Tuesday, August 31, 2010

INDeco Resort Hotel, Mamallapuram, South India


Living here in Chennai, we’ve been down to Mamallapuram any number of times. I’ve written about it in previous blogs. Each time we go there’s more to discover. One of my titles reads ‘GRT Temple Bay Resort’ which rightly deserves much more than a mention (even if it is way too expensive for us retired folk).

We did actually overnight at Mamallapuram some years ago in a place that calls itself ‘Sea Breeze’. The location couldn’t be better. It’s directly on the beach right next to the town’s main attraction, the Shore Temple. The compound is at the end of a wonderfully neat dead end lane. It contains both cottages and rooms, a pool, a restaurant, and gift shop. ‘Sea Breeze’ is relatively new, but lacks the attention to detail and sophistication of the Radisson GRT complex. There’s a certain charm in that though. Whereas ‘Temple Bay' consists of a template that is recognizable anywhere in the world, ‘Sea Breeze’ retains a distinct Indian flavor.

Last weekend we made still another intriguing discovery: The ‘INDeco Hotel’ just south of the World Heritage site. It bills itself as the hotel that is also a museum and is run by the Indian government (that owns some of the best real estate in the country). INDeco too has a restaurant and a pool but it’s a bit of a distance to the ocean - about 5 minutes walk.

INDeco is wonderfully lush, green and shaded. That’s saying a lot for the east coast of India that tends to be arid apart from monsoon season. INDeco - like ‘Sea Breeze’ - is totally Indian. There’s a touch of the exotic here that’s missing at ‘Sea Breeze’ which seeks to be modern. No such pretensions here. INDeco is proud to be old (colonial) school.

I never actually stayed there. Neither did I eat at their multi-cuisine restaurant, ‘Pongamiya’ (named after the Pongamiya Glabra trees that shade the grounds). But from what I’ve seen so far, I wouldn’t mind checking it out. It has, of course the added advantage of its government affiliation which in my experience has always served us well throughout India.





Monday, August 30, 2010

A Gentleman's Farm in Vermont




New England is the vacation spot for active adults and their families who don’t necessarily like to sweat in the hot Florida sun and get sand between their toes. New Englanders have a reputation of being a fiercely independent lot. They are often outdoorsy types who like hunting, fishing and chopping wood.

We’ve been going up to New England on vacation since my grammar school days. My brother and I always looked forward to our summers spent in a cottage along the shores of Lake Sunapee in New Hampshire. Later, I would take my own family to a similarly bucolic lake setting in Vermont. Occasionally, we would end up on Cape Cod, clam digging; or on Martha’s Vineyard, celebrity watching.

Of course, New England in many ways also represents the cradle of American history: Plymouth, Boston, Concord, Lexington, etc. It pays to visit the historic sites whenever possible to get a sense of where we all came from. As such, New England has also served admirably as America’s incubator for artistic inspiration. Emerson, Hawthorne, Dickinson, Longfellow, Poe, King among many others had roots in New England. Henry David Thoreau’s sojourn on Walden Pond marked the beginnings of America’s now muscular environmental movement.

New England also serves as an oasis of privacy where it is still possible to lose oneself. J. D. Salinger, after having had his fill of being hounded by paparazzi, secluded himself at Cornish, NH, where the streets seldom have names and houses lack letter boxes. Many of its less than 2000 residents live out of sight of their neighbors. When, as sometimes happens, big city interviewers come into town, stop at the General Store and ask the patrons for directions to Salinger’s house, their inquiry is likely to be met with stone silence. New Englanders look out for their own. It seems like the old man had let it be known that he doesn’t want to be bothered.

Of late, we’ve been visiting friends in a similar town (possibly even more remote) on the Vermont side of the border. There’s a special feel about the place – the chill at night; the heat of day that brings the snakes out from under rock piles; the ‘hearing oneself think’ kind of quiet, except for the wind rustling in the tops of trees and the birds, and the distinct possibility of losing one’s bearings in the woods.

I haven’t had the pleasure of knowing all that New England is famous for. I haven’t personally witnessed fall there, when the trees are said to literally explode with brilliant color. I haven’t skied at New England’s famous mountain resort. I haven’t gone whale watching off the coast of Maine. But I can well imagine. My sole recent exposure (aside from a trip or two to Boston) has been a tiny farm in Halifax, VT. This alone qualified as a near mystical experience for someone who spends most of his life in the thick of one of a major eastern metro.

Do head up to New England if you can stand the quiet - and the ghosts. If you don’t happen to know anyone up there, there are plenty of charming inns. Google ‘New England: Bed and Breakfasts’ or ‘Cottage Rentals’ and you’ll have plenty to choose from. The only B&B I can personally vouch for is Taraden in Vermont. It’s run by friends of ours.





Mamallapuram, Tamil Nadu, South India


Less than two hours drive south from Chennai is historic Mamallapuram, now designated as a World Heritage site. It was the second capital and seaport of the Pallava kings of Kanchipuram who ruled much of Tamil Nadu from the 4th to the 9th century. Today, they are remembered primarily for their patronage and promotion of Dravidian architecture. The landscape in and around Mamallapuram features huge rock outcroppings which have traditionally attracted armies of stone cutters whose progeny to this day still ply their trade producing intricate sculptures of Hindu gods and goddesses.

The principal attraction here is the Shore Temple. It has been a matter of intense speculation, some claiming that seven of these were originally built (six, they say, having since been claimed by the sea). Though now largely relegated to myth, the tsunami - which hit the coast in December of 2004 - nevertheless re-ignited the controversy after some eye-witnesses recalled seeing patterned arrangements of stone emerge briefly from the water.

Mamallapuram (or Mahabalipuram, as it was called up until only a few years ago) also boasts of having the largest open air bas-relief monolith in the world, known as “Arjuna’s Penance” or “The Descent of Ganga”. In addition there are the “Five Rathas”, or vehicles, which, scholars suspect, was the result of attempting to determine a suitable architectural style for yet to be commissioned Pallava-sponsored temples built to honor the gods they revered.

Virtual tomes have been published about all the antiquities that can be found in Mamallapuram. Of more immediate interest to the casual traveler might be the fact that Mamallapuram is the only spot on India’s arid east coast that can claim to have world class resorts. The area is an amalgam of the very old and the very new and, as such, a fair representation of present-day India.





Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Bhramotsavam: Neighborhood Temple Street Festival


Chennai (formerly known as Madras) is the capital of the South Indian state Tamil Nadu which extends all the way down to Cape Comorin on the southern most tip of the sub- continent. It is an amalgam of small towns and villages that are all built together. I am staying barely a five minute’s walk from the beach and the Bay of Bengal. The town’s name is Valmiki Nagar named after the sage who wrote ‘The Ramayana’.

The focal point of Valmiki Nagar is the Marundeeswarar (Shiva) Temple. It has always been at the center of this ancient village. The annual Bhramotsavam is celebrated in March - April. The idol is placed on a specially designed hand-drawn chariot called Thyagarkanai and taken out into the surrounding streets - including the ECR (East Coast Road), a major artery running north-south along the coast - on the 10th, and 11th days of the festival.

What is interesting here is that Bhramotsavam, despite the intensity and fervor with which it is celebrated (even to the point of shops and services in the immediate area shutting down for the duration), is strictly a local happening. Chennai has many temples including the famous Kapaleeswarar Temple in Mylapore, where the cruise ship companies like to take all their paying customers for some local color. Kapaleeswarar has its own festivals in which the idol is taken around the market square in a huge wooden chariot. Louis Malle devotes almost an entire episode to it in his controversial, “Phantom India” (’69) film series. Even in black and white the film conveys a kind of primeval raw devotion as the crowd surges dangerously close to the chariot’s heavy wheels that can only be stopped by wooden chocks thrown in their path.

The series of pictures taken on April 5th ’09 in Valmiki Nagar seeks to remedy the absence of color in Malle’s earlier effort. Though it must be kept in mind that, inasmuch as both temples (Marundeeswarar and Kapaleeswarar) are dedicated to Shiva, Marundeeswarar speaks to his ‘civilized’ nature; the husband of Parvathi; father of Ganesha and Subramaniam, whereas Kapaleeswarar speaks to the wild and unpredictable destroyer of convention; ‘crazed cosmic dancer on the bones of the dead in the graveyard’ aspect of the same god. It is easy to see where Indian’s sympathies come down; why Kapaleeswarar is considered so much more endearing and powerful.

Bhramotsavam this year fell right around Easter. I caught the tail end of a Christian procession as well, but did not have my camera handy. The two dozen or so devotees walked single-file behind a plain, white loudspeaker truck, waving palm leaves. They were all dressed in identical black pants and white shirts.






Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Jockey Hollow, Morristown National Historical Park, New Jersey


“They also serve who only stand and wait.” – John Milton

We’ve always had the inclination to celebrate great battlefields on which heroes were asked to sacrifice their very essence for the lofty ideals set forth by our leaders. The greater the carnage, the more we elaborate. The more the earth has been turned red, the less we are allowed to forget blood’s contribution to our present state of perceived well-being. We are alive and well, speaking the language of our fathers because (we are told) many have died for our - the greater - good.

On the other side as well, the losers celebrate their fallen vowing to return the favor at some future time. Sometimes we forget to hold a grudge; sometimes we just stand there and look at where it all happened and shake our heads.

It is said that in human history one third is given war. This is why nations tend to spend millions to maintain armies that stand idle two-thirds of the time. And even that often becomes a monumental struggle. Take the winter of 1779-1780 when General George Washington’s Continental army was camped just outside Morristown at Jockey Hollow. Twelve men were crammed into each one of 1000 crudely built 14’ x 16’ structures, passing the time waiting for spring. They were woefully short of rations and warm clothing. That season, Washington’s 13,000 regulars endured seven blizzards during the month of December alone - and not a single shot was fired to advance the cause.

Under lesser leadership, the Continental Army might have fallen apart that winter. As such, it might have been denied the opportunity to favorably affect the outcome of our stand against the British. But only a hundred soldiers died; only a thousand deserted. America would go on to win the war.

Jockey Hollow Historical National Park consists of 900 wooded acres. There is a visitor’s center with vivid displays that chronicle the history of the encampment. There is a farmhouse carefully preserved in its original state with an orchard and herb garden. On weekends, volunteers dressed in period clothes recount 18th Century details of life in the Hollow. There are numerous hiking paths through the woods. A few replicas of the soldier’s huts are also open to the curious.

As a family, we’ve been going to the Park since the moving to the area. It’s practically in our backyard, after all. It’s a great place to commune with nature and one is sure to run across a deer or two if one happens to stray far enough from the road. We’ve been there in winter as well, crunching bravely across the snow while cocooned properly in jackets, scarves and mittens, all the while knowing that we would be back in our cozy home well before nightfall.

The last time we were there was Father’s Day. My now grown daughter had brought her digital camera along. Most of the pictures in this series are hers. I just had a hard time concentrating - the past and present crashing together – while feeling strangely compelled to keep my eyes on the kids.





Friday, August 6, 2010

The Doors of the World


Nowadays, the distinction between windows and doors has largely eroded; one-eyed peepholes have evolved into sliding plates of shatterproof glass. Our houses always tend to have many more windows than doors. TVs, computers, books, newspapers and magazines might be considered as windows of a sort.

Still, a door implies some kind of passage; a journey, perhaps - a becoming. Something changes when you walk through a door. Nothing changes when you’re merely looking through a window. God lives in a great room with many windows and no doors.

Back (in the early 70’s) when we still could afford magazines, I happened across a full page travel ad that featured pictures of thirty-six doors. At the bottom, “The Doors of Dublin” in Celtic font had been inserted. Within days, I noticed the same collage, enlarged to poster size, at various shops in and around New York City. (If I remember correctly, it was right around St. Patrick’s Day.) And that wasn’t the end of it.

Eventually, similar formats popped up all over, each customized to reflect a particular community or region. Even our town came out with its own version.

The concept died rather quickly. “The Doors of Summit” did not sell very well, here or anywhere. I heard some local residents grousing about their doors having been excluded.

The long and the short of it - as to the lasting impact it had on me personally – is that whenever I find myself taking pictures in any locale, either consciously or unconsciously, I am invariably drawn to focus on doors and doorways.

Please indulge me in this. My approach is somewhat different from Bob Fearon’s. Bob was the originator of the ‘Doors’ concept. Not all my pictures were taken on the same street; or in the same place even. (As I understand it, all of these now-famous Dublin poster portals can be found on the Georgian town houses just south of the Liffey.) I thought I’d mix it up a bit – compare and contrast – the portals on four different continents. Doors actually are something that we all have in common in this crazy world that seems forever trying to divide us.

Google “The Doors of Dublin” and you will see the original poster along with the story behind it.





Thursday, August 5, 2010

East Coast Road (ECR), Tamil Nadu, India


The East Coast Road starts at the Old Mahabalipuram Road crossing at Tidel Park, Chennai’s IT colossus. It runs about 4 km east to Thiruvanmiyur where it turns sharply south to skirt the coast all the way down to Cuddalore. I’ve only been as far as the former French colony of Puducherry, approximately 150 km away. The ECR is billed as an ‘Express Highway’. Indeed, the only thing it has in common with ‘Express’ or ‘Highway’ is that it becomes a toll road at Uthandi. Up until this point it’s like any other Indian intra-city road, two-lanes, winding through dense traffic in tough ethnic neighborhoods of indistinguishable hues. Along the way one is treated to a dense pastiche involving temples, churches and mosques; dogs, cows and camels; retail shops, big and small; and every form of transport ever devised by mankind from ox-cart to Mercedes-Benz. This stretch contains food courts, multiplex theaters, resorts, and amusement parks.

From Uthandi on, the traffic thins considerably. The road remains two-lane and has numerous speed bumps and metal (swerve) gates especially as one passes through any one of the many fishing villages that dot the coast. There are now panoramic openings between these settlements. The Bay of Bengal is to the left. The vegetation alternates between scrub palms and cacti suited to arid climes; and coconut palms and banana leaf more abundantly found along India’s opposite Malabar Coast. The stretch between Uthandi and historic Mahabalipuram contains world class resorts such as the Taj’s Fisherman’s Cove and GRT Resort. Curiosities like Dakshina Chitra and Romulus Whittaker’s Madras Crocodile Bank are worthwhile stops along the way.

From Mahabalipuram on south, the ride becomes interesting from the perspective of landscape alone. You begin to see rice paddies along side the road. The vegetation becomes decidedly tropical. Sometimes the Rain Trees form a dense canopy across the road for several miles on end. Add an oxcart to the scene, and you have a quintessential picture of the South Indian state of Karnataka.

Suddenly, the lush greens give way to pale, blinding lunar scapes. To the west there are unbroken salt flats as far as the eye can see. Tiny dark figures in white loincloths harvest the salt and gather it in conical mounds. The vegetation is non-existent to sparse. Cacti line the endless flat; a few paltry strands of grass; a lone scrub palm. Somewhere I noticed a shed snakeskin bleaching in the sun.

And then, just as suddenly, the lush tropical greens are back. I notice a Hanuman temple; whole villages built entirely of thatch. Gradually, the traffic increases as the towns begin to merge into one another once again. Puducherry is but a few miles away. We blow past the University (a good one, I am told); ditto, Auroville (I have little interest in cults). Our first stop is the Sri Manakula Vinayagar (Ganesha) Temple - complete with live elephants - in the French Quarter. By now, we’re pretty hungry after our three-hour ride. Some French food sounds good just about now. We ask a rickshaw driver for directions to Satsanga (restaurant), famous for its soupe de poisson and its terrine de lapin or poulet piment vert et frites. We’ve also heard some good reports about the crème caramel as well as the coffee. Here in India, that’s saying something.






Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Goetheanum, Dornach, CH


I entered 1st grade in Arlesheim, Switzerland, a small rural town in canton Basel Land. My mother had placed me with a family there while she was working full-time in Basel (Stadt) and was unable to care for me. My stay there was cut short by an outbreak of polio - from which I fortunately suffered only minimal effects – after which my mother decided to remove me from the household. During the brief time I did spend in Arlesheim though, inquiries were made by The Anthroposophical Society, headquartered at the Goetheanum in neighboring Dornach, about the possibility of allowing me to join the organization to be sheltered there and educated in its ways.

The Anthroposophical Society goes back to 1902 when the German branch of the international Theosophical Society was founded and led by Rudolf Steiner. His group always remained quite independent of the main branch that was geographically and spiritually headquartered in Adyar (Chennai), India. The bond between Steiner and the main society was irrevocably broken in 1913, when leadership of the Indian branch declared that they had found the reincarnated Christ in a young boy named Jiddu Krishnamurti.

If you have been keeping track of my postings from South India to didyouweekend.com, you will remember an earlier article I wrote about the Theosophical Society grounds and gardens in Chennai. - It’s a small world indeed! I myself hadn’t made the connection until now.

On a recent visit to Europe, which included some of my childhood digs, I (re)visited the massive and imposing Goetheanum again. It appears as quite an anachronism set in the gentle, bucolic landscape of Basel Land. The brainchild of multi-talented Steiner himself, it represents a pioneering use of cast concrete in large-scale architecture and has now been granted protected status as a Swiss national monument. Steiner's initial thrust was to liberate the building’s structure from traditional architectural norms and constraints, especially by shunning the use of the right-angle as a basis for any building plan. Thereby, he hoped to achieve organic forms that were spiritually expressive. The result is certainly unique and has been highly praised by any number of renowned names in modern architecture, including art critic, Michael Brennan, who referred to it as a "true masterpiece of 20th-century expressionist architecture". My own impression was that it clashed unnecessarily with the surrounding scenery. I saw Steiner’s ego dramatically at odds with itself – a dangerous situation that, given the right circumstance, could result in something akin to what happened in Jonestown, New Guinea.

While there, I experienced a strange post-apocalyptic sense. Wandering randomly throughout the building of multi-colored interior walls, I encountered no one. I found myself compulsively seeking out windows and balconies to verify that the sun was still shining; the trees still blooming, and that people were still going about their business in the usual way.

Outside, on the grounds, I met random groups of young backpackers, speaking any number of different languages. They must have made the journey for quite some other reason than my own. One group asked me to snap their picture with the building in the background.





Tuesday, August 3, 2010

NIAGARA FALLS, Ontario, Canada


The first time I saw Niagara Falls was when my father took the whole family to a bio-chemists’ symposium held in Buffalo, NY. I might have been in my mid to late teens; my brother was still a baby. I remember my mother had her hands full with us. My brother fussed and refused to eat, and I rebelled in my own passive-aggressive way. My mother told us later that she would never take us kids anywhere again.

Anyway, we did manage to get it together enough to spend one afternoon on the American side of Niagara Falls. We did all the obligatory things: taking a ride on the “Maid of the Mist”, wearing black and yellow rain slickers; climbing the observation tower; and stuffing ourselves with street food.

After my father’s untimely death, my mother and I drove up there several more times. Each time, the journey would take us through Bradford, PA where Dad grew up and now lies buried. We’d buy flowers and put them on his grave before heading back to the Desoto Motel for dinner and sleep. The next morning, we’d head up to Niagara.

Niagara Falls is one of the eight wonders of the world (and if it isn’t, it should be). I took my own kids up there once and did essentially the same things with them as my Dad had done with us. Only this time we also visited the Hard Rock Café where we bought burgers and tee-shirts.

Most people can list three of the most awesome waterfalls on earth. The list never varies: Niagara in North America; Iguaçu in South America, Victoria in Africa. The precise order of the three is purely subjective. Aside from Niagara, I’ve personally only visited Iguaçu. To compare Niagara with Iguaçu seems like comparing apples with oranges. Some like this one better; some like the other; most like both pretty much the same.

On my most recent visit up there, I took my brand new, Indian-born wife. She’d never seen it. Of course, she’d heard of Niagara Falls and may even have seen the movie with Marilyn Monroe. I, on the other hand, had been up there many times before and did not relish the long drive. It all became worth it, though, when I saw the wonder in her eyes and it affected me as well. Suddenly, I too felt like I was there for the first time. She explained that I was seeing the Falls through her eyes.

Actually, we hadn’t planned on going over to the Canadian side except maybe on foot. From my previous trips, I had always felt that the American side was more natural; more intimate. There were actually places to sit - away from the hawkers and crowds - and imagine what it must have been like when there were only Indians roaming the countryside. One could easily puzzle about what they might have made of this extraordinary spectacle of nature; how they too must have felt it was somehow sacred.

But I had mistakenly taken a lane which would lead across the bridge and from which there was no exit. So, we ended up in Canada. Since we were already there, we decided to stay. There was no need to worry about changing money since everything could be paid for by credit card anyway.

We took a room (with a tortured view of the main attraction) at Michael’s Inn. The town on the Canadian side resembled an amusement park, complete with casinos. It was quite something to walk around at night with all the other thrill seekers, luxuriating in a virtual tide of neon. I did think it was all a bit over the top and totally superfluous, but nevertheless engaging. We found an Indian restaurant (Nataraj) where we had a great dinner.

The next day we took a ride along the Niagara River to the town of Niagara-by-the-Lake. It’s nice if you like lots of flowers, people, shops and the like. One block away, however, toward the lake side, all the frenzy ceases and some degree of peace and normalcy returns.