Thursday, September 17, 2009

Catching Up: A Few Thoughts, A Few Shots

A few thoughts;

1.  We're not being paid nearly enough to do this.

2.  We'd probably do it for free.  

3.  To anyone who's said  India is intense: you are guilty of gross understatement.  After 26 of us crossed a main road in the old city last night with no crosswalks, no lights and no way of knowing which way vehicles were coming (or what kind of vehicles they were) Carol said (just loud enough for me to hear) "India is not for the faint hearted."  Fortunately, Indian drivers don't get bonus points for hitting foreigners and hitting us would slow them down so I think we're OK--so far.

4.  We left last weekend for a three day trip.  First to Agra (Taj Mahal--built by Shah Jahan for his favorite wife, Mumtaz Mahal; Agra (Red) Fort, courtesy of Akbar; at night, the Tomb of Itimad-ud Daulah; and in the morning a group to the river to watch the sunrise over the Taj).  Then to Fatehpur Sikri (Akbar, again).  Finally to Vrindavan to meet with Katie Walter, tour the city and visit the Food For Life where her NGO VKG is housed.

I simply cannot (I have neither the time nor the skills) record our impressions.  I'll include a few pictures but they can't do justice either.  The Taj brings one to one's metaphorical knees.  I am not a man of faith, but if I were, I could only salivate in anticipation of heaven because if humans are capable of creating such beauty, what is God capable of?

Cliches come to mind when trying to say anything about Fatehpur Sikri.  Again, if minds could in fact be boggled, then they were.  One is lost trying to grok the enormity of the construction challenges and the success achieved in meeting those challenges.  If  Akbar meant to announce to the world that he was the "man", he succeeded here as well.  I had this thought in the midst of one of our tours of the trophy sites of the various Mughal rulers that here we see the result of machismo in regal display.  A giant pissing match between father and son and grandson and on and on.  How many slaves died? How much wealth was spent?  How many people went without?  And, where is their plaque?  I had a very similar feeling once some years ago in China at the Great Wall and the Forbidden City.  Kind of like the Bridge to Nowhere.

Vrindavan seems to have been a big hit.  Despite the beauty of the Taj and the grandeur of Fatehpur Sikri,  the students loved the street scene and activity of Vrindavan.  Katie and Sunil put together a very action-filled and interesting day concluding with a visit to Katie's NGO.  Four highlights: 1) Cycle rickshaw races (our 14 biker walas rose to the occasion and made a friendly competition out of winning the race to our various destinations--much to the delight of everyone). 2) Miscreant monkeys.  There are countless monkeys in Vrindavan.  They have developed the ability to steal glasses (even while you're wearing them) and demanding food.  Of course, once you give them food they refuse to return your glasses--not fair right?  Kinda like trying to negotiate with certain political monkeys in the US.  Anjali had hers stolen while she was sitting in a temple and Helen had hers ripped from her while walking on a street. Carol and I were forced to take off our glasses and put them in our pocket--saved the glasses but we kept bumping into monkeys.   3) Visiting VKG--Katie's NGO.  The students fell in love with Katie, the staff and the products, bought a bunch and were reluctant to leave.  Good on Katie.  4) Lunch at the Vrinda Kunj ashram. Peaceful, loving, filling. Good on Gopini.  5) an extra: we were running late and had to be on the train at Mathura at 9 sharp.  Got to Mathura just a bit before 8 and had reservations at a hotel for dinner.  Raced to the hotel, got seated around 8 and figured we had to leave no later than 8:30.  Staff not quite ready, Katie urges them to work quickly, water is brought (8:10), a few dishes arrive (8:15) lights out (8:16), more dishes (8:20) lights go out (8:20), students continue to eat in the dark, I panic, find head guy and plead for bill, (lights out again), students are now shoveling down great food at record setting pace, bill arrives (8:28), Carol pays bill (8:29), lights go out, I urge everyone up and out the door (8:30), much grumbling (8:30), I respond by urging again (8:31), people leave grabbing food and eating while speeding down the stairway (8:33), outside and on bus (8:40), arrive at train station (8:55), walk briskly to platform 2 (9:00) announcement, train running late (9:01), many evil stares at me (9:01-11:30)

5.  We're leaving Delhi in less than a week.  How can we have done so much in such a short time?  The students are maintaining field journals as a key assignment and I'll collect them for my first reading next Monday.  I can't wait to read them (Peter, it's not that bad).  

They are amazing.  They instruct us as much, if not more, than we could ever instruct them. They have welcomed us into their fellowship and we couldn't be more pleased with them. That's the highlight of the trip so far, with nothing else remotely close.  Yo Akbar--got that!


5.  Parting shot.    We were in the old city yesterday and are returning again today.  At one point (around 4 p.m) Sunil led us up a street (about 8-10 feet wide at most) with shops on both sides.  The train station is not far away and when trains come in, goods are unloaded and moved mostly on hand pulled/pushed carts to the various shops in the vicinity. One person had a cart filled with goods that was about 4-5 feet wide.  He had gotten about half way down the street and then wasn't able to go any farther because of the crush of people.  We likewise were trapped as people continued to try and enter the street from both ends and work their way past each other in different directions.  We were (to use a Sunilian expression) cheek to jowl and (to use mine) butt to belly with hardly any room to move.  The crowd shuffled, swayed, and inched to this side and that, and occasionally forward.  The noise was deafening and the heat suffocating.   Fortunately for the women, there wasn't sufficient room for any groping.  We were strung out in a line (all 26 of us) about 25 yards from front to back--Sunil in front, Aukeem and I bringing up the rear.   At one point Sunil and I made eye contact and gave each other a thumbs up sign and smiled (his saying, I think, "welcome to India"; mine, I know, saying "thanks for the memories").


A few shots:

Aukeem has this Dr. Seuss book (I think it's entitled "Oh, The Places You'll Go")  He's been using it as a prop and taking a shot of him and another student holding it up at each stop.  It was seized when we entered the Taj grounds.  It caused quite a stir and Sunil tried in vain to reason with the guards who I guess thought we might use the pages to start a fire.  They just couldn't get their brains around the idea of a grown man taking a cartoon book into the Taj (I sort of understand).  At any rate, deprived of his book, he and Rosie do some kind of gangsta representation of the book:)


Sensing my understanding of homeland security, this ROTC troop welcomed me as the true anti-terrorist crime fighter I am

Helen, Rosie, Shandara and Richie

Carol's best shot.  The sun rises over the Yamuna with what I think is a Mosque in the distance




Anjali and Keletso


True story.  We're across the Yamuna River at sunrise to witness the sun come up and make love with the Taj (8 students, Carol, Sunil and moi).  This kid comes up and asks if I'm the Big Cheese.  I say, what's your name and I hear him say "Because".  I say, "Why" and he says, "Because."  (cue the laugh track).  This kid is the smoothest talker I've ever met. It's the old foot in the door trick.  First we fall in love with him, then he whips out a bag of trinkets.  Carol, of course, can't resist and buys an elephant inside an elephant thingy.  She says it's for Braylen (Judy's grandson) but I know it's just Because.  

Sadhus: Indian holy men. 
Your guess is as good as mine

At the Agra Fort Sunil expounds, Shandara kicks Alex and I ponder why I didn't get back in the stock market last January

Gopini explains the history of the Govind Dev Temple.  Moments later a monkey steals Anjali's glasses and all hell breaks loose (think the Three Stooges meet the Keystone Cops).  Proving again that India is one very strange place
We hold a slight lead as we round the club house turn.  
Thomas and Richie don't seem too concerned.
Katie recently graduated from LC.  She is a "non traditional student" (not directly out of high school and a "bit" older) who travelled on the 07 India trip and has a passion for India and social justice.  She is currently on a grant to study Hindi and has also won an India-Fulbright grant to continue her work with the NGO (Non-Government Organization) next year.  She developed her NGO as a result of winning one of the "100 Projects For Peace" awards.  She has worked to set up a collective where widows and other women can produce and market their sewn handicrafts directly to retailers and/or on-line. This cuts out three or four layers of money grabbers and raises their incomes substantially.  They make beautiful products and Katie is explaining the process in this shot. Note to alums and LC administration: Katie told me our contribution would make it possible for one of the widows to send her son to school for a year.  Good on us!
The students with Katie and others.  Alex is displaying a yoga mat carrying cover she has purchased.  
Two beautiful kids in Vrindavan.  Carol can't resist taking their picture














Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Zen And The Art Of Negotiating Delhi

These notes and most of the pictures were written/uploaded almost a week ago--uploading pictures takes forever.  We have been so busy I'm only now getting around to posting.  I'll try over the next day or so to reflect and document with pictures what we've been up to this past week--one of the most memorable of our lives. 
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Yesterday (I wrote on September 8) was exhausting.  Sunil pushed us to our limits, but the candle, as they say, was worth the flame.  We're learning about neighborhoods--particularly how Delhi's ancient past is often uprooted, seldom understood, and frequently ignored, even as it lives in the midst (or often below) Delhi's present.  Coming from the US where "old" is clearly seen differently than it is here, we're constantly struck by how the ancient and the modern (as well as the rich and the poor) live in what we see as jaw-dropping contradiction, but many in the city take with hardly a pause.

We saw how  Delhi's "first city" Qila Rai Pithora,  has been romanticized, decontextualized, and it's moat and gate turned respectively (but not respectfully) into a drainage ditch and a tourist attraction.  We visited a sufi shrine in the forest near Sunil's Saket neighborhood and were granted a rare visit inside a centuries-old mosque that abuts the largest shopping center in the city (Sunil was in ecumenical heaven when we walked into the mosque courtyard, not knowing how we'd be received, and were told we could come inside after prayers--including our large contingent of female students--no pictures here, of course).

After being greeted enthusiastically inside by about a dozen young boys who shortly got down to their studies--chanting/singing the Quran as they swayed in unison--we left with a deeper appreciation that Islam is not monolithic and a new spirit of ecumenicism seems to be asserting itself in Delhi--at least at this mosque.  Following a stroll through the big new mall (that looked just like every other big new mall in the world) we walked outside and into a huge bazaar that went on for blocks and again, could not have been any more different than the sanitized, franchised, redundancy of the big new mall--I'm working on a theme here folks.

Finally after approximately 4 hours of walking and close to 15 miles of travel (my pedometer broke the third day here, so I'm just guessing:), we arrived at the home of Sunil and Anjali Kumar.  They hosted us to an unforgetable Indian meal and everyone had a blast.  We got home about 11 or so and everyone (by this morning's accounting) fell fast and deeply asleep, but all showed up for our 10 a.m Hindi lesson with renewed energy and vigor.

After class today, Carol and I took off on our own neighborhood adventure.  Auto-Rickshawing first to Connaught Place to exchange some travelers' checks (kinda got scalped on the exchange rate) and then  lunch--shared with a most gregarious Bengali journalist who was desperately missing his young daughter--off with her mother to tend to a sick grandpa--and who introduced himself by observing that I must be a father and who would therefore understand how lonely he was.  What followed was a 15 minute conversation about social injustice in India and an articulation of his fear that the caste system, having institutionalized inequality, was a permanent barrier to any hope of ever seriously addressing India's poverty and her oppression of children and women.  Getting no argument from us, we exchanged email addresses and our parting shot that we tended to agree with his somber assessment, but hoped we are all wrong!  

Then onto the adventure. Looking for an establishment called Mittal's Chai emporium--reputed to have every kind of tea produced in the known universe and all the pots, kettle, cups and other tea stuff that make tea afficianados drool.  Now many of you know Carol, and you know she has a well deserved reputation as a navigator of remarkable skill.  Carol is one of those people who enjoy maps--she likes looking at them, believes they are helpful and actually uses them.  Today, despite her tendency to believe the map is the territory (similar to a certain hiking buddy  of mine who also is a bit of a map fetishist) we got completely and hopelessly lost.  Much to her credit--because, as we're told by some gender communication scholars-- she is a woman and not afraid to ask for directions (unlike those of us plumbed differently who, we are likewise advised, are afraid to ask for directions because to do so would be a form of self-emasculation)--she asked for directions a number of times.  Because I don't like to emasculate myself publicly, and I AM the chronicler, I stood respectfully by and took notes or pictures and commented after each query how remarkable it was that despite living in the same neighborhood, not one of the 4 or 5  people she asked gave anything resembling the same answer.  "Oh, yes madam, Mittal's.  I know it well, across the street and there, on the left.  That's right just there on the left."  "Mittal's, umm, down that street, right at the light and then left, can't be far now."  and "Mittal's?  Yes madam we have some very fine teas here, just inside, here, I can show you."  

Sorry Judy, we never found it.

So Sunil, what have we learned?  First, don't cash your travelers' checks at an "authorized American Express Exchange Post."  Second, yes you can make friends quite easily in India and sometimes it happens when you least expect it.  Third, even experienced navigators can get lost in the labrynth that is Delhi, and sometimes even more so if they ask for directions.   Fourth, you see the damndest sights on Delhi's streets. Fifth, Anjali is a very lovely person (as are you) and your wit, insight, and grace help all as we try and make sense of this very exciting and mysterious place you call home.  Finally, in India, you take your Zen where you find it--even if you have to do it without tea.

And now for your viewing pleasure, far too many pictures, but each one suitable for framing.

Qila Rai Pithora


Once the center of a Muslim neighborhood, this abandoned Mosque sits less than 100 yards from an extremely busy street in a Hindu enclave

Aukeem tries to make sure I don't wander away

The Saint's tomb
At the shrine.  Carol wanted to get the "Ladies are not allowed" notice

One of about 1000 stalls in the Bazaar

A few shots of students at Sunil and Anjali's house

Rosie
Aukeem and Sara
Shandara and Richie
Thomas and Ben
TLC and TLA
Helen and Lucie


Sharada, Allison and Sunil
Greg

Leah

Looking for Tea (in all the wrong places)


Carol smiling when she asks three men and gets three directions


He says we're on the right track and draws a map in the street

Garbage disposal is a huge issue


Lots of construction going on--the Commonwealth Games are here next year


Connaught Place
Happy Hour Smile



An elephant Filling Station just outside our place


And as John Stewart would say, Now for our moment of Zen




Monday, September 7, 2009

The Real Nitty Gritty

Here's our schedule for the remainder of our stay in Delhi and until we reach Varanasi.  I'll fill in the details later--after they've actually happened--a departure from most blogs.  As we say in poker: read 'em and weep--pretty cool stuff, eh?

Week Two:  Sept. 7-13

 Monday, Sept. 7, 2009           

            3:00 p.m. Visit to a Pre and Post Colonial New Delhi neighborhood: Saket

            7:30 p.m. Dinner with the Kumars

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

            10-11:30 Hindi class

            Lunch (Residency)

            Independent field trip

            Dinner (15 Residency)

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

            9:30 a.m. Field trip to Tughluqabad

            Lunch in City (Program)

            5:00 p.m. Discussion of Independent Field Trips

            Dinner (Residency)

Thursday, September 10, 2009

            10:00 a.m. Shobita Punja and the National Museum

            Lunch in City (Program)

            5:00 p.m. Discussion of Independent Field Trips

            Dinner (Residency)

Friday, September 11, 2009 Paper #1 Due

            10:00 Lecture Dilip Menon on caste

            Lunch (Residency)

            3:00 p.m. Field Trip to Qutb and Bakhtiyar Kaki’s shrine

            Dinner (Residency)

Saturday, September 12, 2009

            10-11:30 Hindi class

            11:30 Tea

            12:00 Meeting with Katie Walters regarding Vrindavan trip

            1:30 p.m. Lunch (Residency)

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Leave Delhi for Agra by train, visit Taj Mahal in morning and check into hotel at noon/lunch

            Go to Red Fort an Itmatudaulah 4-6 p.m--Night in Agra

 Week Three: September 14-September 20

 Monday, September 14, 2009

            Morning leave Agra for Fatehpur Sikri (breakfast in route) go directly to mosque

            Check into hotel and have lunch

            Evening in Sikri

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

            Morning leave Fatehpur Sikri for Vrindavan by bus

            Visit Vrindavan with Katie Walters

            Leave Vrindavan for Mathura and take train back to Delhi at night

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

            Student Meetings with Vini and Ranjeet on travel plans

            4:00 Lecture on Labor

            Dinner (Residency)

Thursday, September 17, 2009

            10-11:30 Hindi class

            Lunch (Residency)

            3:00 p.m. Mosques of Old Delhi

            Dinner in the Old City (Program)

Friday, September 18, 2009

            Lunch (Residency)

            3:00 p.m. Bazaars of Old Delhi

            Dinner in the Old City (Program)

            7:30p.m. Red Fort Sound and Light Show

Saturday, September 19, 2009

            10-11:30 Hindi class

            Lunch (Residency)

Sunday, September 20, 2009

            Free Day

            Dinner (Residency)

Week Four: September 21-September 27

Monday, September 21, 2009

            10-11:30 Hindi class

            Lunch (Residency)

            3:00 pm. Field Trip to Humayun’s tomb and shrine of Nizam al-Din

            Dinner (Residency)

Tuesday, September 22, 2009 Paper #2 Due

            10-11:30 Hindi class

            Lunch (Residency)

            1:30-3:30 Presentations and Discussions

            7:00 p.m. Dinner with Sharada Nayak

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

            10:00 a.m. - 12:00 Presentations and Discussions

            Lunch (Residency)

            1:30 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. Presentations and Discussions

Thursday, September 24, 2009

            Early Breakfast (6 a.m.)

            Leave Delhi early morning for Dehra Dun (8 hour trip)

            Lunch on way at Cheetal restaurant (Program)

            Discussion with Navdanya staff

Friday, September 25, 2009

            Navdanya area farms

            Possible visit to Tibetan community and Buddhist stupa

Saturday, September 26, 2009

            Morning--Forest Research Institute

            Afternoon bus to Rishikish stay at Lakshman Jhula Resort

Sunday, September 27, 2009

            Morning—Free to explore Rishikish

            Afternoon—Visit Parmarth Ashram

            Sundown –Observe ritual worship of the Ganga at riverside by pilgrims

Week Five: September 28-October 4

Monday, September 28, 2009

            Free day (possible river rafting)

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

            Bus to Mohyal Ashram in Haridwar

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

            Visit city of Haridwar, temples and pilgrim activities

Thursday, October 1, 2009

            Late evening train to Varanasi

Friday, October 2, 2009

            4:00 p.m. Arrive by train Varanasi (Gandhi’s Birthday)

Saturday, October 3, 2009

            Participate in a shramdan or “gift of labor” with NIRMAN people to celebrate Gandhiji's birthday

 

 

Friday, September 4, 2009

Off And Running


Golf Links is a very upscale gated community in Delhi.  Since the Delhi municipal government is almost totally ineffectual, areas with sufficient resources have decided to provide their own security.  Hence an army of private security personnel stand/sit permanently in front of the gated homes of the affluent as well as at almost every retail establishment.  The vast majority of residents are extremely poor and are essentially left to fend for themselves.  The newspapers report on affairs of state as well as the affairs of Bollywood stars, but say virtually nothing about the vast majority of 12 million people who live in Delhi.  Many of these folks live on sidewalks or in shanty towns and one can only imagine the types of violence they live with daily.  

So, yes, we're pampered, and that fact can't be ignored when you see how much poverty exists all around you.  I will write more about that later and how we're processing that individually and as a group.  Among our pampering assets is cable TV.  TLC and I discovered (actually she did) that we had ESPN and to my great  delight the Duck-Boise State game was on--live and in living gut-churning blue color.  As you may know, it turned out not to be a great day to be a Duck.  The vaunted Duck offense was about as effective as the Delhi municipal government.  It was not, in a word,  Off And Running.  But, after this equally gut-churning and meandering introduction, I'm pleased to report that we, in fact, ARE!  

After 4-5 days of feeling like death warmed over, I am risen.  Carol isn't sure this is a good thing because now I'm back to my normal habit of getting up at 3:30; and, because this is a one room apartment, my prowling, coffee-making, internet surfing habits interrupt her far greater need for sleep.

Several of the students are suffering from some of the same symptoms I had and we're all subject to a variety of diagnoses.  Yesterday morning when we arrived at the building where the students are staying, Rashmi Ahuja, who owns/runs the two places, was quite convinced I was dehydrated.  She offered as evidence  the "dark spots" under my eyes and  something about dark spots under my jaws as well.   I must, she insisted, add hydration salts to my water and assured me I would soon be fit as the proverbial fiddle.  In fact she brought a packet which I dutifully added to both our drinking bottles.  Sunil, our most excellent academic leader, was having his own bout of sinus woes and attributes it to the constant and dramatic changes between being outside in the God-awful oppression of heat and humidity to the mind-numbing cold of the air conditioning.  Carol is equally sure it's my karma and warns me to be more mindful of my choices (I couldn't get a clear explanation from her reading of the jaw-thing).

Speaking of Sunil Kumar.  He is everything Dell and Helen promised.  The pre-imminent scholar of Indian Medieval History, he has a brilliant intellect, an encyclopedic knowledge of Indian history, a compelling sense of social justice, a disarming and endearing approachability and a passion for teaching which is contagious.  He gave a one hour lecture on the history of Delhi which was one of the most engaging academic presentations I've ever heard.  He met us yesterday at the University of Delhi, where he teaches (he is on a three year leave of absence to teach at the Univ. of London's School of Oriental and African Studies--but has returned to Delhi for about a month to work with us).  He had arranged for a group of History graduate students to meet with our students and the experience was interesting, fun and highly enlightening.  As Carol and I get to know him, he wrestles with the same issues many of us in education wrestle with--how to engage students and how to get students to step beyond their comfort zones and engage and challenge the relevancy of the class-room to the real-room. I must say that this group seems ready willing and able to meet those challenges.

Delhi is one amazing place.  Because I've been laid up for the past bit, we haven't had a chance to explore as much as we've wanted to.  So far, we've done most of our shopping and taken most of our non-group meals at the Kahn Market--a very interesting place several blocks away.  However, now that we're Off And Running, that will change.

The students are again turning out to be the best part of the trip for us.  I wrote in my Aussie blog that the highlight of that experience was the stunningly marvelous group of young people who allowed us to travel with them.  This group is no less exceptional.  They are smart, funny, adventurous and open.  They are bonding and seem attentive to their respective needs--that is, they take care of each other.  Do you agree with that Kiran?

Carol has been carrying most of the water so far.  She's taken care of me and suffered my mewling (crossword puzzle word)  while shouldering the bulk of the responsibility of setting up the organizational details, including monitoring in some detail a substantial budget.  She has captured the affection of the students because of her natural charm and loveliness, but also because she has all the money (the kindest thing anyone has said about me is that I look "well traveled"--probably the jaw thing).  

We really miss Joe and Rose and Mookie and Milo and all the gang and we wish you were all here with us--especially now that we're Off And Running.  In the meantime, could someone explain to me how an Oregon offense could only gain 9 yards in the first half! 

Here are a few more pictures from the last several days.


Sunil and Shandara
Rika and Sharada
Sharada, TLC and Rosie

Sharada and TLC take a break


"That's right" I tell the students, "only 9 yards in the first half."  


Alex, Helen, Rika and Leah 

Keletso--one of the happiest, most positive people I've ever met


Golf Links Dining Hall.  Kiran, Keletso, Greg and Lucie


It was election day at the University.  Sexual harassment has become a central issue on campus.  This sign was posted outside the College of Social Sciences where we met with graduate students in History. The students, male and female, talked about their experiences as young men and women in India.  Sunil has asked our students to "make a friend" and write about that experience.  Meeting with the University students was a chance to get going on that assignment.

Inside our bus on the way to the U of Delhi.  The previous day Sunil had to find the bus driver who was lost and couldn't find us.  On that field trip, he got lost at least 5 times.  We got the same bus driver for this trip but we insisted the bus line send a co-pilot who knew his way around Delhi.  Sunil had gone ahead so Carol and I were responsible for making sure we got there.  You can see how stressed out the students are.  


The most amazing thing about this shot is the fact that there's open space in front of the bus.  The physics of Delhi traffic demand that no space remain empty for more than three nano seconds.  I'm right over the driver's shoulder but I'm focused on the guy who's supposed to know where we're going.  Every  5 minutes or so I ask him "are we there yet?"  He doesn't think it's that funny.


India Gate.  Check it out on-line.  A central part of Delhi and Indian history.

Sunil Kumar prepping us outside the Jawaharlal Nehru Musuem.