1 post tagged “punjab”
Last Saturday began a long two weeks of travel for me all over India. First, we went further south to Chamarajanagar, a district in the southeastern corner of Karnataka for a conference on teaching methods and for NGOs and non-formal school educators to come together. Chamarajanagar was really beautiful, and the school in which we stayed--Deenabandu School--is partially sponsored by Asha and educates orphans and very poor children in the district. Chamarajanagar is also considered one of the most backward states in Karnataka. Apparently, former Chief Ministers always had bad luck politically after visiting this district, so now its taboo to come there, and no CM's will come! I made friends with a few schoolgirls that at first, wanted to call me Aunty. We corrected that quickly and they taught me some Kannada. It was really interesting to see various educators coming together and discussing the challenges that they face. Some of them talked about a lack of "nourishment," so to speak, among people doing similar things--working with poor children, facing funding problems, feeling alone in their quests, etc. Imagine starting up your own school in rural India for children far below the poverty line, some orphans, with little staff and few people that can give you the sort of intellectual or moral support with a certain level of understanding on education taken into account. If you don't have that support, it gets lonely. If you, as an individual, are the emblem of sustainability, by enduring with your project for decades, how do you find someone that can follow up with you after you've moved on, that has the compunction to invest the same amount of needed long-term energy into something like a school? In some ways, it makes sense to me why one would instead choose to spend a lifetime trying to change the government system--the fundamental, permanent provider of education for the most underprivileged. But that is also a very frustrating, endless road to go down.
On Sunday, we made a mad dash back to Bangalore to catch our train to Delhi at 10 PM. Ram kept telling me I wouldn't have a chance to have a bath. Thankfully, we did, and I had my only bath before we embarked on the 2 day, non A/C train journey. As a sidenote, this has been the dirtiest vacation I've ever been on. Baths are very coveted affairs. So anyways, the train was actually not too far from my expectations, but I had been prepared. Madhavi bought me a copy of the newest Harry Potter (!). Sleeping on the train wasn't too bad, but at 6 AM sharp, the chai-wallas started coming down the aisles every few minutes. The scenery was fantastic--we traveled through 6 states: Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, and Uttar Pradesh. At one point, the train stopped for us to witness probably one of the most fantastic sunsets I've ever seen. Guys on the train were sticking their heads out the windows and singing Hindi songs. We got to Delhi around noon on Tuesday.
Once we got to Delhi, we went to the sketchiest hotel I've ever been to to park our stuff for the day and have much-needed showers. Then we spent the day wandering around Delhi's National Museum and Connaught Place. That night we took another train to Chakki Bank station in the very northern part of Punjab state, and from there we took a taxi to Himachal Pradesh. We wound up the mountains and landed up in the Himalayan hill station of Dalhousie, about 7000 feet up.
Dalhousie was absolutely beautiful, though the cloud cover was pretty thick for the 2 days we spent there. While no snow-clad peaks were to be seen, we did a lot of hiking and I am proud to say that I handled it all in my flip-flops with only on scape on my little toe to show for it! As we climbed higher into the mountains we trekked by cows and bulls grazing. I'll admit that I was only slightly terrified of being butted off the mountains by a bull as we tried to slip by them on the narrow paths, with valleys dropping thousands of feet nearby. 2 days in the clouds of Dalhousie were fantastic though, and definitely a highlight of the trip.
After Dalhousie, we headed to the thriving metropolis of Sherpur, Punjab. A village of 10,000 people, Sherpur is not easy to find. The Asha India Conference was held there in a dharmashala in the village, and for 2 days I witnessed the goings-on (basically all in Hindi) of a mixed group of Asha-India volunteers from all over the country. Asha is an extremely diverse federation of people--some running schools, some working in people's movements, some fundraising and running projects like in Bangalore, etc. Most of the meeting was spent on discussing processes as Asha grows in size and in funding strength, so that wasn't too interesting for me. But it was quite an experience nonetheless. Being in Sherpur definitely provided another contrast to our third world/first world travels. The place in which the conference was held was under construction, with piles of sand and dirt everywhere, un-usuable bathrooms with inches of stagnant water inside, and a generally rowdy bunch of Northerners mixed with a few "tree-top" NGO-types from the US and the South that were only slightly horrified by the conditions there. I got to stay at a nice Punjabi woman's house at night, sleeping on cots in the open air. I couldn't speak to my host, because she only spoke Punjabi and Hindi, but she was incredibly nice and hospitable. The highlight of Sherpur was when we got to see the school and plant nursery that Asha was sponsoring. The kids in Punjab are definitely more boisterous from what I'm used to, breaking out in bhangra and singing songs and playing with the volunteers. The plant nursery was developed on the grounds of a crematory (!) and is situated in the rural part of the village. I've never been to a place like Sherpur before, or a state like Punjab, but it was definitely an experience. At times I felt entirely cut off from the rest of the world, but then at other times, I was taken by in-your-face kindness the people there.
From Sherpur we headed to Amritsar, and indulged in first-world delights of air-conditioning and mattresses and toilets in a hotel near the railway station. In the evening, we saw Jallianwala Bagh, the site in which hundreds (or thousands? The numbers reported vary from source to source) of innocent people were massacred by a British Indian firing squad in 1919. It was surreal seeing it for real, because my limited understanding of the place is from the film Gandhi and what I've read in history books. Later, we visited the Golden Temple.
Now I'm back to Delhi again, after taking a fancy Shatabdi train from Amritsar around 5 this morning. I'll be here for a few days before heading back by train to Bangalore, arriving on Friday. This trip has been brilliant so far. I've traveled 8 states in a little over a week. I've learned to sleep on humming trains, bumpy rides down the Himalayan mountains, and in cabs tumbling through the dusty Punjab. Oh and I've also learned to sleep through snarky comments on my reading Harry Potter (which was actually pretty disappointing! This article sums it up pretty well). But I've gotten to experience quite a bit of the multifaceted landscape, food, charms, and contradictions of this country. Pictures to come soon.