I thought I
was tired of India .
Then I went to Mumbai. After Mumbai, thought I’d seen all of India that I
wanted to. Then I was sent back to Chennai. I didn’t want to return – there’s a
big wide world out there waiting to be explored. I done Chennai, surely?
I was
wrong.
It’s always
less daunting, but much safer and to my mind a bit boring, to return to a place
one has already been. But I doused my itchy feet in a bucket of financial
realism and off I went. It had been three years since my last trip to South India , and I wondered if Chennai would have
changed. It has, in part. But then so have I. India has taken on a normality
after spending a quarter of every year there since. No longer do I notice the
noise, the hooting, the traffic, the stares, the haphazardness and lack of
personal space. I barely even notice the smells.
So, what
had changed? The metro line which had resulted in multiple road closures and
traffic chaos had at least been slightly finished, and it could be that I’m a
bit immune to Asian traffic but the melee on the roads didn’t seem quite as
bad. The car:motorbike:tuc-tuc ratio had definitely increased. There were some shiny
new pavements, the rubbish dump I used to clamber over on my way back from
work, vanished. Starbucks had arrived. A couple of organic health-food stores had
appeared. More cafes, with decent coffee easier to find. The Mall had even
spawned a wine shop, with proper doors, not just an illicit-looking hatch.
One thing
is for sure, though, I’d done the sights of Chennai on my last visit and they
didn’t really tempt me again. One could unkindly say that one of the great
things about Chennai is the ease by which one can escape it. Easter weekend was
looming, and it seemed a fine idea to use those extra days off to discover the
tea stations in the hills around Ooty. Properly called Ootacamund, the town was
set up by the British as a respite from the sweltering summer in the city. At 7350 ft
above sea level Ooty is about twice the height of the top of Mount Snowdon, and
it certainly seemed that way as we wound our way up the twisty narrow road up,
up and away, narrowly missing brightly painted lorries and buses which regularly
performed standoffs at narrow junctions, forcing all other traffic to a
standstill. It was good to get up into the clean mountain air.
Tea
plantations and fabulous views aside, the highlight of the weekend had to be
the ‘Toy Train’, a narrow gauge railway that puffs (or in our case toots – the steam
loco in only used on the first train of the day, so ours was a diesel) up the
mountain past utterly gorgeous scenery. As with everywhere else that Easter
weekend, the train was immensely popular, and we were ever so grateful that
we’d succeeded in bagging some first class tickets.
Ooty even
boasts a chocolate museum – an exhibition of handmade artisan chocolate - and of
course, tea producers. Sadly the visit to the tiger reserve, which was signposted
as being 37km away, took rather longer than expected owing to a sneaky
diversion taken by our driver, on a minimum km payment and keen to exceed it. The
safari on offer once we had finally arrived rewarded us with the sight of a
couple of slightly uninteresting deer but, obviously, no tigers…or anything
really. We insisted our driver take the shorter route on the way back, which he
wasn’t keen to do, and we soon found out why as the road became one hairpin bend
after another with the hapless man unaware of the correct gear required. When
he inevitably stalled with a sheer drop behind him, he was unable to execute a hill
start and announced that the handbrake wasn’t working. Cue much frantic leaping
out of the car.…
Another
weekend offered up a jaunt to Pondicherry .
I’d been before, but the affectionately-named Pondy is a place worth revisiting,
if only for the lack of traffic in the peaceful French quarter and a plethora of
lovely courtyard restaurants, not to mention the car-free promenade at night,
best experienced with an Italian gelato. En route we stopped off at The Farm,
an organic farm/restaurant where a tour introduces the free range chickens, the
buffalo (for the mozzarella) and the organic gardens, growing palak (spinach),
bitter gourd, chillies, beans and mangoes. A lovely place.
Just down
the road from Pondy is Auroville, It’s difficult to describe what Auroville
actually is, but it made for an intriguing morning. It’s a kind of commune,
made up of folk of many different nationalities co-existing in a
self-sustaining community. The entire place was reclaimed from barren
scrubland, and now produces its own organic food, candles, incense (of
course!), medicinal herbs and clothing, which are all sold in the rather flashy
and faintly incongruous large shop near to the visitor’s centre. For a
community that does not believe in trading with money it seems to be making
rather a lot of it. The concept of Auroville was conceived - naturally - in the
1960’s, by a lady known as ‘Mother’ whose portrait, perched on a lotus flower, smiles
beatifically down from every wall, much in the manner of the Pope in Rome. She took
up with a fellow called Sri Aurobindo who is described as a spiritual visionary
and she was the driving force behind Auroville. ‘Mother’ rather autocratically
decided its principals and ideals. She was the author behind the creation of
the Matromandir, a huge golden golf ball type globe which is used for meditation
and rather resembles the spaceship from Close Encounters of the Third Kind, so
incongruous is its positioning. Aurovillians do not practise religion, stated
the visitor’s guide, yet the God-like lifestyle prescriptions of ‘Mother’ made
us wonder where this life philosophy ended and religion began. I did muse
whether the huge golden dome rounded up any stray Aurovillians intent on
escaping the place, little like the big round ball in ‘The Prisoner’. Food for
thought indeed.
Further
afield, a weekend trip out of the state of Tamil Nadu led to a few days in Calcutta , where Bengal
and Hindi replace Tamil. The city boasts superb colonial architecture including
some leafy wide roads reminiscent of New Delhi ,
the splendid marble Victoria
memorial, dedicated to the memory of the late monarch; and the Park Street
cemetery full of ornate tombs, largely commemorating British notables from the
late 1870s, most of whom had perished very young. Calcutta itself is buzzing, restaurants serve
alcohol, food and market stalls dominate and the traffic is crazy, from iconic
yellow ambassador taxis to hand-pulled rickshaws, gaudy horse-carriages and
even trams. On our first day we passed the shocking remains of the collapsed flyover
where sixty-nine people had been killed just a couple of weeks previously, just
a gaping hole remaining where a road – and many people’s lives – should have
been.
The
highlight of Calcutta
for me was most definitely Mother Theresa’s house. A simple little, free,
museum displayed her knick-knacks, from her leather sandals, grey sweater,
walking frame and prayer books, along with an incongruous and amusing display
for children involving Barbie Dolls (and even a Ken) dressed up to represent
scenes from her life. Barbie dressed up as a nun is certainly a sight to
behold, but the scenes depicting Mother Theresa’s early life, with the young religious
Albanian girl dressed in a sparkly Barbie outfit sporting long golden hair, did
make her subsequent life choices somewhat difficult to comprehend. Next to the
museum was her tomb and her bare little bedroom, a very moving place even for
an agnostic like me.
I’m glad I
had a second chance to visit Chennai.