25 August 2010
Code cracking
If I had a rupee for every time I've been puzzled in India I'd be a very wealthy lad. Here's one example. All across India the walls of residential streets are decorated with speedily drawn chalk calculations. I thought at first they were house numberings. Later I thought they might be file numbers that prove house ownership. Or the calculation of debts. Or redirection notices for people who have moved house. Or the markings of a tax or electricity bill collector. I'm no closer to the answer. But there is a side of me that likes this. Clearly there is a system of sorts for the achievement of a socially useful end about which I have no idea. And thus I have faith that things will happen, even when there is no sign that they will. Invisible processes that I can't see will ensure it. How does India work - it's a secret written in chalk code.
Walls
We return again to my fascination with walls. India has lots of them, and they carry on their faces the scars and wrinkles of daily life. This Pepsi sign in the backlanes of old Delhi looks like it's been painted, subsumed, and restored many times over. A wall of torn political posters turns the contest of ideas into a contest for wall space - the end result resembles the output of a kindergarden. And finally an old wall - supporting a further five metres of ancient wall above it - built haphazardly but effectively by long gone bricklayers. These are the textures of India's cities.
22 August 2010
Udaipur
I was puzzled by this glowing-shield-thing. Then I discovered that the rulers of Udaipur once considered themselves sun-kings. Armed with this fact I found references to their solar lineage littered throughout the palaces of Udaipur, just in case they or their subjects forgot. Sun-king.... Hmmm.... Given it was about 50 degrees the day I was there I think I'd prefer to be a cloud-king.
Pinkish
Grace under shower
Back...
Bidip was silent for a few months. Some wondered whether delhi's summer had hardbaked my will to write. They're not far wrong. Delhi in summer is a tough place. The Brits escaped to the hills. And the modern Indian middle class escapes to the south of France or New York or wherever their diaspora connections take them. I escaped to ANYWHERE air-conditioned. But now the monsoon has broken, and the city is livable once more, I feel like sharing my stories again.
Today I visited old Delhi, a place that restores my faith in India like nowhere else. I played a few overs of laneway cricket, and smiled at strangers, and soaked up the wondrous multiplicity of the place. It is everything at once, woven, mosaiced and trampled into one. South Delhi with its posh shops and shiny cars feels like another country, separated by choice and chance. The latter is more pleasant by most metrics, but the raw goodness of old delhi draws me back again and again. People with nothing, and no agenda, are so disarmingly friendly. And the walls and cars and sunglasses of south Delhi, which inhibit so much communication, are gone. When I leave India it will be the smiling chai wallahs and the cheeky kids that I will remember, not the shiny malls or blinged up frumps in german sedans.
Today I visited old Delhi, a place that restores my faith in India like nowhere else. I played a few overs of laneway cricket, and smiled at strangers, and soaked up the wondrous multiplicity of the place. It is everything at once, woven, mosaiced and trampled into one. South Delhi with its posh shops and shiny cars feels like another country, separated by choice and chance. The latter is more pleasant by most metrics, but the raw goodness of old delhi draws me back again and again. People with nothing, and no agenda, are so disarmingly friendly. And the walls and cars and sunglasses of south Delhi, which inhibit so much communication, are gone. When I leave India it will be the smiling chai wallahs and the cheeky kids that I will remember, not the shiny malls or blinged up frumps in german sedans.
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