fell into deep sleep.
Our terrifying ordeal began with a tremendous jolt and bang. There was a
sizzling hiss of steam and, then, ear-piercing screams. After being
left sprawling across the floor of the compartment, my first urge after
regaining my composure was to jump out of the train. My aunt grabbed me
on time: “Don’t jump! We are on a river,” she screamed. She saved me
from a watery grave.
Like a puppet on a string, I ran around the compartment in circles. My
watch showed it was 5.30 a.m. Peering out of the window, the first crack
of daylight revealed a mighty river that roared eerily as it frothed
and rushed furiously, taking everything in its path — trees, train
wreckage and bodies of men, women and infants. Perched on a platform on
the bridge, the guard yelled, “Get out, your compartment has derailed.”
In response, my aunt, in her overpowering voice, shouted: “follow me.”
“I can’t,” I cried, clinging to her. Wrenching herself off, she bravely
unlatched the door and lowered herself to the step of the compartment
precariously. She then clambered along, holding on window to window and
heading towards the rear of the train.
In an incredible act of heroism, we were walking back to Ariyalur station to seek help.
Prayer for deliverance
Turning my eye heavenward, I prayed for deliverance. Mustering my courage and leaving the precious parcels behind, I followed my aunt in utter terror along with other passengers who had vacated the eighth coach. I remembered the lines from Tennyson’s ‘The Charge of the Light Brigade’: “...into the valley of death rode...”
Turning my eye heavenward, I prayed for deliverance. Mustering my courage and leaving the precious parcels behind, I followed my aunt in utter terror along with other passengers who had vacated the eighth coach. I remembered the lines from Tennyson’s ‘The Charge of the Light Brigade’: “...into the valley of death rode...”
My heart pounded, my teeth chattered and I trembled with fear and cold
as I gripped the window bars of the compartments. Loosening my grip
would mean certain death. Using every ounce of my strength and with
unswerving determination I struggled to save my life. With bruised palms
I swayed across four compartments and eventually reached the last
compartment in the reassuring presence of my aunt. She was a heroine.
Frightening hours
Being stranded there, waiting to be rescued with floodwaters on either side of the track, were the most frightening hours of my life, observing a scene a human eye could never have seen. It has haunted me all my life. The river bank was bathed in blood with human pulp, headless corpses, severed limbs, torsos and heaps of bodies wrecked of life’s esteem.
Being stranded there, waiting to be rescued with floodwaters on either side of the track, were the most frightening hours of my life, observing a scene a human eye could never have seen. It has haunted me all my life. The river bank was bathed in blood with human pulp, headless corpses, severed limbs, torsos and heaps of bodies wrecked of life’s esteem.
After an anxious wait of about four hours, the floodwaters gradually
abated. Finally, as the river meekly meandered in its course and corpses
bobbed in and out of water, we were rescued. A locomotive arrived to
tow us safely back to the Ariyalur station.
There were triumphant screams mingled with sadness for those lost in one of the worst disasters that gripped a nation.
joycevernem@hotmail.com
( At the time of the accident, young Joyce Philomena was a clerk at
the Golden Rock Railway School in Tiruchi, newly recruited by Southern
Railway. Two years later, she was tranferred to the Divisional Railway
Superintendent's office in Tiruchi. She married Clarence Vernem, a Guard
with Southern Railway, and moved to Madurai where she continued to work
for the Railways until opting for voluntary retirement from service in
1982.
The following year, Mr. Vernem passed away. She migrated to Australia
in 1996 to join her two children and their families. She now lives in
Melbourne (right). Upon being contacted by The Hindu on the phone on
March 1 after she sent in her account to Open Page, Ms. Vernem (who
provided the details given here of herself) said she remained terrified
of trains for years. She later mustered the courage if only to watch
passing trains, and would marvel at “how brave the passengers were” !
After suffering nightmares and sleep-walking disorders, she
eventually overcame her dread, and often passed Ariyalur by train. A
year shy of 80, she still occasionally takes the train in Australia, and
lives a “very active life.”
As for her aunt, Eugene Gilles passed away in 1985.)
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