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Catching Up

Friday, December 19th, 2008

We’ve spent the last week or so in Calcutta and in the state of Orissa further south, and to catch up I’ll post some quick impressions.

Calcutta is more pleasant than I remember from our 2003 visit. It’s actually infinitely nicer to walk around than Delhi and most other major Indian cities. Calcutta somehow manages to combine the destitution for which it is so famous with a sophistication that you don’t often see in India, emphasised by having yellow ambassador taxis rather than auto-rickshaws, by its plethora of British colonial buildings, and by the very existence of its pavements – you need pavements to have pavement-dwellers, right? – which make walking around so much easier. Calcutta can’t boast the history of Delhi or the dynamism of Mumbai, but it has a certain appeal to it.

Chariot Wheel

We spent four days in Orissa, the highlight of which was the historic Sun Temple at Konark, which was about as impressive as any Hindu building, architecturally, that we’ve seen in India either this time or last time (but I prefer the Muslim architecture of the Mughal period, for what it’s worth). The other noteworthy place in Orissa was the main Hindu temple in Puri. It’s closed to non-Hindus, so we had to be content with standing outside the complex and seeing what glimpses we could get, but it was fascinating to see the comings and goings of the faithful and all the activity surrounding the temple.

Having seen and done the things we wanted to in India, we decided to check out the last country in South Asia that we haven’t explored (Bhutan and its outrageous visa that costs US$215 per person per day): Bangladesh. We did spend one insane morning in Bangladesh in 2003 that coincided with the Muslim world’s second-largest mass gathering of people, and have always thought it would be interesting to come back even though the country does not possess many tourist sights in the classical sense. So, we’re going to spend a couple of weeks here (including Christmas in a Muslim country for the third year out of the last four) and see what the world’s most populus country is all about. I’ll post my thoughts in another day or two.

Moments like this…

Tuesday, December 9th, 2008

Sealdah train station, Calcutta, 6:20am this morning: Forty-eight hours after waking up in a 23-house village with no roads in Sikkim, we are dumped in the middle of the second largest city in India, notorious for its slums and pavement-dwellers and for being the last bastion on earth of the human-powered rickshaw. With the auto-rickshaws from the station grossly overcharging, we decided to walk with our packs the 3km or so to the guesthouse area. On the way, as we walked down an alley in the Muslim area of town, not realising that it was the middle of the Eid holiday following the hajj to Mecca, we were treated to an extraordinary dawn sight: with the interior of a nearby mosque full, dozens of Muslim worshippers – fathers and sons – dressed in their best shalwar kameez and skull hats laid out their prayer mats onto the street and began praying right in front of us. With bleary eyes, we walked past and marvelled at how India is always able to astonish us, even after all this time. It’s moments like this that make India worth it.

Prayers

Then again, you never really know…Â