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With more than 50 years of travelling about in India, one can share a good deal of information and experience about out-of-the-way places and roads less travelled. That can make visits all the more exciting and enjoyable.

Tuesday 20 December 2022

"Theyyam" ritual of Kerala

Practically every state of India has its special and peculiar folk rituals and ceremonies. Kerala has its Theyyam ceremony that is undertaken in many parts of the northern, or the Malabar, coast in the state. Much of it is bound up in myths and legends about some folk god, e.g. Muthuappan, or of some animist god, or it could be an invocation of a traditional god like Siva or Bhagavathy. The ritual takes several hours in preparation with the wearing of a special dress made up from coconut leaf fronds, many repetitive and stylized movements, chanting of "Mantras", offering of libation of wines, beating of drums and playing of other musical instruments, and so on.
Many scholars have held that the purpose was to enable a low caste priest progressively through the various stages of the ritual to assume the spirit and powers of the god who has been invoked and thus communicate the message of the gods to other persons also of lower castes - often on a one-to-one basis - thus helping bypass the prevalent caste restrictions and improving social intercourse.
Usually the theyyam ceremony is part of the rural life of northern Kerala and is held away from urban centres. The dress, the stylized dances, the drumming and music make for colourful yet solemn ceremony.

Thursday 22 September 2022

At long last, "at home" in India

As one works through one's life, all sorts of notes, observations, bric-a-brac and photographs tend to accumulate. Some have only a personal aignificance but a good number have archival imortance.
There are, for instance, the pictures and songs recorded in the "bachelors" dormitory among the Muria tribe in Bastar way back in 1970s. It is just not possible to get the original songs any more due to extensive change in the way of life of these tribes in recent years. Then there are the pictures of wildlife since 1972, when one could still walk about along the jungle paths and tracks. Many of these pictures in black and white are still appreciated by many.
Thanks to the personal interest of my good friend, Raza Kazmi, these notes, ranging from description of pale-geological sites going back about fifty million years to the Indus Valley sites that are just about five thousand years old, and the rock pintings starting from ten thousand years are now housed in the archives of the Ashoka Unversity. The link to this collection is at --https://archives.ashoka.edu.in/paper_details/96

Thursday 15 September 2022

Fort St. Angelo - a landmark in Kerala

Kerala has many things going for it. There is the great landscape, a wonderful culture and an interesting history. Tucked away somewhat far from the public eye and the usual tourist circuits, is the Fort St. Angelo located a little to the north of the town of Kannur, in North Kerala.
Following the visit of Vasco de Gama, the Portuguese navigator to that area, the local king granted land at the site to the Portuguese in 1505 and a wooden fort soon came up there. Afonso de Albuquerque became governor at the fort in 1509. This helped in the later Portuguese occupation of Goa. The original wooden fort was soon replaced by a fort built of laterite blocks and brick and mortar. Later in 1663, the fort was occupied by the Dutch and a few years later by the British. It remained as the principal British miltary centre on the Malabar coast till 1947.
This is a view of the Arabian Sea from the ramparts of the Fort Angelo. Since this is located quite near Kannur, one can take a bus or a vehicle to this site quite easily.

Tuesday 30 August 2022

Sanchi - a wonderful Buddhist site

A good part of the history of India, and several of its neighbouring countries,such as Sri Lanka, Tibet and Myanmar, is inter-twined with the life and teachings of the Buddha. Fortunately, India has many places that are closely associated with the Buddha, both where he delivered his sermons and where some relics of the Buddha are enshrined in a "stupa", or a massive reliquery. One of the finest such "stupa" is located at Sanchi, which close to the city of Bhpoal in Madhya Pradesh. Besides its religious sanctity, Sanchi has some of the finest sculptual work, dating back to the 2nd century BCE.
This picture shows a a "torana"or a gateway to the stupa that has excellent carvings on it, some showing events from the life of the Buddha.
The details of this gateway show the large royal retinue that came to visit the Buddha and receive his blessings.
Walking around the stupa and enjoying the sculptures so finely made, one comes upon this statue of the Buddha deep in his meditations. It is a time to pause and think for a while on the teachings of the Buddha.

Sunday 26 June 2022

The Kinnaur Kailash in Himachal Pradesh - a fascinating journey

The month of October in 2012 saw me travelling with a group of friends to the Kinnaur Kailash region of Himachal Pradesh. The idea was to see some of the typical temples of that area besides making a visit to one the farthest outposts on the Indo-Tibetan border at Chitkul. We went initially by train via Kalka and Simla and then by road up the valley of the River Sutlej via Rampur Busheir, at one time one of the key points in Indo-Tibetan border trade.
After night halts at Sarahan, Rekong Peo and Kalpa it was on to Sangla, and then up the valley of the Baspa River for a quick visit to Chitkul, which was at about 11,000 feet. All along the way, the scenery was extremely beautiful, with snow-clad peaks showing up at almost every turn of the road, above and beyond the jagged hill ridges along the river valleys.
This was also the season for apples and other fruits, and one could pick them up from the road-side and fields with the permission of the land-holder, but only two or three at a time. Even baskets-full of apples were going cheaply in the local markets. An typical apple orchard may be seen below.
Considering the proximity of Himachal to the western edge of Tibet, it is small wonder that Buddhist "gumphas" and temples to Hindu gods and goddesses have co-existed in Himachal for long. One of the most fascinating temples was that of Bhimakali at Sarahan, with its unique architecture the picture of which is given below.
Another interesting temple was the Narayani at Kalpa. Of course, Chitkul, which was almost at the end of the valley of the Baspa had a special attraction.
So, this Kinnaur Kailash trip with its mix of wonderful scenery, excellent views of the Kinnaur Kailash from Kalpa, temples and plenty of fruits will be remembered for many years.

Friday 10 June 2022

Bird-watching in Sattal, Kumaon Hills

A recent visit to Sattal, in the Kumaon Hills, located about 20 kilomteres from Nainital, for bird-watching was most enjoyable. While there are a number of lodges in the town (more a large village), the accommodation at the Kumaon Mandal Vikas Nigam was very central and not crowded at all. More to the point was the ease of access to some of the birding areas in and around Sattal. One of the notable features was the trusting nature of the birds in the neighbourhood. One Grey-winged Blackbird practically came upto my feet and was photographed with a 25 mm lens from about 4 feet away.
The White-throated Laughing Thrush was equally trusting (though laughing thrushes are generally quite suspicious of men) and came and sat on a branch of a tree near my head.
It is possible that a person sitting still does not usually disturb the birds and animals. Here a barking deer, normally a shy animal, stood at a distance of about 20 feet, without feeling nervous. This experience was quite enjoyable.

Tuesday 3 May 2022

Corbett Tiger Reserve - Rare viewing of elephants

The Corbett Tiger Reserve in Nainital district, Uttarakhand, is one of the best places to see Indian wildlife in one of the finest natural settings.
The Park authorities in recent years have imposed restrictions on entry of private vehicles and have limited even safari vehicles registered with the Park authrities to about 25 or 30 every morning and afternoon at each of the four or five entry gates now functional. Further, entry permits may only be obtained "On-line" on the Tiger Reserve web-site on payment of the necessaey charges. Looking for a tiger at Corbett is more like searching for a needle in a hay-stack - it is largely a matter of luck, although having an experienced guide and safari driver certainly helps. Our trip to Corbett yeilded two tigers - but only just, as one was at some distance in some thickets and the other disappeared quickly in the grassland. Our luck with the other big game at Corbett, the elephant, held and we saw a magnificent male elephant with heavy tusks leading the way for our safari jeep for over a kilometre.
The next afternoon, we had a rare viewing of about twenty-five elephants in another area of Corbett - such large groups are not be frequently seen. They frolicked in a large water-hole with the baby elephants nearly submerging themselves in the water, the others spraying water over themselves and all having a good time - much like children at a sea-side!
Needless to say, one does not come by such sights every day and we enjoyed taking pictures of these elephants almost as much they enjoyed themselves in the water in the heat of the afternoon!

Monday 28 March 2022

Darjeeling Himalayan Railway - A UNESCO Heritage Site

One of the fascinations of childhood on any visit to Darjeeling in North Bengal was the ride in the "toy train". A toy train it was with its narrow-gauge track just two feet wide. The small engine would huff and puff as the driver and helper would shovel coal into the small, tub-sized boiler. Strange-sounding stations would pass - Rongtong, Tindharia, Ghayabari, Tung, Sonada and then Ghum, in the middle of a rising mist that entered through the door-way and exited through a window. Great moss-laden trees and masses of fern would brush the coaches as the train chugged on. All the while local people would hop on and hop off as if riding a tram car. It is nice to know that the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway, or DHR, has been accorded UNESCO "World Heritage" status in 1999.
As is well-known the Darjeeling region came under the British administration in 1850 and the first tea garden began to to be set up in that area around 1858. While the "Hill Cart Road" had been built by about 1858, it was another twenty years before the setting up of a railway line was thought of. The Darjeeling Himalayan Railway was the first, and one of the most outstanding, example of a hill railway in India, the other two being in the Nilgiris in South India and in Kalka in the north. Opened in 1881, the DHR as it was popularly known was a marvel of design and engineering, in tackling a rise of about 2400 metres over a distance of about 88 kilometres, i.e. about 1: 25. This the train could do by way of a number of zig-zag reversing-forwarding and three loops, where the track looped around and went over a small bridge over the track it had just covered. Despite these measures, it was interesting that two persons usually sat at the front end of the ngine, throwing handfuls of sand on the tracks to improve the traction.
Now all the steam engines that had been built in the UK by Sharp, Stewart and Co, and later North British Locomotive Co. have been retired and the coaches are presently hauled by diesel operated engines built at the Chittaranjan Locomotive Works.
It was therefore very much a journey through "memory lane" recently to visit that area after so many years and to see the DHR still chugging its way around the loops and zig-zags and the tourists thoroughly enjoying themselves with the novelty of the experience. And certainly the names of Rongtong and Tindharia rang a bell. That felt good.

Sunday 27 February 2022

Some reflections on Ukraine

The recent invasion by Russia into Ukraine is most regrettable, and distressful on account of the inevitable loss of valuable human lives and the long streams of refugees. One is driven to ponder over whether in the second decade of the 21st century when the Planet Earth is facing the serious challenge of Climate Change besides the task of building up a more inclusive, equitable and humane society it is at all relevant and pertinent to hark back to Tsarist or Stalinist days that date back for more than a century. How does one really turn the clock back? Here the silver lining lies in rational and reasonable thought that human beings are still capable of, as exemplified by the address of the Kenyan ambassador to the UN at the UN Security Council on 25th February as per the link given here -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=78ec1_fzepc There have been many bilateral and multilateral peace treaties in the past only to have some one tear them up for some real or perceived grievance. India also had to suffer such aggression more than once in the last 70 years. https://www.bookgeeks.in/a-conflict-in-thin-air-prosenjit-das-gupta-book-review/ The Treaty of Versailles after World War I was no better, lasting for just about 20 years. At least the UN Charter that is subscribed to by over 200 countries has kept the peace for nearly 75 years.

Thursday 20 January 2022

Indian temple sculpture - social media in stone

It is fortunate that most Indian temples have sculptures of people at work or play, or about music and dance, or in some rituals, etc.. In the absence of the art and science of photography, which did not exist in those early times, it is from such sculptures that later historians can draw some sort of idea about the nature of dressing, ornaments, buildings and architecture, mode of transport, dancing, the plants and vegetation, presence of kings and many other things, of much earlier times.
Secondly, religion even in the ancient times, was not always confined to sages living in caves and forests, but was a part and parcel of everyday life. So even a place of worship, such as a temple was decorated with scenes from real life, such as music and dancing, or of battles, or royal processions, or a king sitting in court, etc. This will be evident from tyhe pictures from Khajuraho and the Konarak temples given here by way of illuatrsation.
Thirdly, it is possible that these beautiful carving also attracted the common folk to come to the temple to pray and also to enjoy the interesting carvings. It was was form of permanent visual copmmunication

Sunday 16 January 2022

Farm Laws Re-visited

Recently there was an interesting Webinar on the Farm Laws that have been repealed following protracted oppostion by many sections of farmers. The principal speaker expressed the view that government was intervening in many ways into the demand, suppy, prices, etc. in the farm sector, which would be better left to market forces and the pricing mechanism to sort out.
There were quite a number of questions put to the speaker, these broadly concerning -- (1) certain specific provisions of the Farm Laws that appeared contrary to the usual provisions for legal review; (2) whether with the imperfect knowledge about the supply and demand situation, the price mechanism would work well; (3) how would the farmers or the purchasers factor in uncertain weather conditions especially with extrme weather conditions due to Climate Change; (4) whether issues of rural indebtedness and strengthening of the rural credit network deserves due consideration; (5) whether the form of corporatization envisaged in the Farm Laws was the right way forward considering the huge numbers of small and marginal farmers in India, and so on.
The Webinar provided a useful opportunity for exchange of views on an important subject. While the principal speaker attempted to deal with these wide-ranging issues, it did seem at the end that there were a good number of unanswered questions on the Farm Laws.