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Mornings in Varanasi, illustrated

Monday, April 28th, 2008

[* All asterisked subjects are illustrated in order below]

Mornings are my favorite time in Varanasi. I get up at first light and head out through the narrow winding galis* (alleys) to the Dashashwamedh Ghat. It’s the big busy colorful ghat, so of course it’s my favorite.

I make sure the night before to get money changed into coins so I have a pocketful to give as alms to the beggars who line the stairs* leading down to the ghat itself. It is good karma work to give alms here. I’m sure I need it. Some people give bananas or rice but I give money because I figure that is the attachment that needs to be broken, for someone from the west.

Once down on the steps of the ghat itself, I usually head first for one of the holy men who sit at little puja tables under the tarps that cover the whole area. On the table there is a pile of marigold flowers, short lengths of twisted rope, shells with different colored pastes, incense, and a metal urn full of water. I sit down cross-legged in front of him while he says prayers of blessing and applies the paste in two dots – first white, then red – on my forehead. Then I hold out my hands, with the right hand on top, for him to put a marigold and piece of rope in it*. I put the left hand over the right and hold my hands together in a posture of prayer. He asks my surname and then prays some more. Next comes the part I’m not so good at – repeating the prayers, in Hindi or maybe in Sanskrit, I’m not sure, but they say them very, very slowly and clearly for me. At this point of the trip, I am generally used to being treated like a small, not too bright child, and accept it happily. When we are done, he touches my head in blessing again, and I drop a small coin in the metal urn. I go down to the river to give the flower and rope as a puja offering.

After I’ve done this, I just relax in the shade and watch life happening all around – people bathing, washing, fussing over the bride and groom of wedding parties*. When chai wallahs come around, I get a clay cup* of hot, sweet chai to drink quickly before smashing it on the stone stair. Clay shards are much of the litter that the sweeper ladies clean up during their frequent rounds.

After a few cups of chai, the air starts to heat up and I get hungry. So it’s back through the galis to the Brown Bread Bakery for a bowl of muesli, yogurt, fruit and honey. And so my day begins.

Varanasi galiDashashwamedh GhatVaranasi pujadsc01535.JPGClay cups

Varanasi portraits

Sunday, April 27th, 2008

SadhuSandy drinking chaiChai wallahCow face!Monkey hanging outSandy blurry self-portrait

What I saw at the burning ghat

Saturday, April 26th, 2008
This probably isn't the right place to start talking about Varanasi...or maybe it's exactly the right place, I'm not sure. Anyway, the old town of Varanasi runs along the Ganges and there are a series of ghats (wide stone staircases) ... [Continue reading this entry]