Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Christmas Day 2011: Mamallapuram, Bay of Bengal, Tamil Nadu


We begin the day with gifts – the promise of mutual ayurvedic massages, a chocolate bar each, I re-open the dhoti fabric Betty bought me several weeks and one peninsula ago – then a walk out to the shoreline, among fishermen picking the night’s catch from nets, women gathering the specimens they want for market stalls, young waifs in rags selling necklaces, the odd cow dozing between boats.

After breakfast we join the Sunday throngs down from Chennai to visit the nearby temples and beaches. The atmosphere on the beach is festive: carnival games and rides, fresh slices of watermelon and pineapple on offer, whoops and high-pitched screams as children jump into the surf, caution on the faces of adults in full dress, stepping tentatively into the shallows. 


It’s the same picture at the remarkably complete stone-cut ruins of what was once the great port city of the 4th to 9th century Pallava dynasty. Apparently an 8th century Tamil text describes this place as Kadal Mallai, Sea Mountain “where the ships rode at anchor bent to the point of breaking laden as they were with wealth, big trunked elephants and gems of nine varieties in heaps.” Today, holidaying children and adults clamber over and around splendidly-detailed bas-reliefs, rock-cut temples, chariots, and life-sized free-standing granite lions and elephants, each figure and scene sourced in stories from the Hindu epic The Mahabharata. Is there anywhere on earth where ancient places are such crowded playgrounds, picnic sites and backdrops for countless glamour photos?

 



Returning to town, we pass the clink-clink-clink hammer blows of stone carvers bringing to life bookshelf and garden size Shivas, Nandis, polished lingas, Durgas, Vishnu, lions, buxom apsaras and Ganeshes, including tiny ones stretched out in front of Apple computers.

Day’s end and a Christmas dinner of prawns, rice, a coconut veggie curry, beer and ice cream sundaes, served under the night sky, sea surf shuffling in the distance, starry yellow lights spiralling up a nearby palm, tuk-tuks putt-putt-puttering along the street below. Merry Christmas Mamallapuram.

“What are you thinking of India?”


Many Indian’s ask us “How are you liking India?” The question usually feels prompted by genuine interest, but the manner of asking suggests the questioner really wants to hear India praised. Some put the question differently. “How are you finding India?” “What are you thinking of India?” Now this one, no built-in bias, more room for the mix of our experiences, is easier to begin answering. 

So, after fourteen weeks in the country, what do I think of when I think about India?  

The throngs of people. On the streets, at bus and rail stations, in temples. The invariably long, haphazard, meandering queues. It is as if pretty well everything and every place is undersized, shrunken, relative to the number of people who must move about.

The constant noise. Honking, beeping vehicles. Roaring, sputtering, put-put-putting engines. Loud, often shrill voices. The clamour of temples bells and music. Full-volume videos running through unfathomable concoctions of bloody fists, fairylands and bombast. So few quiet places to be

The memorable individuals we have met along our way, people who respond genuinely out of their own character, experiences, memories to each of us as other individuals, not as “tourists,” not as abstractions. The guesthouse hosts (father, mother, daughter) who discussed from their three different perspectives the effort of “finding a good husband” for daughter. Gopi, the  kindly, gentleman “clerk” on the Kerala train who had read Dalrymple’s chapter on theyyem and, with dogged struggling English, so wanted me to read it. The gentleman guide at the Dr Ramnath A Poddar Haveli who, late one day, so generously, so intelligently showed us the painted walls of the grand old house, patiently sketched out the key Hindu gods, then invited us to return the next morning (which we did) because “The house has so many more stories.” The puppeteer who entertained me with the dancing girl and trickster. Narendra Mehta, the painter of miniatures. Zaveri the Jain pilgrim. Our host Gilbert (and his family) at the Alliance Guesthouse, with his open welcome and great walking advice up into the nearby hills and villages. The nameless ones who helped us find a bus station or post office or eating place, to get off a train at the right stop, to better understand where we were, prepared and served us delicious meals.

Traffic frenzy – which we feel whenever we walk, in any vehicle we ride (including those several near-death rides), in the town streets thick with exhaust and churning dust, in engine noise, in the surrounding whirl of movement.

The impossibility of experiencing the pleasures of strolling, at least in urban India. Sidewalks have been rare and are often clogged with stalls, scatterings of repair set-ups, vehicles and garbage. Walking must be done on the street, dodging vehicles from every direction, searching one’s way through more parked vehicles, watching for cow shit and scattered garbage, squeezing through throngs of others also finding their way, walking amidst the stench of urine and rotting waste. So much of one’s attention becomes narrowed to the next step and the beeps at one’s shoulder. Forget conversation. Forget the wider view. Forget any reflective lingering.

Other more critical kinds of turmoil – of ‘new India’. The preposterously concentrated and quick wealth of “new India,” its privatized world of gleaming (conspicuous but blinding) towers and its gated houses, its surrounding sewer-soaked servant shanties, its overwhelming Westernized ethos and culture, its need for ever-expanding ‘security’, its aura of ‘progress’, its promise of ‘success’, its work culture of old coolieism. The many suicides among small land-holding farmers. The continuing, habituated patterns of police/state violence: torture in police stations, the phenomenon of police-orchestrated ‘fake encounters’ (called ‘extrajudicial executions’ under international law).The hopeful-desperate journeys through the Emirates and indenturism. What Ashis Nandy called in 2000 “the growing criminalization of politics in the country” – and today its normalization.

Fondly remembered places and times. Walks in mountain villages above Naggar and in the Sangla-Kinnaur mountain area. Dewali in Delhi with Prem and Santosh and their neighbours. Sitting over cold beer at the Costa Malabari Guesthouse talking about the theyyem rituals; experiencing the intimate processes of applying the dance make-up and costumes.  Moving by boat and train through the green and watery world of the Kerala and Malabar coast, conversations with strangers along the way. The conversational English class with Tibetan refugees in MacLeod Ganj and talking with other refugees there. Rocking back and forth slow-motion atop those camels, then night fall and moonlight and sunrise with chair on the Rajasthan dunes. The many colourful, frenzied, magical, incomprehensible and exhausting temple worlds we witnessed.

What appears to me Indians’ very precise – remarkable to me – sense of space. Vehicle collisions seem so often imminent and yet surprisingly infrequent, especially given the numbers on any road. Passing drivers are able to negotiate the narrowest laneway and cliffside roads with millimetres to spare. Crowded passing pedestrians behave similarly, so often just slipping by each other at the last second. Bumps and knocks feel rare, except in some queues, and are seen as true accidents: met by surprise and politeness. The message? This is unusual. Considering the times my backpack has jostled and bumped others, or made them dodge in crowded spaces, I’ve come to believe that these unnatural protuberances of the body disturb a finely-tuned Indian sense of the space a natural body takes.

Such diversity, such extremes: India’s many “Indias.” Its many landscapes, languages, expressions of spirituality and faith, foods, body colourings and characteristics and expressive habits. The extremes of poverty and wealth. The impossible to fathom spectrum that runs from a world of the high tech, high fashion and industrial-corporate (mimicking selected aspects of 200 years of Western “progress”) through to feudal working and living conditions, pre-modern villages and beliefs, vast urban slums and human uprootedness, and a lively ancient spiritualism. Diversity, yes, but also these extremes. Oil, water, fire.

The fascinating incomprehensible worlds of expressed faith – especially at the many and varied temples and shrines, in the prolific world of Hindu and other gods, goddesses, spirits, venerated humans, creatures, flora, places. The fantastical shapes and colours taken by (or used to represent) the gods, their presences not only on temples but on house roof-tops, pillars, porticos, twisting, glowering, embracing, exhibitionists, guardians, energies. This is a land of the live spiritual imagination like no other I know.

Public filth: waste casually dropped or tossed anywhere, rare garbage bins usually hidden under a heap of waste, streets lined with scattered rotting garbage, increasing amounts of plastic waste, street sides rank with sun-baked urine, walking places littered with smeared cow shit, so many public spaces filled with the stench of filth. The filth kept astonishing us, but no less did so many Indian’s contribution to and seeming shrugs in the face of it. Those towns and states where there is an effort to reduce public filth (thus demonstrating that this is possible), set the scale of the issue in sharper relief in the rest of the country.

The handsomeness of so many of the sari-clad women and white-shirted men – all the more extraordinary against the ground of their often dusty, filthy and shabby surroundings. Just down a laneway strewn with days of garbage stand two straight-back, white-bearded men, white dhotis brilliant in the desert sun, one in saffron pagari (turban), the other in red, a hand on one another’s shoulder, eye-to-eye, smiling, coupled in conversation. Those saris: the women’s eye for such pleasing, often gorgeous, combinations of colour, pattern and design. How the sari itself can swirl along the female form, feet to forehead, the sparkle of tinselly threads or miniature mirrors, the fabric rippling in the slightest breeze, flame-like.

Especially tasty foods such as the stuffed bhel puris of north India; raj kahori, a sweet and spicy concoction in a puri or thin pastry shell; cham chams, sweet wrapped in an edible silver coating; crisp samosas straight out of streetside dhaba cookers; those never quite the same dals; prawns and roasted cashews along the Malabar coast; Jasailmer’s laapsi desert, ingredients too numerous to list; Kerala coffee, from a coffee press, especially after weeks of north India ‘instant”; Kashmiri pulao, a rice pilaf with pomegranate seeds, cashews, peppers, pineapple and papaya pieces …; drinking chai, stretched out on our charpoy on the crest of a Rajasthan sand dune, the sun just now rising on the horizon.

The chronic squeezing out of another 10 or 50 or 100 rupees from travelers, something not peculiar to India, but at least as relentless as anywhere we have been.  The aggravation and stress of this squeezing. The small-time cheating, attempted overcharging, the “friendliness” that sooner or later morphs into some “deal.”

Dysfunctional bathrooms. In 16 weeks we might have had two or three bathrooms where everything worked, more or less. Otherwise: sinks that drained onto floors, toilets without handles, showers without heads, heads without showers, cold from “Hot Water” taps, hot water from “Cold” taps, sinks the size of cereal bowls ….

Those behaviours that strike us, as strangers, as curious and particularly Indian. We ask a man a question in public (Is there an ATM nearby? Is this the bus to …?) and immediately three, five, six, eight more men are at your shoulders and in your face, simultaneously offering advice, opinions, interpretations and misinterpretations, advice on the misinterpretations, disputes over misinterpretations, special deals … until you scream something about none of this being helpful, at which point you realize everyone is giving you a concentrated “Wow, is this guy inconsiderate or what” look, and you wonder – stressed, culpable, your question still unanswered – what to do next.

A land “full of surprises.” We were told this in the first days and it has proved to be so very true, day after day. – “Yes, the bus you need leaves from this stall,” but it doesn’t and you almost miss the last of the day.  – “No, there are no seats on the train you want,” says the man at the India Rail wicket, who then gets up and walks away, perhaps for chai? for lunch? for a pee? for a chat? although another man soon arrives, sits in his place and you begin again, with a look of 67-year-old desperation, with your train reservation question (not yet quite accepting the answer you have), in response to which the new fellow scans his computer screen, stares some more, and longer still, men and women poking through your ribs and kidneys into the wicket itself, and then you hear the voice: “Two seats available. 473 rupees. Do you want them?” – A passing woman says the museum is 10 minutes walk, but it turns out to be 60.  – You spend 15 hopeful minutes studying the six page menu of a restaurant that has, it turns out, only four items “today.”“Yes, we have hot showers” – until you hear the verbal small print the next day: “Between 5 and 6:30 a.m. on some days.” Or “Yes, the museum is open. Yes, I am certain. I just telephoned.” – but when you reach the gates, a half hour across the city in another life-threatening auto rickshaw ride, it is Gandhi’s birthday and the museum is closed. In India, have a back-up plan.

Holy waves, fortune-tellers and winged elephants: in Tamil Nadu


Our first experience of the south India state of Tamil Nadu is the busy town of Kanyakumari, sitting on the farthest southern tip of the Indian peninsula at the confluence of three bodies of water: the Indian Ocean, the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal. It is the experience of land’s end that attracts a few curious travelers like ourselves. But the main attraction, drawing hundreds of thousands of Hindu pilgrims, are the three converging seas, highly auspicious and worth at least one bath in a lifetime.



When we arrive the seashore is ringing with the voices of excited bathers. For one this means a first hesitant step into ocean waters; for another, a touch of the sea water to their forehead, then a quick splash forward, arms waving, daring the depths. Men pose for that perfect Kanyakumari shot, then another, and another. Children play in tidal pools, groups of women sit in gentle waves rolling over nearby rocks. Four young men stand waist-deep while others climb their knees then shoulders to form a pyramid, then tumble into the brink, then clamber up again, whooping, laughing.   

Up on the sandy shore, men slip in and out of bathing suits and underwear. Women in soaked layers of fabric lay out their long saris to dry, some red, some ivory, a colourful patchwork.

The pyramid men, like many other young men here, wear black bathing trunks or black sarong-like panchas with narrow bands of gold or orange trim, snug on the hip, handsome on the trim, all stomach on others. We have met these men before – Ayappa pilgrims – moving by the bus full through Kerala and Tamil Nadu, off to their main forest temple in the Western Ghats, but touching down at other auspicious sites across the south, like here at Kanyakumari. (Ayappa is a deity born of Shiva and Vishnu’s beautiful female form, Mohini. I have read that the Ayappa cult is growing rapidly.)

These Ayappans, often celibate before pilgrimages, are a restless, enthusiastic bunch on the road, singing and chanting ebulliently on the fly, eating quickly by their buses. More than one seems ecstatic at the moment of plunging into the ocean, then rising from it. Our guidebook says what we can easily imagine: that “they are known for their lusty calls-and-responses – Swayiyee Sharanam Ayappan, Give us protection, god Ayappa – reminiscent of English football fans.”

At the seashore temple sits the virgin goddess, Devi Kanyakumari. Although non-Hindus are not permitted in the inner sanctum, we understand the Devi wears a diamond nose stud whose brilliance compares well with the best of Newfoundland lighthouses, and is said to have once functioned in a similar manner.

More shrines and memorials sit a ferryboat ride away. These include a 40-metre tall monstrosity dedicated to the Tamil poet-philosopher Thiruvalluvar, a fellow who is said to have lived sometime between the 2nd century B.C. and the 5th or 8th century A.D., or is a “Homer”-like stand-in for many pre-modern Tamil poet-philosophers. Whatever the case, given the nature of the man’s life-work, the Thirukkural, which is said to carry a message of simplicity and truth, I’m certain I saw statue weep.

A few metres inland, marketers have set up shop along the only paths to and from the blessed waves. Pretty well everything in bad taste and practical need is covered, from garishly painted plastic Ganeshes and other icons to plastic palm trees, shells, bead necklaces, blankets and winter shirts, sparkly girls’ dresses, drinks of coconut milk, batteries and plaster-cast Shivas, as well as travel products, including suitcases to replace the ones that fell apart coming here. Clever palm and card readers are parked at temple gates, along with a man with a parakeet that pulls your fortune card and someone drawing lines in the sand. Business is good. 

Among the many oddities of oddities of this land’s end is how the shoreline is lined with an armada of Christian churches, including a very large Catholic edifice, as if there was once a plan to run raids north into idol-worshipping Hindustan – one man’s idol being another man’s god (and vice versa). The night we arrive a pre-Christmas service is underway, which we wouldn’t have known if the whole several hours (liturgies being read, Indian choral voices singing hymns in various keys and meters) hadn’t been broadcast across town through loudspeakers, then launched once more at sunrise just after (other loudspeakers blazing from a minaret) the Muslim call to prayers. Speaking of the sun, apparently on some days of the year in these parts you can see it setting and the moon rising on the same horizon. A strange, Alice and rabbit hole kind of place.


As we move north and east through Tamil Nadu, visiting Dravidian temple towns, we are in yet another India: a Dravidian-rooted peoples with distinct physical features, another language and, so we read, a sense of otherness from, and often defiance of, the north. It was from these eastern coasts that Indian sailors, fishermen, traders, priests and kings, stone carvers and bronze idol-makers (crafts still so alive in the region) ventured across the seas to ports throughout South-east Asia, prompting the beginnings of new combinations of local and Indianized beliefs, rituals, crafts, architecture and social forms. Wander Angkor Wat, Borobudur, Prambanan, the Batu Caves, Champa, Ayutthaya and you are walking through an Indian Hinduism and Buddhism deeply internalized in distant lands. 

Here, today, in the crowded Hindu-Dravidian temples of Tamil Nadu, we watch with little comprehension the personal rituals and collective ceremonies whirling noisily around us.

A god is carried on a palanquin, hurriedly but ceremoniously, to his consort where they are bedded down together each night. The devout fall belly on stone floor in front of garlanded black-bodied images draped in green, gold, red and orange fabrics. We stare wide-eyed at the profusion of sculpted, vividly-painted gods, goddesses, serpents, winged horses (ashvas), eyes bulging, ecstatic or distressed we can’t tell. We get lost in mazes of pillars and walls and sanctums within sanctums, votive candlelight populating the half-light with pilgrims become black apparitions, shadowy ghosts stretching up stone walls, across smoke-stained ceilings. Our bare feet follow the steps of millions over millennia, sometimes slipping along butter-smooth stone, often stepping through votive oils, wax, rice, crumbled sweets, nasturtium petals.

For us, such outsiders, these are both wondrous and punishing places – teeming, frantic. We end each day exhausted.