Sunday, April 29, 2012

No such thing as time


Today we had a fancy luncheon with our profs in a restaurant named Marco Polo. It was awesome. More about them later.  More importantly, today we all realized something we have been subconsciously avoiding at all costs: we have about a week left in India.

I am freaking out. 

Tomorrow we leave for Puri. I still have approximately 25-30 pages of writing left. I REFUSE to spend my last few days in India writing papers.

But let's think about something happier.

Bauls are traditional wandering musicians especially in the state of West Bengal. Sometimes we have them in our neighborhood, the sound of their singing combining with the laughter and mischief of the child next door who Puja tutors, the hawkers who ride around on their bicycles with melon carts with their strange calls, and the occasional honk from the primarily calm Salt Lake auto or car. I can usually catch a few words of their songs (especially "manoosh" - mankind) as they sing praise to humanity. They are beautiful.

Sound quality isn't very good and I very foolishly recorded sideways on my camera, but this is for me, not for you.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5gkp9kqQRxc&feature=g-upl

Much love. See you...soon.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Hyderabad to the bone


And we're off.

Always traveling in style
(April 4-9) End of classes begot the eagerly anticipated South Indian excursion. Mentally prepared for the heat of the weather and spicy foods, we got the heck out of dodge and hopped on an early flight to Hyderabad, city of mystery. First impression at the airport: Houston, we are not in India anymore. Hyderabad is one of the Indian cities known for its business and technology sectors which have made it incredibly wealthy. The growth is obvious; huge and modern buildings, very little visible poverty, and very fancy malls. Additionally, the architecture is very pastel. We checked into a fancy hotel and were wedded to our new tour bus, a large purple pink vehicle of comfort reminiscent of our orange chariot in North India.







And the tour commenced. We visited the Chowmahalla Palace in a Muslim district; in Hyderabad there is a huge Muslim population and let me just say that Muslim ambiance is awesome. The architecture, the clothes, the Arabic on signs and Urdu spoken in the streets. I felt like I was in the Middle East, which to me is a most pleasing sensation. Anyway, the palace was fancy and huge and we sang Aladdin in a most politically incorrect fashion and it was wonderful. 




You can't take us anywhere.
However, upon finishing we learned our bus would not start. No matter, we are a patient bunch. We got off the bus as to not be suffocated by the heat and watched the cricket yard next to us. One thing led to another and there we were making friends, taking a picture or two, our boys taking questions from the young lads about girls, when a dance circle emerged. We impressed them with such synchronized classics as the Macarena and Soulja Boy, and continued to dance and sing to the delight of local families. It began to warmly rain just as evening set in, and our festivities came to a close with the arrival of thunder. 


Our lives are a movie. 



Day two we rode a few hours to a boat and took that boat to an island, which was hotter than blazes and absolutely rife with Buddhist ruins. We pretended some of them were time portals and jumped through them as though we were entering a different dimension and other standard study abroad hijinks. (I apologize for the uncouthness of this blog and our lives. This trip was historically spectacular, visiting ruins and temples thousands of years old. And what did we do? Fool around. Desire to return to the hotel with its soft beds and air conditioning. Collectively sing Britney Spears horribly off-key.) 







One heckuva Buddha

Time travel
Back from the future

Just say no, kids.






Footnote: Drew double dog dared me to walk barefoot on the side of this path for a particularly long stretch. I accepted. My feet ended up swelling with large blisters from the heated ground, which I sucked up as part of my swami training. Next goal: hot coals.

Day three we hit up the new part of Hyderabad, called Hi-Tech City! With a name like that, it's got to be good. And it was. The freeways were big and clean. The traffic police booths had "Cyberabad" written on them. We pulled up through a series of gates into the elaborate complex of the Indian School of Business. Fun fact-- ISB costs 40,000USD per year, basically the same as a private college in America. Not a huge deal, until you realize what other Indian schools cost (my college St. Xavier's, for example: 500USD a year)--ouch. 






Footnote: We went to a mall to hang out while waiting for a market to open and got some lunch. We weren't the only ones eating though--conveniently tucked away in a portion of the giant food court was a little salon at which one could have fish feed on one's feet for a mere five dollars. If you ever get the opportunity to do so, take it. It is THE strangest sensation I have ever experienced.





Day four marks the grandeur of old Hyderabad. First, the Golkanda Fort--one of my favorite architectural places in India, the fort is this beastly thing constructed up the side of a mountain. We had a pleasant hike up and down that took a few hours, and the view from the top was amazing; you could see the whole city though we were a couple of miles out. It was all only enhanced by the fact that Sucharita was having knee problems so we held hands as we conquered those nasty stairs.



      
Charminar - quite charming.
After the fort, we hit up the Charminar. This was my favorite place in Hyderabad and definitely the most Muslim. We didn't go in the Charminar itself, but we did attempt to go into the mosque just down the street. The guard was power-tripping and didn't let us, based on some standards he made up about clothing. There are basic requirements for most temples we enter, but this was bogus. Suchers was as mad as a hornet. But we didn't let it spoil our day! 
My American hands were far too big for the average bangle
Both the Charminar and the mosque are located on this area called Bangle Street, known for its insane amount of bracelets. We had fun bartering and letting shopkeepers load our wrists up with bangles despite constantly assuring them that we were not in fact going to purchase anything. Everything is just so glitzy on Bangle Street, even the burkas! All over India, particularly in the conservative areas, we see very few women. In Delhi, 
there are virtually none visible, and in Kolkata, it depends on where we are. Usually in Muslim areas, we haven't seen very many out and about; maybe it is because of the more progressive Hyderabad attitudes, but there were tons of women around, mostly Muslim, some with their faces exposed and some with them covered. 

As we were walking through the crowded area, I was straggling behind a little, and a lady with her face covered said something to me in Urdu and gestured to me with her phone--a picture. I don't mind letting women take pictures of me, so I nodded and gave her a big smile. After the first snap, three of her friends had zipped over on either side of me; they pulled down their burkas to expose their huge, beautiful smiling faces. We took another one and they all giggled and (I can only assume) thanked me while pulling their burkas back up. They did all of this with confidence; their burkas were not oppressive. I am thankful for moments and interactions like this that awaken me from my preconceived misconceptions about the lives of others.

You can't make beauty like this up.
Late in the evening, a bunch of us went by taxi auto for Easter Vigil mass. Our church of choice was the Shrine of Our Lady of Health (oy), which happens to be the biggest octagonal church in Asia! A real treat for us. The vigil mass itself was outdoors, and there were a few thousand chairs set up, all of which were eventually filled and then some. It turns out we were given the wrong times, so we arrived an hour early thus picking prime front row seats. Mass itself was in a combination of (mostly) English, Telugu, and Tamil, and in true Indian fashion, everything was fourteen times more flamboyant. When midnight officially came, we lit our candles, bells rang out, and Christmas lights dazzled and danced.

Jesus Christ Superstar




Day five begins with an appreciation for your endurance. Thank you for bearing with me. After wrestling with some more corrupted guards, we managed to scope out a cool Jain temple which was two thousand years old. The day proceeded with some ruins we didn't really understand, followed by a Hindu temple known as the Thousand Pillar Temple. Our guide had been talking about it today, slyly saying he'd show us why it was so titled as such when we arrived. He later revealed with great relish that it doesn't have a thousand pillars; it was all merely a hyperbolic literary device.  

Give or take a few.


















Footnote: Due to the black granite of the temple sitting in the sun, actually getting into the temple was an ordeal for all of us. Our feet were severely burned in the process. Should have been called the Thousand Blister Temple, oh-ho! (Buh dum chhh.)

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Things considered highly illegal in America that are totally commonplace in India

Every possible moving and parking violation
Public indecency
Public urination
Sexual harassment (especially on metros)
Jaywalking
Government corruption
Loitering
Health code violations
Building code violations
Truancy
Communism

Saturday, April 21, 2012

If you can't stand the heat, let's get some ice cream


Nomoshkar, dear family and friends! Finals week is coming in hot! LITERALLY! I have written approximately 7000 words in the past few days and have to finish about 4000 more by Monday, so I apologize for the hiatus. After my finals I will procrastinate my last three papers by writing a whole slew of blogs--I solemnly swear.

Until then, here's a fun fact: it is currently 100 degrees, but it feels like 111! And there's no place to swim here so sometimes we just pretend (astonishingly easy to do so when lounging in a pool of your own sweat).

Okay. Miss you. Love you.
Latah, hatahs.

Monday, April 16, 2012

"Digestive health" (a long overdue posting of a most excellent email)

[Dated January 1, 2012 while I was still in Delhi, just a few days after arriving]

We finally found your blog.  You could be a travel writer.  Be sure to take your probiotics--those up and up and culturelle caps.  Go easy on the tap water.  I drank some bad water in Burma or Nepal and got the parasite giardia. We love you and are very excited about your adventure.  If you do get diarrhea take azithromycin for 3 days.  
Dad

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Twitch


The poor Dover Divas have had a heck of a time. In addition to mice, lizards, cockroaches, snakes, and a footlong rat (aka Ranjit), they recently had their first encounter with the worst creature of all: the horrific Hand Spider. The name alone should fill one with dread as, indeed, it is the size of one's hand. Gag me with a spoon. For pictures, please check Kate's, Kelsey's, or Rachel's facebook. No flipping way am I posting a picture on here. Rachel made the world a better place by killing it with a squeegee. The silver lining to this disgusting cloud was Sujoy's speculations on which household member would play the role of Miss Muffet ("clearly not Kelsey; she detests milk products" when confronted with the line about curds and wey). 

A few days later, I was taking a shower (surprise!) and I noticed a dark spot on the ground. "That's odd," I wondered. I hadn't noticed it before. It must be a hairball I had dropped; surely it could not be anything else (forbode). I stepped out of a shower and the thought occurred to me that it might be a bug. I mused that of course it would be, as it was three in the morning and I had no one to protect me. As I put on my glasses before I left, I chanted "don't look don't look don't look" and promptly looked. It was a spider with a body the size of a nickel. Of course it would be. This is just too much, I despondently observed and went to bed.

In the morning, I woke up to the sound of my roommates waging war on the beast. Shrieks escalated as the thing made its way into my room. Brenna beat it to death with a broom. 

Monday, April 2, 2012

Darjeeling: It's Transcendent.

Tomorrow we leave for Hyderabad (our South Indian excursion) so I figure I've got to get this blog out while I still remember what it is to be cold. 

(March 16-19)

Our group hopped off for the weekend with Sujoy, Arundhati, and Vinayak (the Dover Divas' host parents and brother) to the previously British hill station of Darjeeling. Let's start with getting there. The Salt Lake Crew walked into the bustling Sealdah train station like Flik from A Bug's Life walking into Bug City. We experienced our first Indian sleeper car, which was an adventure in itself. After a few rounds of Goosebumps and having a hijra solicit to us (google it), we hit the sack. The next day we hopped in a few jeeps and drove for hours up crazy hairpin turns--definitely the most psycho roads I have ever seen, any roads elsewhere pales by comparison. Sujoy raved and raved about the wonders of Darjeeling, of the hills and mountains, and indeed, the immediate surroundings proved truth to his words. According to him, 80 percent of the appeal of Darjeeling is the geographical makeup. This begs the question, what constitutes the other 20 percent. Old World Charm of course, Sujoy will tell you over and over throughout the weekend when admiring any sort of architecture or city planning. The British just don't make 'em like they used to (primarily because they were ruthless rulers and were rightly thrown out).
Old World Charm

Darjeeling is completely different from every place I have been in India to date. For starters, it's cold. The ethnicity of the people there looks more eastern (like Nepalese) than south Indian. There are a great deal of tourists, a few Europeans and Americans but mostly Indians, and the effect this has on the city is very interesting. Darjeeling is kind of cosmopolitan already because of the British history, but nowadays it is westernized enough to cater to those tourists, but still very much maintains its own culture without getting overly commercialized. It's just the perfect balance! Also, it's very developed with very little visible poverty, comparable to a European town.

It was a pretty packed weekend. We woke up at 4:30 and 3:30AM respectively to watch the sunrise with the mountains, which let me tell you, sure is something. The Kanchenjunga (3rd highest mountain in the world) is astonishing. You can't see it so well during the day because it is too foggy, so it is very much worth it to wake up so early. After the sun rises, we enjoyed a myriad of adventures throughout the day: A plethora of Buddhist monasteries and temples, a sick zoo (sick as in gnarly) that had a spot with a tiger across the path from a wolf pack (add that to favorite spots on earth), a cable car that goes over the tea fields which snapped eight years ago and killed people, etc.


Hills of tea
AHHHHH
Just a morning jaunt with my monkeys
You can see the shadow of our cable car... and we didn't even die
Kangchenjunga barely visible... but visible nonetheless

This is getting too long. I'll summarize. Darjeeling is like heaven on earth. It is crazy beautiful. Everyone seems happy there, and how could you not be?
The only graffiti I saw was a wall tagged with "I LOVE DARJEELING".

This next part is really more for my benefit, but feel free to read through it. Favorite times:
-Rapping to Encore/Numb remix at the gas station on the way
-The moment I realized all the clothes I brought for the weekend were purple (subliminal messages courtesy of my hair)
-Experiencing the abundance of old world charm around every bend
-All those minimuffins at that restaurant with the waiter in the argyle sweater
-Bartering in the markets (I'm a pro now. Not in my wildest dreams!)
-The market in the cemetery, one of many momo stops
-Ending the cable car ride perfectly alive
-Exploring and our whole youthful group meeting that dude from Wisconsin
-Frolicking in the the tea fields
-Initially unintentionally then very intentionally photobombing the people in front of us at 5AM
-Flat tires which cause us to dance to Aaron's Party (Come Get It) on the side of the road
-ANYTHING SUJOY SAID AT ALL
-When the sun turns orange and the mountains emerge from the morning fog and you are surrounded by wonderful friends and an unbelievable view
-Walking through the forest trails on the hill and knowing it doesn't really get better than this.