The battle  between the Mamata Banerjee dispensation and the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha (GJM)  in the picturesque Darjeeling hills may not have an end in sight yet, but  humanity, under the hashtag 'Darjeeling Spirit' did put up a strong fight, and  won amid all the ugliness.
  
  Once a summer resort for the British Raj elite, the popular happy-go-lucky town  is home to the Darjeeling Himalayan Railways or toy trains, velvety tea gardens  and the unparalleled Darjeeling tea. Tourism is its mainstay.
  
  At the height of its tourist season, the town witnessed the GJM unrest  demanding the separate state of Gorkhaland.
  
  As the Army and police contingents closed in to bring things under control, the  Queen of Hills opened her heart out to the over 40,000 tourists stranded when GJM  activists clashed with police.
  
  As GJM and the Trinamool Congress traded barbs, locals brewed the famous  Darjeeling cuppa and stirred up pots of khichdi for the tourists, rendered  hotel-less and helpless due to the 12-hour GJM shutdown in the historic town.
  
  They rolled out rugs, carpets and bed sheets to offer the confused travellers a  resting place.
  
  Women turned up with hands of bananas for the Army personnel, even as rumours  spread thick and fast - mainly over social media - that locals resent the military  intrusion.
  
  These were countered by posts that asserted "Every household in Darjeeling  has a daughter, a son, a father, a brother or a friend serving in the army...  so we know how to respect them".
  
  Home to iconic bakeries and cafes serving English breakfast such as Keventer's  and Glenary's, the sleepy town of Darjeeling springs to life in the summer  season as tourists from across the globe troop in to watch the sunset at Tiger  Hill or gaze at the mighty Kanchenjunga peak.
  
  Glenary's remained shut during the day but opened up late on Friday evening  dishing out its usual array of cakes and pastries.
  
  Perched at an altitude of 6,710 ft, to reach Darjeeling one has to drive up the  circuitous colonial era Hill Curt Road - spending three hours chasing clouds,  with the greetings of ever-smiling locals making the uphill climb through  orchid-lined hillsides a journey to remember for life.
  
  Who are these "locals"?
  
  As per the 2011 census, Darjeeling is home to 132,016 people of whom ethnic  Gorkhas form the majority, followed by indigenous ethnic groups, including the  Lepchas and Bhutias. Bengalis, Marwaris, Anglo-Indians, Han Chinese, Biharis  and Tibetans also call the town their own.
  
  Nepali is the dominant language, but Tibetan, Hindi, English and Bengali are also  spoken.
  
  The rich linguistic diversity was evident in the last two days when Darjeeling  was on the boil. It was as if it was easily forgotten that the trigger for the  fracas was language itself, with the Mamata Banerjee government's earlier  decision to make Bengali compulsory upto Class 10 providing the GJM the ammo to  renew the Gorkhaland movement.
  
  Camera grabs did the rounds on social media showing the Lepchas and Bhutias  conversing with travellers in English and Hindi, easing off their worries over  plates of baked goods, steamed momos and the humble khichdi.
  
  As the West Bengal government pressed a fleet of buses into service to ferry  the marooned tourists, a couple of local schools also offered their buses to  aid them.
  
  Netizens hailed the 'Darjeeling Spirit' and urged more to come forward.
  
  GJM Chief Bimal Gurung tweeted late on Friday night: "I would like to  thank the people of Darjeeling and elected members of Darjeeling Municipality  who voluntarily served the tourists with food and water while they waited for  the bus to go back to Siliguri."