Saturday, 16 February 2013

Delhi (1) Mainly Old Delhi but some New Delhi too

Mosques, Forts, Bazaars and Delhi's Ceremonial Centre

15-Feb-2013

Delhi, Arrival and Orientation


India
Delhi
Modern, clean and calm, Indira Ghandi Airport is everything India aspires to be. Once through the airport we were driven to our hotel along streets, some of which were modern, a few of which were clean, but none were calm. Indian drivers do not do ‘calm’, they do ‘horn’.

Usually a hotel’s location is described with reference to the city centre. In Delhi that does not work. Old Delhi and New Delhi are adjacent but very different cities, and New Delhi has separate administrative and commercial centres. Our hotel was in New Delhi - in the suburban sprawl rather than the planned central district - in a middle class residential area near Patel Nagar metro station. It had modernity in the shape of the metro – like Bangkok’s skytrain, it is mainly built over the streets rather than tunnelled under them -...

Delhi metro, near Patel Nagar Station

...and it had tradition, in the sense that there was a comfortable spot for a cow to lie down.

A comfortable spot for an urban cow, Delhi

Despite persistent suggestions from the local tuk-tuk charioteers that they should drive us somewhere, we insisted on exploring the area on foot. It offered few facilities for a pair of itinerant foreigners, but we did identify a promising bakery and a couple of possible restaurants. We visited one in the evening, it was a ‘Vegetarian Family Restaurant’ (i.e. no meat and no beer) but the food was good – Gobhi Noorjaimaini (Cauliflower with cashew nuts), and Dhal Makhani, with a couple of naans and Gulab Jamun to follow. The restaurant was cheap and clean, always a pleasing combination.

16-Feb-013

Old Delhi

In the morning Vikram turned up to show us Delhi. A good linguist and very competent guide, he had been a promising cricketer in his youth, opening the batting for Rajasthan under 19s. With that youth not very far behind him, he was newly married and manfully shouldering the responsibilities of adulthood - but not without a little nostalgia for the days when cricket filled his life.

This day, though, was not one for cricket. We were aware that February is relatively cool in northern India, but we had not expected drizzle, nor the biting wind that seemed to follow us round the city.

We drove the 4 or 5 km to Old Delhi through the relatively light Saturday traffic. Less than 1% of Delhi’s 17 million inhabitants are Christians, but along with railways and cricket (and both will feature in subsequent posts) the British left India with a proper respect for Sunday, and to a lesser extent Saturday, as days of rest – at least for office workers.

The Jama Masjid, Old Delhi

We soon arrived at the Jama Masjid (Friday Mosque). Inthe 17th century Delhi gradually assumed the mantle of capital of the Mughal Empire, and although Shah Jahan, the fifth Mughal Emperor, actually ruled from Agra (where he built the Taj Mahal) he made a major contribution to the move to Delhi when he laid the foundation stone of the Jama Masjid in 1650. His thirty year reign was a golden era of Indian prosperity.

Entrance, Prayer Hall and Minarets, Jama Masjid, Old Delhi

Capable of holding 25 000 worshippers, the largest mosque in India sits on a low hill on edge of Old Delhi.

Looking across a drizzly Old Delhi from the Jama Masjid to the Red Fort

We climbed the steps, removed our shoes, paid a photography fee and entered. Lynne had come equipped with a headscarf, but they were not interested in that, providing her, and every other western woman, with a voluminous dressing gown. Heads remained uncovered and many of the dressing gowns lacked fastenings and blew open in the breeze, trailing behind their wearers like Batman’s cape.

Lynne in a flowery dressing gown by the East Gate of the Jama Masjid, Old Delhi

The courtyard is surrounded by a wall wide enough to accommodate a good proportion of the peak time worshippers. In the centre is a pool for ritual ablutions while the prayer hall, bracketed by two towering minarets, faces Mecca at the western end. Constructed of red sandstone and marble it is an impressive building, but there is little inside. Islam is a religion of sunny regions and praying normally takes place outdoors; carpets cover the flagstones and shade can be arranged as needed.

Inside the Prayer Hall, Jama Masjid, Old Delhi

Walking round such places we usually stay off the stone so as not to burn our bare feet. On this day the carpet strips were wet and slimy, the flags stones were cold and the small puddles were too numerous to avoid; not the best day to visit.

Pile of shoes outside the jama Masjid, Old Delhi

Handing in Lynne’s dressing gown and reclaiming our shoes, we descended the steps towards a scrum of cycle rickshaws.

By Rickshaw to the Bazaar, Old Delhi

Vik selected us a likely peddler and another for himself – unlike in Yangon cycle rickshaws can accommodate two passengers - and we set off along one of Old Delhi’s wider roads.....

One of Old Delhi's wider roads

....before diving into the narrow lanes of a bazaar. Not all the shops were open and there were fewer people than on a week day so we were able to make reasonable progress without running anybody over.

Into the bazaar, Old Delhi

I have previously photographed impressive tangles of wiring in the old part of Hanoi, but that was nothing compared to Delhi, even the rickshaw man pointed it out as a local wonder. Later in our trip television news would report a fatal fire in a Calcutta bazaar cause by such wiring. The report went on to list a series of similar fires in recent years. Nobody should have been surprised.

An impressive tagle of wiring, Old Delhi bazaar

Whilst considering the possibility of immolation we were able to enjoy the lively ambience and to take a good look at those shops that were open - in this area the main business was wedding saris.

Selling wedding clothes, Old Delhi bazaar

Chandni Chowk, Old Delhi

Eventually we emerged into Chandni Chowk, that ‘marvellous artery of Delhi which epitomises the magic and mystery of an eastern city.’ Or so wrote Lovat Fraser, editor of the Times of India, in 1903. It was then, according to the Rough Guide ‘a sublime canal lined with trees and some of the most opulent bazaars in the whole of Asia.’ It is now, they say, ‘a seething mass of honking cars, auto rickshaws, cycle rickshaws and bullock carts’. That is the description I recognise.

Gurdward, Chandni Chowk, Old Delhi

We turned left towards the Sikh Gurdwara, but went only as far as a gap in the central reservation which allowed our peddler to perform a u-turn. Having survived this manoeuvre we progressed to the end of the street past the Central Baptist church, a Jain temple and a Hindu temple; such is the diversity of India.

Down Chandni Chowk to the Red Fort, Old Delhi

The Red Fort, Old Delhi

Across the T-junction at the end of Chandni Chowk is the Red Fort, the huge sandstone citadel commissioned, like the Jama Masjid, by Shah Jahan.

The Red Fort, Old Delhi

We crossed the moat, now dry but once full of water and crocodiles, and entered, as all tourists do, by the Lahore Gate. Beyond the outer gate there is a right angle turn before the inner gate, to prevent elephant powered battering rams working up any momentum. The risk of marauding war elephants is low these days, but the authorities clearly have other threats on their minds as an army post is sandwiched between the two gates. As we walk through, men behind blast proof shields were pointing their guns straight at us. They are there, we are told, for our protection, but having a rifle aimed at my chest does little for my feeling of security.

Lynne enters the inner Lahore Gate, Red Fort, Old Delhi (the soldiers were out of shot, right)

There are a couple of bullet holes in the brass cladding of the inner door, put there when the British took the fort in 1857. We apologised, and passed through into Chatta Chowk, a covered street lined with market stall sized niches. As the ladies of the harem could not leave the fort to visit the bazaar, the bazaar, or at least the cream of the city’s carpet makers, goldsmiths, jewellers and silk weavers came to them.

The Naubhat Khana (Drum House) is the entrance to the royal enclosure.

The Naubhat Khana from the Hall of Public Audience

Beyond that, across a garden, is the Hall of Public Audience wherethe emperor sat on a two metre high marble throne, currently protected by a mesh screen. A pigeon was trapped inside the mesh, so it may not have provided effective protection but it did efficiently spoil all attempts at photography. Female members of the court could listen and observe from behind a screen carved from a single piece of stone. The public could actually approach no closer than the Naubhat Khana so the audience was conducted by messengers who sprinted back and forth across the garden.

Carved screen. Behind this the ladies of the court could listen to the Public Audience

Deeper into the inner sanctum are various royal apartments, a hammam and a personal mosque built by Aurangzeb, the sixth emperor, who reversed the Mughal's traditionally tolerant approach to religious diversity. The Hall of Private Audience once held the Peacock Throne, but the fort was sacked in 1739 by the Persian emperor Nadir Shah who carried the throne back to Tehran to be used by the Shahs of Persia. It now resides in the Tehran treasury, where we saw it in 2000.

The Moti Masjid, Aurangzeb's mosque, Red Fort, Old Delhi

To the north is the last surviving formal garden, once quartered by channels of running water pumped from the River Yamuna which ran below the fort’s eastern wall. The river has since moved and the fort now overlooks a rather more prosaic ring road. Marching across the front of the garden is a line of buildings constructed as barracks for British soldiers. Shah Jahan, meanwhile, revolves quietly in his grave.

In the formal gardens with the British barracks behind, Red Fort, Old Delhi

The Raj Ghat

With the drizzle continuing, we left the Red Fort, pausing only to buy a model tuk-tuk (a gift for our grandson) from an itinerant vendor. A short drive south brought us to the Raj Ghat near the Delhi Gate to the old city. Ghat means river bank, but the River Yamuna has moved away from here too and the Raj Ghat is actually a garden. It was here, the day after his assassination in 1948, that Mahatma Ghandi was cremated.

The Raj Ghat, Delhi

It is as peaceful a place as can be created in the heart of this noisy city. We walked through the garden and onto the walkway which looks down on the eternal flame. Vik suggested we should stay there rather than descend to the flame itself as we would have to remove our shoes and the carpets were wet and slippery. At the time we agreed, no one likes the feel of wet carpet beneath their feet, but I have since regretted that I did not insist on taking a closer look. The flame stands beside a low black plinth inscribed with the great man’s last word ‘Hai Ram’ (Oh God) - a statement of great piety or, perhaps, surprise.

The India Gate and the Rajpath, New Delhi

In 1911 the capital of British India was moved from Calcutta to the shiny new purpose built city of New Delhi, designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens. We had set out to see Old Delhi, but from the Raj Ghat it was convenient to head a little further south and then drive down what was once the Kingsway, the central avenue through the administrative heart of British India. Now called the Rajpath, it performs the same function for independent India and grandstands are erected along the side of the road for the Republic Day parade.

We started by the India gate, built in 1931 to commemorate the 90 000 Indian soldiers killed in the First World War and now the national memorial for all India’s war dead. Although not part of the original design, it is also by Lutyens (as are the Cenotaph in London and the Thiepval Monument on the Somme). Having designed the Kingsway/Rajpath with more than a nod in the direction of the Champs Elysée, Lutyens could not resist putting an Arc de Triomphe at the end. The empty canopy behind the gate once housed a statue of King George V

The India Gate, New Delhi

We drove up the Rajpath in the opposite direction to the parades, passing the Indian Parliament building, a circular construction set back from the road…..

The circular Indian parliament building a little away from the Rajpath, New Delhi

… and various secretariat buildings….

Government buildings beside the Rajpath, New Delhi

… until we reached the Rashtrapati Bhavan at the end of the road; once the residence of the British viceroy and now India’s Presidential Palace. India is a parliamentary democracy, power lies with the prime minister, Manmohan Singh, and the role of the President is largely ceremonial, but in compensation President Pranab Mukherjee gets to live in one of the country's finest houses.

Rashtrapati Bhavan, New Delhi, official home of the Indian president

For lunch we were taken to the sort of restaurant guides think tourists will like, and perhaps some do. Clean and bright, the clientele consisted entirely of westerners, mostly tour parties sitting at long tables and eating set menu lunches. The à la carte was overpriced and probably underspiced, certainly our soup was, and that was all we chose to eat. The place’s one redeeming feature was that it sold beer, though at a price; a bottle of Kingfisher costing as much as in an English pub.

Returning to our hotel we drove along some wide roads lined with large houses in well-kept grounds; the Delhi elite certainly live in pleasant surroundings, though once outside their compounds there is no escape from the city's angry, snarling traffic.

An Excellant Garlic Chicken, Delhi

In the evening we walked from our hotel to the other restaurant we had identified. The Chowra Chick-Inn looked a touch forbidding but at least promised meat, though again we had to wash it down with a glass of water. We ordered garlic chicken and another cauliflower dish. Five minutes after we had ordered the waiter returned and said quietly ‘the garlic chicken is very spicy.’ ‘Good,’ we said and he looked at us, shrugged his shoulders and went off to the kitchen. In fact it was spicy but not very spicy. I have eaten hotter garlic chicken in Stafford, but I have never eaten better garlic chicken anywhere. The meat was tender and succulent, the subtle spicing enhanced the flavour and there was a pleasing blast of chilli. It was one of the best meals of the whole trip.

Delhi and Uttar Pradesh
Part 4 Varanasi

Thursday, 31 January 2013

Banyan Trees

I have only just finished the post on Ho Chi Minh City, though we were there in April last year - writing these posts does take some time.

I decided to leave out a picture of of the banyan tree outside the Jade Emperor Pagoda because it missed the entrance to the temple, but as I made that decision I realised that I have several photographs of banyan trees taken in a number of different countries. Banyans are photogenic, exotic (at least to the European eye) and stand still, which makes them easier subjects than birds and butterflies. I am not their only admirer, the Banyan is the national tree of India and appears on the Indonesian coat of arms.

The Indonesian coat of arms with a banyan tree in the top right quarter
The banyan is a member of the fig family. It starts life as an epiphyte, its seeds germinating in the crevices of a host tree or building. What makes the Banyan remarkable is its way of sending roots down towards the ground from its branches; sometimes these roots re-engage with the original host which is why it is also known as the Strangler Fig. There are fifteen different species of Banyan, which is why they do not all look identical in these pictures.

Starting, then, where the idea for this post germinated

Vietnam

This is the tree outside the Jade Emperor Pagoda. It may be small, bit it is a complex little blighter.

Banyan, Jade emperor Pagoda
Ho Chi Minh City
And this one is large, possibly the largest in Vietnam.


Banyan, Lao Cai
It is in the town of Lao Cai on the Chinese border in the north of the country. The kiosk selling incense sticks for the nearby Taoist temple has taken refuge in the tree's aerial roots.

Queueing for incense sticks, Lao Cai
Hong Kong

We first visited Hong Kong in 2004. On day 1, like many new visitors, we took the tram up Victoria Peak and followed the footpath round the summit. That is where we found this banyan, it may well be the first we ever saw.

Victoria Peak, Hong Kong
Chung Chau is one of Hong Kong's outer islands.  It is small and car-free, which makes it relatively peaceful, though it can be crowded, particularly at weekends, by those (like us) attracted by the seafood restaurants near the harbour. The town centre has a venerable banyan tree...

Chung Chau village
...with a gruesome past - it was used as a gallows by the Japanese during the Second World War.

India

Gods can lurk under Banyan trees, like this one near Dindigul in Tamil Nadu...


Near Athoor Lake, Dindigul
...or these Naga stones at Gokarna on the coast in Karnatika

Naga Stones under a banyan, Gokarna
These splendid banyans are also in Karnatika, lining a road near the Nagarhole National Park.

The road from Kerala to the Nagarhole National Park
 But my favourite is this huge old tree...
Banyan tree, Auroville
...in the remarkably well-heeled New Age Settlement/Hippie Commune of Auroville in the Union Territory of Pondicherry.


Saturday, 5 January 2013

Commemorating Comedians in Caerphilly, Morecambe and Ulverston

Three Towns Commemorate their Favourite Sons

Tommy Cooper, Caerphilly, South Wales


Caerphilly CB
When we visited in April 2009, Caerphilly looked a dismal town; shops were boarded up, paint was peeling, windows needed cleaning – those that were not broken – and many of the people look pale and unwell. It gives me no pleasure to write this; I may be a long exiled Welshman, but both sides of my family come from South Wales, as do Lynne’s (her mother actually attended Caerphilly Grammar School), and it remains a part of my somewhat complex concept of ‘home’. There are still many pleasant and prosperous places in the region, but I fear that Caerphilly is typical of too many towns struggling to adjust to the post-industrial world.

The centre is dominated by one of Britain’s largest Norman castles. This should be a tourist attraction, and maybe it is, but on a dank April day the castle looked as dark and forbidding as Gilbert de Clare (see also Llantrisant and Castell Coch) could have hoped for when he began work in 1268.

Parc Dafydd Williams, Caerphilly

On the plus side, there is a pleasant garden which the town kindly chose to name after me (all right, it’s some other bloke with the same name, but it could have been). Nearby is a statue of Caerphilly’s favourite son.

Tommy Cooper was born in Caerphilly in 1921, though the family moved to Devon when he was three. His connection with the town is slim, but Caerphilly needs all the straws it can clutch. The statue, the work of James Done, was unveiled by Sir Anthony Hopkins in 2008.

Tommy Cooper and Caerphilly Castle

For those too young to remember, Tommy Cooper was a magician. Tall and ungainly with a fez stuck on his permanently dishevelled head, he looked nothing like the standard magician – and his tricks went wrong. From this simple premise he extracted humour which was sometimes simple, sometimes complex but always hilarious. An innately funny man, he could make an audience laugh by standing silent and motionless on stage, he was also a competent magician. Occasionally his tricks went right, just to keep everybody off balance.

He died on stage during a live televised show in 1984. At first, both the audience and stage crew thought the collapse was part of his act. Sadly it was not. A one-off and a true original, he died far too young.

Eric Morecambe, Morecambe, Lancashire


Lancashire
Morecambe
I have written about Morecambe Bay before (Morecambe Bay and Sunderland Point) but not about the town. A station and harbour were built beside the bay in 1846 and the town that grew up around them and absorbed the fishing village of Poulton-le-Sands eventually adopted the name of the bay. For a time Morecambe thrived, the railway bringing tens of thousands of holiday-makers each year, mainly from Yorkshire and southern Scotland.

In 2013, however, marketing Morecambe as a seaside resort seems a job for a hopeless optimist. With a beach of imported sand, and sea that only visits for a couple of hours a day, the cool, damp climate is the least of its disadvantages. Yet people still come here. The hinterland of north Lancashire and southern Cumbria is countryside of rare beauty, but surely it is only those who know no better - or can afford no better - that take a seaside holiday in Morecambe. Maybe Morecambe has its charms, if so I have missed them – I would be happy if anyone enlightened me.

The sea front at Morecambe

While the town took its name from the bay, Eric Morecambe took his name from the town where he was born in 1926. John Eric Bartholomew, as he was then, met Ernest Wiseman in 1940 and the double act of Bartholomew and Wiseman was born. Separated for a while by national service, they reunited, changed their names to Morecambe and Wise and the rest is history.

The Morecambe and Wise show was a Saturday prime time fixture for well over a decade and the Christmas special was compulsory viewing. With a script that was not actually replete with jokes, Eric’s clowning and ad-libbing regularly reduced my mother to a quivering heap. The quality of guests was legendary, serious actors, like Judi Dench and Glenda Jackson, serious musicians, like André Previn, and serious politicians, like Harold Wilson, queued up to be the butt of their jokes.

Eric died in 1984, the month after Tommy Cooper. Like Cooper he died of a heart attack, but unlike Cooper he managed to finish his show before collapsing backstage.

A statue of Eric Morecambe by sculptor Graham Ibbeson has pride of place on the town’s sea front. Before the Olympics the Queen did not do guests spots on other people’s shows, but she did came to Morecambe to unveil Eric’s statue in 1999.

Eric Morecambe on the Morecambe Sea Front

Eric and Ernie brought the double act to such a pitch of perfection they effectively killed it. Humour does not always cross the generations, but my mother was one of his greatest fans and my daughter can sometimes be heard quoting him, though she was only three when he died.

Stan Laurel, Ulverston, Cumbria


Cumbria
Traditionally a detached part of Lancashire, but since 1972 officially Cumbria, the Furness peninsula is a strange sort of place. Travelling south, the Lake District hills flatten out into land scarred by ancient glacial activity, riven by broad sandy estuaries and fringed by desolate salt marshes. The unlovely industrial town of Barrow lies at the tip of the peninsula while at the base is the small, neat market town of Ulverston.

County Square is hardly the focal point of the cluster of handsome old buildings that make up central Ulverston, but it does seem to be considered the town centre.

County Square, Ulverston

Stan Laurel was born Stanley Arthur Jefferson in Ulverston in 1886. He came from a theatrical family, went into the business straight from school and joined Fred Karno’s troupe in 1910. In 1912 he toured America with the troupe (which also included Charlie Chaplin) and decided to stay. He was already a well-established actor and film director when he started working with Oliver Hardy in the late 1920s.

The statue of Stan and Ollie that stands outside Coronation Hall is, like that of Eric Morecambe, by Graham Ibbeson. It was unveiled by Ken Dodd in 2009.

Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy outside Coronation Hall, Ulverston

Ulverston also has a Laurel and Hardy museum, but it was closed for ‘major refurbishment’ when we visited – what did we expect on a cold wet January morning? Laurel and Hardy were no doubt funny in their day, but I doubt modern audiences find much to laugh at. That said, they were innovators in their field, they were the first major double act in film history, and they were successful in both silent and talking pictures, so they must have had something.

My mother met them when they were touring Britain in the late 1940s. They came to the Ideal Home exhibition and visited the stand where she was demonstrating cookery techniques. Her verdict: ‘a pair of silly old fools.’