31 July 2011

There are 17,014 people in Suriawan



Suriawan station is a place where the shadows lie long and the pace is slow. We stopped for 2 minutes en route to Varanasi. Wikipedia (citing the 2001 census) informs that 57% of the 17,014 residents of Suriawan are literate and that 17% are under 6 years of age. I would add that the people seem friendly (measured by 3 waves in 2 minutes) and many of them ride bicycles. So a shout out to Suriawan - seems like a nice sort of town.

26 July 2011

So many people ....



.... well, actually only one person in this pic. India will never stop blowing my mind with its immensity.

Man. bowl. morning.

It takes three to push and one to pull



Ten fat sacks of Ganesh brand jeera (cumin) make their way through an old delhi street...

25 July 2011

I hear there was a time when eastern block was cool in India...



And I'm guessing that's where these mannequins in old Delhi came from. Speaking of Nikita dolls, later in the afternoon I passed a bus in Chawri Bazar that had 'Donated by Elton John' emblazoned on its side in red paint.

They say there's a song for every moment (this is the first and last time Elton John will be featured in bidip - promise!):

24 July 2011

Neat...


On the sidewalk in Chandi Chawk the salesmen place their tools of trade in front of them and wait patiently, cross-legged, for customers to appear: a nice statement of neatness amid the complete chaos of old Delhi.

23 July 2011

From the collection of the Indian National Museum: Chicks who love guns



Which sort of reminds me of this nugget of gold:

I'm feeling the urge...


... to get on a train and travel far far away from Delhi... and then come back. Just for the journey.

20 July 2011

The cold water hater

File this under irrelevant. I have an office conundrum. I’m a simple man, and I like chilled water – it keeps me focused and refreshed through long work days in this HOT HOT country. But my penchant seems to be clashing with one of the more ancient inherited wisdoms of India: chilled water it seems is widely believed to be VERY VERY bad for you. Who knew!

Things have taken a turn for the worse in recent weeks and I find myself engaged in a silent Battle to the Death over the water cooler. Somewhere in the vicinity of the cooler sits a Cold Water Hater (CWH). First I found the cooler was occasionally turned off at the switch (I assumed it was a mistake).... then it started being unplugged (and I first sensed the intervention of the CWH)... today the plug itself was wrapped in electrical tape in a way that made connection with the electricity thing pretty much impossible. Sabotage! The warm water fundamentalists are taking over and I’m blaming the CWH.

I've googled to find evidence to substantiate the coldwaterisEVIL theory - nothing. But now I know why every waiter in this country asks if you want chilled or room temperature water. They’re scared of the CWH too! (Maybe they've heard the rumours about waiters being found in dumpsters wrapped in electrical tape). I had dinner with an otherwise sane bloke recently who insisted on warm beer.... mysteries wrapped in riddles, wrapped in electrical tape.....

On second thoughts file this under ‘India: answers are not there’.... It’s a large file.

19 July 2011

The choice


Not a great pic, but an interesting sentiment: "India, love it or leave it". It's a binary choice, black or white, hot or cold. I feel it loses something not being attached to the bumper of a gas guzzling car. For the record, India, I love it. And I love that the hinge of this doorway appears to be held together with a piece of string.

Has a cow ever been accused of eavesdropping?


11pm, Old Delhi

Mumbai: a few months back


Mumbai: a few weeks back

The ocean is angry today, all churning brown-grey water and unfulfilled currents. Waves rise and fall without purpose, swirling pissily. I wonder how much I impose my mood on the ocean. It is, after all, just going about its millennial business in obedience to the moon and the moods of the seasons. The other day, a similar view evoked images of romance and hope with the lingering aftertaste of danger. I saw young couples holding hands in the stiff breeze as though the feisty weather cut raw the strength of their partnership. I saw elderly couples looking newly alive as the weather played with their loosefitting clothes. And I saw kids, playful like dogs, as though the wild wind finally authorised their wicked ways. But today, without people to mediate between the ocean and me, I see only enormous, horizon pushing anger. Perhaps it is the colour of the water, stained by the very city on whose shores it beats, spoiled and gritted by the Mumbai millions. Were it dark blue and matched with a biting breeze I’d interpret it differently, perhaps as a statement of the primacy of nature. But here nature is beaten, and no matter how impressive its fist it can’t impose itself without stirring up the weakness in its shallows.

Seen from the top of the Bombay Stock Exchange building this city is Manhatten. Stretching north from Colaba and the old colonial buildings, built in foreign styles with long term colonial intent, the city disappears into a high-rise horizon, misted up by the monsoon.

On marine drive couples stare out through their wild hair at the sea. Behind them on the pavement, an old shrunken woman in greased clothes carries a wrapped bundle of possessions on her head. And I find myself wondering what she’s thinking, and whether the brutality of her existence has wiped thoughts clear from her mind. She stares straight ahead and shuffles in a northerly direction parallel to the gutter.

The stuff is everywhere, discarded stuff, no doubt placed with reason once but that reason long since forgotten. Roadwork signs, rusted around the edges and fading, once commanding traffic but now part of the streetscape like the bitumen and the street traders and so many feet. In India I sometimes dream of white rooms. Floor to ceiling white. I’m sure I’m not the first.

18 July 2011

DIY vs GIDBS


I come from a Do-It-Yourself country, and after 30 months in India I'm still struggling with the Get-It-Done-By-Someone way of things. Exhibit A: my fledgling attempt at establishing a herb garden on the balcony (with a notable shoutout to someone ace who purchased some pots and got things rolling). There is an intangible satisfaction in planting things, tending them with occasional bursts of attention, and seeing them blossom - all the more-so in Delhi's intense weather. But my efforts are clashing with those of the weather-beaten old bloke who comes to my house every day to fight the dust. His higher order skill is gardening, but I've never had a sprig of green in my house so he's been stuck dustbusting for 29 of 30 months. Not that that's an insignificant task - if he went on leave my driveway would turn into the Thar Desert in about three days. But now that there are pots and promising green shoots he's all over them. Today he re-potted the week old zucchini sprouts, killed off the less promising tomatoes (sob) and de-symetricised the pot layout (de-symetricised I tell you!). Now I don't want to sound like I don't appreciate his hard work, but I'd almost double his salary if he'd just ignore the pots and let me have the simple cause-and-effect pleasure of seeing my seeds turn into tasty vegetables with no inputs other than the sun, the air and my hand on the watering can. These are not big issues (indeed they are pathetically small), but I'm learning I like doing the little things myself. Driveway dusting however is all his!

another mall rises......



When I arrived in Delhi there were no malls in Vasant Kunj, a part-scrub suburb nearby my house. A few monsoons hence (just add water and bounteous cheap labour) and now there are three massive malls side by side, with another sibling rising fast. It may sound snobby but malls are the death of culture! Nothing interesting comes out of them. But just like sweaty-palmed consumers the world over, India's rising middle-class love em. While this is a little bit sad, it's also a marker of how fast this place is growing.... Malls = disposable money = prosperity = higher wages = buy more stuff. But also: Malls = screaming demonstration of what 'the haves' have and the 'have nots' don't. One day, all the world will look like a mall and we'll reminisce about the time when getting on a plane led to exciting adventures in far off lands. Prove me wrong world. Please!

17 July 2011

Sometimes...


... India looks like Italy (well the scooters do anyway).

Seen in haus kas village...



13 July 2011

A sad night for India

An almost full moon shines gently over the country tonight - may it shine a searing light on the cowards who do such hideous things. 7pm is a deeply sinister time to blow things up, right when people are commuting home to their families or shopping for their dinner. It's a magical energetic time of night in markets all over India - no place for IEDs or the mofos who plant them. 21 poor souls in the wrong place at the wrong time. Rest in peace.

I present, after much research, the cleanest back-end of a bus in all of Delhi.

12 July 2011

The midnight balcony

First line of an unwritten novel: "She left me with a lettuce spinner and a two jars of pickled onions."

Last line of an unwritten opera: "love like a bird flies away."

It's late. I'm sitting on the balcony of my delhi apartment listening to the sounds of the night. A radio plays shrill hindi songs in a guard house down the street. The suburb hums softly with the baratone of a generator and the tenor of planes in thrust taking off from the airport nearby - machine harmony. The monsoon is here and the air is juicy and hot. And so still. Delhi is sleeping behind its walls. A dog barks. Another plane roars overhead. Another dog barks. Another silence. The manic city rests, waiting for a new day. Dust settles.

Ways to make a buck



This bloke, the picture of melancholy, made his living wrapping and unwrapping his head scarf for the entertainment of foreigners. As magic tricks go it was completely crap. But as acts of sheer desparation go, it had a fading scent of creativity. We gave him ten rupees. Geez this place can be tough.

11 July 2011

10 July 2011

blinking or dreaming?



Sure, I got the guy blinking, but I reckon this captures the sleeplike state required to handle manual labour in delhi's heat. He looks very zen. There's a book in it Mr Rickshaw wallah - "what i think about when I think about rickshawing" Or "zen and the art of rickshaw maintenance"...


I toyed with buying one of these babies today and getting down and dirty with the delhi traffic. Wonder what the locals would make of a honky on wheels.... "farangi's a nut job" or something like that I'm guessing. I'm definitely going to buy one before I leave.... those springs and old skool seat will turn heads on Melbourne streets. But I want a black one with a lightning bolt. If it says 'super' on it as well, then so be it.
Dear Delhi, I know you’ve always been a bit confused about who you are. But this is taking the piss. Last night you pretended you were Paris and rolled out French wines and quiche Lorraine. This morning you were dressed up as Singapore, all steam and sweat and rumbling thunder on the horizon. And now, at 2:17pm on a Sunday afternoon, you’re trying to pass yourself off as Dubai, hot baked and boring. What’s with that. Would the real Delhi please stand up. Thanks.

8 July 2011

The award for astronomical observatory most likely to become a skatepark goes to....



Jantar Mantar, Delhi (chance of seeing stars through the smog: zip)

7 July 2011

Hero or villain?



So I'm stumped whether the artist behind this portrait is trying to paint the subject as hero or villain. Clearly the bloke is significant, and the portrait captures his gravitas. But the bursting red veins and steely eyes hint at danger. Should we respect him or be scared of him. Should we vote for him or watch his movie? Wish I could read Tamil.

Goddessfone

Two small piles

6 July 2011

Who has right of way?

Looking out my window right now, traffic on my suburban street is stuck. Coming from the left: one black sedan, one three-wheeled rickshaw, two bicycles and a long-horned brown cow. In the right corner: one white sedan, one motorbike and one cyclist. In the middle, standing still, one high-humped white cow, not quite sure which way it is headed. All the protagonists are frozen trying to figure out who has right of way: does biggest vehicle win or are the cows - the jokers in the pack - free to flaunt their superior road rights? Answer: everybody goes at the same time, and like a sofa through a doorway, inch by inch, progress is made and 20 seconds later the street is clear. Nobody has blinked.

India: endlessly and incredibly India.

4 July 2011

A case of explosively tasty mangoes




My mate told me I was crazy when I said the mangoes from Mumbai were the best in India. I was spouting conventional wisdom and thought this was safe ground. But mangoes are a controversial topic in India, particularly in the flush of the mango season. To prove his point he promised me a special delivery of mangoes, freshly picked from the tree in the courtyard of his family home in Bihar. And sure enough, this magically rustic box arrived today (and freaked out the security guys at work). Only in India could a package of fresh fruit, wrapped like this, and placed on a train 1000km from Delhi arrive in one piece and on my doorstep... a love India moment. And for the record they taste absolutely amazing! No more the sweet superficial Mumbai mango for me... henceforth I'm a Bihar man.

3 July 2011

This shop sells exclusive ribbons, all kinds...

A bucket, a P and two hands



India tends to throw up more questions than it answers. Take this for example: a small unadorned doorway in a quiet corner of old delhi. The scene is utterly unremarkable and yet so many questions leap out... like 'why the red P?' and 'what's with the blue hand prints?' and 'who left their bucket behind?' Of course there is danger in searching for meaning, and even constructing meaning, where there is in fact none. Either way I'm intrigued by the P. Answers/ guesses welcomed.