Pakistan Today

Dargah’s Billi…

… and a cat named Sufi

I’m writing this column in the dargah of Hazrat Nizmauddin Auliya, Delhi’s 14th century saint. It is his Urs. For now I’m distracted by some other being.

He gazes down on the marble floor. One minute. Two minutes. Three minutes. Eleven minutes. He is immobile. Pilgrims walk around him. A few pat him. One child playfully pulls his tail. One takes his photo with a mobile phone camera. But he remains stock-still. A statue.

He is Billi. His name means ‘cat’ in Hindi. Most people call him Billi. But sometimes he is also called ‘Cat’ and ‘Catty’. His light-brown furry body is marked with black stripes. He has eight whiskers. The inside flaps of his ears have the pale red shade of raw meat.

“Billi has been here for four years,” Farid Nizami, a khadim (caretaker) of the shrine tells me. “There are about four cats who are permanent residents in the dargah but Billi is very different.”

Unlike the other cats, Billi is not shy of people. He never runs away from them; he never tries to look for a secluded spot. He is mostly seen sitting beside worshippers who are either praying or reading from the Quran.

In winter, Billi often jumps into people’s laps and snuggles inside their shawls.

In summer, Billi lies in the shade.

No extrovert, Billi barely looks at the crowd, and seldom seems to react to the noise and chaos so typical of pilgrim destinations.

He is like an ascetic; disdainful of the corporeal world.

When he is hungry, he sits beside anybody who happens to be eating. In Hazrat Nizmauddin dargah, like most other sufi shrines, pilgrims often eat, pray and sleep in the courtyard. Free food is served twice daily. Some pilgrims bring their own home-cooked meals.

On noticing Billi, most people give a small portion of their roti or biryani to him. Some do it out of love, others out of duty.

Unlike dogs, cats are traditionally considered holy in Islam. They are permitted to roam freely in shrines and mosques. For instance, it is rare to spot dogs in the Muslim quarters of Shahjahanabad but cats lurk everywhere: in alleys, across drains, inside bakeries, on rooftops, around electric poles, alongside butcheries.

In the book 100 Cats Who Changed Civilisation: History’s Most Influential Felines, American author Sam Stall has a chapter titled Muezza: The Cat Who was Mohammed’s Favorite Cat. Explaining why cats are esteemed in Islam, Stall writes:

Felines owe this exalted status to Muezza, the adored pet of the Prophet Mohammed. One day, as his faithful pet slept on one of the sleeves of his robe, Mohammed was called away to his prayer. Rather than disturb the cat, he cut off his sleeve. When he returned, Muezza bowed to her master and received three strokes down her back in return. This blessing assured her a spot in the afterlife.

This blessing also gave a home to Billi in one of Delhi’s most exalted places.

The evening prayer has just ended. The qawwals have taken out their harmonium.

Suddenly springing to life, Billi is getting up from the marble platform, jumping down to the courtyard and making his way through the crowd.

He brushes past an embracing couple. He stops by a fakeer eating biryani from a polythene bag. He briefly sits beside a circle of boys who toss chicken bones at him. He is heading towards the Jamat Khana mosque, which was built in the dargah by one of the sons of Sultan Allaudin Khilji. Two children try patting him but he ignores them, and enters the mosque, where he keeps walking… in the direction of Mecca.

This Billi is indeed like a Sufi. But I know another cat who is actually called Sufi.

Thumri singer Vidya Rao lives with Sufi in a second-floor apartment, not far from Qutub Minar. Like most live-in companions, they have only a few things in common. While both share a dislike for milk, Rao love chocolates and Sufi doesn’t. Rao has read all the seven Harry Potter novels, Sufi hasn’t.

They first met one monsoon afternoon when Rao was returning from… well, Hazrat Nizamuddin’s shrine. Her daughter, Aditi, spotted a kitten lost in the road. They brought her home and named her Sufi. Why Sufi? “You see she was, so to speak, taken from one sufi dargah to the other”, Rao told me; her house is walking distance from Sheikh Bakhtyar Kaki’s shrine.

A tiny bell around Sufi’s neck helps Rao in tracking her movements. As a kitten, Sufi had broken her leg and so has a slight limp. When she feels claustrophobic, she is permitted to prowl in the apartment complex. Always concerned, Rao intently watches for her from the door till she returns.

If not doing riyaz, yoga, meditation, or reiki, you might as well catch Rao chatting with Sufi, who, by the way, is not the only kitten in her life. There are cats painted on her cups, saucers, and also on her tablecloth. There’s even a cat-shaped blackboard stuck on her refrigerator.

While Rao prefers vegetarian food, Sufi is a fish lover. Her meals are never complete without rohu. She also has a weakness for chicken. “Sufi is lucky to have you,” I told Rao. “I’m lucky to have her,” she replied.

Tonight Rao will also be visiting the dargah. Will she come with Sufi? Will Sufi meet Billi? Will they bond?

Mayank Austen Soofi lives in a library. He has one website and four blogs. The website address: thedelhiwalla.com. The blogs: Pakistan Paindabad, Ruined By Reading, Reading Arundhati Roy and Mayank Austen Soofi Photos

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