Showing posts with label hinduism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hinduism. Show all posts

Sunday, 21 February 2016

Vietnam Memories I: You Gotta Have Faith (Part 1: Traditional Religion)


Greetings!

This week's update is a bit of a one-off. It's a short piece written about my two years spent living in Vietnam. I hope that it'll become part of a series but at the moment no more have been written. It's strange but for some reason my time in Vietnam has inspired very little writing. I can't fully explain why, except that of all my stints overseas, this was the least enjoyable but even so, there was still plenty to write about. For some reason though, I never did... well, apart from this.

Keep travelling!

Uncle Travelling Matt

Flickr album of my time in Vietnam

Account of my first trip to Vietnam in 2001





Vietnam Memories I: You Gotta Have Faith (Part 1: Traditional Religion)

I knew from the very first day when I arrived in Vietnam that religion was going to play a major part in my life there. I’m not saying that I saw the light as I stepped off the plane at Tân Sơn Nhất International Airport or that the Vietnamese people are especially religious, (by Third World standards, they’re not),[1] or that the folk that I hung around with were particularly pious and saintly, (by anyone’s standards, they are definitely not), but it’s just that, well, living in Vietnam, religion just kept on cropping up.

And often in ways that I least expected.

Take for example, my very first day there. After being met at the airport by the whole Nguyễn tribe and heading home to the family home on Lạc Long Quân to drop my bags off. Then it was announced that we were heading straight off again to a temple to give thanks for my save arrival. Who cares if I’m not remotely Buddhist, (and so why would He go out of His way to make sure that my plane hadn’t fallen out of the sky?), the fact was that they – or to be more particular, Huệ[2] - had prayed that I’d arrive safely, (and even abstained from meat for a few days to make doubly sure), and since those prayers had obviously been answered, then it was time to give thanks.

So, onto the motorbikes we popped and to the temple we went. But not the local neighbourhood shrine, oh no, instead all the way into the centre of the city, a good thirty-minute drive, where we then parked our bikes outside a huge temple absolutely crammed with worshippers. We made our way inside and Huệ et al hastened to give thanks, offer money where one should and the request further boons in life, which left me able to wander around the place at my leisure.

And it certainly was an intriguing place to wander around. A large square complex with a myriad of deities both scary and tranquil dotted around its exterior wall, whilst just to the left of the door, a large statue of a lion which Huệ enthusiastically climbed under and bade me do the same, (“You do this, you very lucky!”), before then rubbing its eyes with her fingers and then rubbing my eyes with the same fingers, (“Very lucky for eye!”), which were already stinging from the smoke of thousands of incense sticks being lit and wafted around by the faithful.

The lucky lion

Fascinating though all this was, by this time, one thing was beginning to bug me: Huệ, Thảo and the others were all Buddhists and whilst this temple was certainly not short on gods to prostrate oneself before, not one of them was recognisable as the Buddha.

In the centre of the temple was a small, square shrine cordoned off from the praying masses and before which a couple of hairy Indian blokes who looked like they may be important (and speak English) were stood, so I made my way over to them and enquired, “Excuse me sir, but where’s Buddha?”

“Oh no sir,” he replied, “there is no Buddha here.”

“But isn’t this a Buddhist temple?”

“No, no, no sir, you are not understanding! This sir, is a Hindu temple, not Buddhist. We are Brahmins!”

A Hindu temple! But…? “Then why have this Vietnamese family come here to pray? They are Buddhist.”

“Sir, look in here; all these people are Buddhist!” I looked. The place was crammed and they were all praying hard. “There are no Hindus in Vietnam sir, only Buddhists, but all of them, they are coming here. Hindu, Buddhist, believing is believing!”

Outside the temple, after I’d had a garland of jasmine flowers hung around my neck by the Brahmin fellow, I put the question to Huệ: “You know this is a Hindu temple, not a Buddhist one?”

“Yes, this temple India, no Buddha.”

“Don’t you have any Buddhist temples near to your house then?”

“Yes, temple Buddha, have many! I take you go tomorrow if you like!”

“Yes, that would be lovely, thanks, but please tell me because I don’t understand: you’re Buddhist, right?”

“Yes.”

“So why do you travel a long way to pray at a Hindu temple when you are a Buddhist and there are lots of Buddhist temples much closer by?”
And at this her face grew serious. “Here you must understand. Before I go too many Buddha temple to ask things, but what I ask, I not always get. But ask gods here at temple India and I always get. This temple very power! You ask money, you get money! You ask job, you get job! You ask pass exam, you pass exam! This temple gods always give you what you ask!”

“But you are Buddhist; a whole different religion!”

“Different religion, no problem. I am Buddha, yes, but every Christmas go to church ask Maria help me. Maria in church very power sometimes as well!”

And thus was my introduction to religion in Vietnam.[3]


The Mariamman Hindu Temple, Hồ Chí Minh City

If one quality of Vietnamese religious devotion is that it is flexible, another is that it seems to permeate into everything. The flip side of a society which will head for whichever temple gets the best results, regardless of whether it belongs to the correct religion or not, is an intolerance of anyone who does not do the same. As a practising Christian I am not meant to bow down before any false idols or eat any food offered to said idols, yet, I am afraid to say, both of these tenets of my faith flew out of the window within hours of arrival. Vietnamese Buddhists largely practise their religion at home, on shrines in the front room where the motorbikes are parked, upon which there are a number of deities, (Quan Âm[4] and Bố Đại[5] being popular ones as well as the Buddha Himself), a myriad of tacky and garish flashing lights, gaudy decorations and then finally, the obligatory retouched photographs of deceased relatives who, along with the gods, get fruit and incense sticks offered to them daily. Many’s the time when I awoke from my midday siesta to stinging eyes, a dry throat and a throbbing headache because Huệ had decided to offer the gods an extra-large helping of the dreaded yellow incense sticks just because she’d bought a fistful of lottery tickets and reckoned that it might help her chances.

It never did.

Household altars for sale in Hồ Chí Minh City


Quan Âm and Bố Đại

But in fact, of all the holiness on offer at the average household shrine, the photos of dead ancestors are by far the most important items for Vietnamese spirituality centres around honouring the dead. I remember once, years after leaving the country, asking a Vietnamese student of mine in England which religion he followed – Catholic or Buddhist – to which he replied, “No sir, you don’t understand. In Vietnam there is only one religion and that is ancestor worship. Maybe Catholic ancestor worship, maybe Buddhist, but deep down, same-same. Vietnamese worship our ancestors before anything else.” And in many respects, he was telling the truth. Vietnamese Buddhists celebrate Buddhist holy days and the Catholics party at Christmas, but nothing comes close to the sanctity which they reserve for the anniversaries of the deaths of their closest relatives.

Tributes for a deceased ancestor on an altar in Vietnam

I attended one of these anniversary parties once, the death day of Huệ’s mother. The entire extended family was there, a huge picnic packed and a riotous party held… in the graveyard. Now, I can be a bit of a cantankerous fellow at times and I wasn’t feeling good that day, even worse since I’d been forced to miss Mass, and this rather strange location for a knees-up rankled my very European sensibilities over what should and should not be done in cemeteries. When we got there though, my not-so-good mood was worsened even further by the fact that no one present seemed remotely bothered about the dead person present – there was no respect or reverence shown for her – and instead they just wittered on about their dogs, jewellery and mobile phones. Needing to be alone, I excused myself and walked a distance away to the Catholic part of the cemetery where there was a large crucifix which I could kneel before and focus my prayers. However, just as I’d put my hands together and closed my eyes, I felt a tap on my shoulder. I opened them to the view of a lottery ticket vendor thrusting a wad of his rather unholy wares in my face. I waved him away and closed my eyes again to pray but he stood there unmoving and despite my best efforts to focus heavenwards it was me who gave up before him.

“But why on earth would he even think that I’d want to buy a lottery ticket when visiting a graveyard?” I later asked Thảo, still exasperated by the man’s insensitivity.

“Because the graveyard is the very best place to buy a lottery ticket,” she replied in a voice which suggested that I must be pretty stupid if I didn’t know such simple things.

“But why?”

“Because in a graveyard you are surrounded by all the dead people and they can help give you luck when you buy the tickets!”

Lottery tickets: consult your dead uncle before buying one

Now disrespectful, annoying or just plain ridiculous this might sound to European ears, to be fair to her, she’d had direct experience of this very phenomenon. One of her favourite stories to tell was of the day when her cousin was possessed by the spirit of a dead person. Thảo was called to the house to witness this because the deceased individual in question was none other than her father and he’d been asking specifically for her, (and specifically not for his wife). When she arrived, he gave several messages to family members, telling them that everything was hunky-dory on the other side and then asking if there was anything which he could do for them, at which point one cousin requested the next set of lottery numbers. With a great degree of reluctance apparently, he gave them but they came accompanied by a warning that the said cousin should not be greedy and that the numbers he gave would only work once. The cousin duly did win the lottery that week but, being a rather greedy fellow it seems, ignored the warning of the dead man and bought a load more tickets for the following week, praying for Thảo’s father’s intercessions. He never won the lottery again after that.

As I said, religion, or at least fortune and the chasing of it, permeates everything in Vietnamese life. You wake to the smell of incense; marriages, births and deaths are calculated by calendars to decide how auspicious they might be[6] and fortune tellers are consulted regularly. I went once with Thảo and was told that our marriage would be long and prosperous (we’re now divorced) and that that summer I would come into money (I didn’t). At the end the fortune teller was not impressed when I asked why every prediction which she made concerned material wealth or physical health and not once was happiness or spiritual wealth mentioned.

My son: jolly, fat and very prosperous… apparently.

But there was one aspect of Vietnamese religions all-pervasiveness which I did rather like and that was how it also involved sightseeing. Temples were highly-regarded by Thảo and Huệ as the destinations for a jolly day out and, as a man always in favour of a day out, I was only too glad to get dragged along. Local temples that were favourites of my wife and mother-in-law were Chùa Ngọc Hoàng in District 1 of Hồ Chí Minh City, a fascinating labyrinth of a place, dedicated to the Jade Emperor, always thick with incense smoke and noted for its pool full of turtles just outside the main entrance, and Chùa Bà Châu Ðốc 2[7] at Phú Xuân just before the ferry to Can Gio.


Chùa Ngọc Hoàng and its turtles

This latter temple was reached down a narrow alleyway off the main road and then over a grubby stream to the shrine itself. Architecturally, it was nothing special, but it had holy credentials and, I must admit, a certain atmosphere. When I asked Thảo about it she said that it was all because the god (idol?) had miraculously come out of the waters. All very nice but that didn’t explain why it’s called Bà Châu Ðốc 2 – Châu Ðốc is a famous temple on the Cambodian border noted for its miraculous happenings and memorable for the fact that its idol is dressed in glorious gowns donated by worshippers, often wearing so many that it ends up as wide as it is tall.[8]

Another favourite trip out was to the Chùa Châu Thới near Biên Hòa just out of Hồ Chí Minh City. I was the cause of our first visit there; returning home on the motorbike from a trip to Vũng Tàu one evening at sunset, I spied it, in the midst of all the detritus that surrounds every Third World city, a small hill topped by a graceful pagoda silhouetted against an orange sky. It was scene straight out of a classical Oriental painting, or at least it would have been were it not for all the quarries, houses and industrial plants that surrounded it. Nonetheless, I commented on it and vowed to check it out and Thảo said that she seemed to remember visiting it once as a child, so several weeks later, after riding out to her father’s grave, (which is in a Heroes Cemetery nearby), we checked it out.

Chùa Châu Thới from the road

Chùa Châu Thới fulfilled all expectations. It was founded in either 1612 or 1681 (accounts vary) by a teacher named Khanh Long who climbed up the mountain to meditate and study the sutras whilst gazing out from its peak, and even today you can see why for it’s a peaceful and beautiful spot. True, there are no vestiges of the original temple left – war and accident have destroyed the complex several times and true too there’s a whacking great quarry next door but once you’re climbing up the wooded hill upon which the temple stands, the hard-working world of the 21st century seems to be a million miles away and you’re back in a simpler time.

Chùa Châu Thới

But then perhaps that’s why the Vietnamese so love their temples; as I said before, I don’t consider them to be especially religious, particularly by Third Word standards, but what the temples offer is not only faith but also a glimpse of something else, a change of scene from the relentless worship of Mammon that has so consumed the country, (and indeed East Asia as a whole), ever since the Đổi Mới reforms of the 1980s. Temples offer a momentary glimpse of a slower-paced life and I loved sipping tea in the shade of the trees outside Chùa Châu Thới whilst monkeys jump about the branches over your head, before then entering the quiet precincts of the shrine itself, ringing the giant bell as you say a prayer and then emerging onto the terrace and taking in the magnificent view where I could almost believe that the lake below me was still tranquil and pristine and that beyond it was not a noisy quarry and the industrial units of one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, but instead lush green rice paddies tended by concial-hatted workers whilst in the smog-free sky above the Celestial Emperor and other deities looked down benevolently.

Chùa Châu Thới in 1967 when all around were the fields that I had to imagine

The most famous – and spectacularly sited – of all the temples that we visited regularly was the shrine on Black Virgin Mountain at Tây Ninh, Núi Bà Đen. Tây Ninh is famous amongst foreign visitors to Vietnam for two other shrines within its borders – the psychedelic cathedral and Holy See of the esoteric Cao Đài religion in the centre of town and, on the outskirts, the secular shrine of the Củ Chi Tunnels in which the Viet Cong guerrillas hid for years only fifty miles or so from the heart of South Vietnamese power, launching operations which had a decisive impact upon the eventual outcome of the war. However, for every foreign traveller drawn to the region to sample those two Vietnamese delights, there are dozens of domestic tourists who come to pay homage at Núi Bà Đen.

Núi Bà Đen is an ancient, Khmer religious site relating to a female deity whom legend says was a woman who fell in love with a soldier who betrayed her so she committed suicide on the mountain. It was originally remarkable for its setting, the main temple of Linh Sơn Thiên Thạch, which sits two thirds up the slopes of the mountain, an extinct volcano and the only raised ground for miles around. It can be seen from huge distances and the views from the temple are incredible, stretching all the way to Hồ Chí Minh City and beyond. Attained by a stiff climb of several hours up lush slopes sprinkled with huge volcanic boulders, the thirsty, aching, sweating, cleansed pilgrim would eventually arrive at the shrine spiritually prepared to embrace the Divine and behold the glories of Creation.

I said “was originally remarkable” and “would eventually arrive” because that was then and this is now. In the 21st century Núi Bà Đen is equally remarkable for its rampant commercialism in a very East Asian fashion. These days few if any pilgrims walk up to the temple for there’s now a cable car to take you up and en route, as you drift over the boulders, shrubs and ravines which once caused so many troubles for the hardy pilgrims, you may now feast your eyes upon lifesize plastic models of Doraemon that wave, flashing plastic Chinese dragons, luminous plastic palm trees that glow at night and the litter dropped by thousands of pious souls.

And if that were not enough, then going back down, whilst you may choose to take the cable car again, there is nowadays an alternative option. Walking? No, don’t be silly, why walk when you can instead take a sliding car which whizzes down its silver bobsleigh track – speed up and try to hit the pilgrim in front but don’t dare drive too slow or the spiritual seeker behind you will ram into your backside! And when it’s all over, you’re deposited at a funfair where bubblegum pop music plays continually on loudspeakers, there are bins shaped like zoo animals and food, drink and ice cream outlets.

But what is most remarkable of all about Núi Bà Đen is the attitude of the locals, including the monks themselves. Are they offended by this Disneyification of a sacred site, the transformation of a secluded spot of quiet contemplation into a blasphemous, second-rate copy of Alton Towers with a plastic deity or two thrown in for good measure? Does all of that rankle with their pious sensibilities? Does it hell! They don’t mind at all, in fact they can’t see why I do. What’s wrong with a cable car? It saves the legs! And why moan about the waving, grinning Doraemon? He’s cute! And as for the lollies and cans of coke on offer? Well, what are you drinking this moment Matt, and did not the writing on that wrapper you just put in the bin say ‘Magnum’? No, perhaps it’s you who’s lost your sense of reason, not us?

And do you know what, when you sit down on one of the benches by the zoo animal bins and see all the young couples holding hands and smiling, the children playing and the grandparents remembering their youth, then maybe, for a shrine dedicated to a young lady who once fell in love, that is not so wrong after all.

Perhaps.

But any discussion of my experiences of religion in Vietnam can never be complete without mentioning a trip – or to be more exact, a pilgrimage – that I took one weekend to Cà Mau in the far south-western corner of the country.

Like so many things in Vietnam, particularly when temples are involved, this was a communal affair. The local neighbourhood of Thảo’s cousin Dan had hired a coach and they were doing a tour of the holy places of the Mekong Delta. To make up the numbers we – along with several visiting Western friends of mine – tagged along.

The first stop was Châu Ðốc which I’ve already talked about, where we ogled the over-dressed goddess and checked out a memorial to those killed by the Khmer Rouge there.[9] Then we were allowed to take a siesta in a pilgrim rest house before travelling overnight – and being kept wide awake and “entertained” by some truly awful Vietnamese comedy videos – to Cà Mau, the city on Vietnam’s far south-western tip. However, at around six in the morning, in a flat, uninhabited wilderness of rice paddies some distance short of our destination, we pulled up and everyone trooped off the bus. There was nothing there whatsoever save for a roadside café serving phở and a tiny Catholic mission church where there was a Mass in progress. Immediately I assumed that this was simply a stop to refuel ourselves for the day ahead, but no, everyone totally ignored the restaurant and instead wandered across the road to the church.

Bà Chúa Xứ Núi Sam, the well-dressed goddess of Châu Ðốc

What was going on? Why was a coachload of devout Buddhists on a pilgrimage heading to a Roman Catholic Mass? Confused, I followed them, but instead of entering the church where a priest was busy preaching the Word to a scanty congregation, they all passed by the entrance and wandered up the side of the building and then round the back.

And at the back of that church was a corrugated iron shack in which stood a lifesize statue of a Catholic priest and, to my amazement, all these Buddhists on a pilgrimage were busy bowing down before him, offering him pineapples and incense sticks and rubbing his eyes and then their own just as I had seen with the lion in the Hindu temple in an attempt to improve their eyesight. It was surreal and it begged a simple question: Why?

The statue of the Catholic priest

In the café after Mass I got my explanation. The statue was of one Fr. Francisco Trương Bửu Diệp and it stood on the site of his grave. Born in 1897, Fr. Diệp had been the local parish priest until war broke out in 1945 when he was advised by a superior to leave for a safer location, a suggestion which he refused with the words, “I will live with the flock and if necessary, I will die with them.” And a year later, on the 12th march, 1946, exactly that happened when he was captured by the Viet Cong along with seventy of his parishioners. Local legends say that he was offered his freedom but he refused and instead died in place of his flock, thus becoming a martyr. Why he is so venerated by the Buddhists however, (as well as the Catholics of course), is because he was a great healer in his lifetime who made no distinction between the creeds of his patients and, after his death, miraculous healings have been associated with his relics which were located after Fr. Diệp appeared to a local Catholic in a dream and, when discovered, were uncorrupted.[10]

Worshippers at the shrine of Fr. Diệp at Tắc Sậy near to Cà Mau

And that is where I shall finish this short look at the traditional religious culture of Vietnam, often described as Buddhist, but including very little of the Buddhism recognisable to Western readers of the sutras. Traditional religion in Vietnam cannot be defined by dogma or creed, but is instead a complex patchwork of beliefs drawn from all over the place, from Khmer Hindu idols found in the river, the ancient Chinese celestial emperor, a heart-broken lover deserted by her soldier beau, a myriad of Indian deities, a martyred Catholic priest and your own dead family, the Vietnamese veritable live the spiritual salad bar, eating from any dish that is tasty and provides them with the answers to their prayers. To a European brought up in a country torn apart for centuries by minor doctrinal differences of two similar branches of the same faith, it is alien, but then isn’t embracing the alien the very reason why we travel?

Copyright © 2013, Matthew E. Pointon
June 2013, Smallthorne, UK

[1] This reminds me of a quote by the Iranian Ambassador which I once read in the Saigon Times which I found to be particularly amusing. There was a high-level Iranian diplomatic visit to Vietnam, (one of the few countries that actually speaks to Tehran), and the Iranian Ambassador was waxing lyrical on the two countries’ relationship. “We have much in common,” he began, “such as the fact that both of our peoples have overthrown repressive governments in revolutions…” Here, though, he ran out of similarities as the two countries really do have little in common beyond kicking out decadent capitalist regimes. However, obviously not a man to let such a tiny thing as reality stand in his way, Mr. Ambassador continues, “…and Iran is religious with the Ayatollah Khamenei guiding our path forwards whilst in Vietnam the temples are always full.” Really Mr. Ambassador, ‘the temples are always full’! Is that the best you could do…?
[2] My mother-in-law
[3] The temple that we visited was the Mariamman Hindu Temple on Trưong Ðịnh. It is reputed to have miraculous powers.
[4] The Goddess of Mercy. In China she is called Guanyin and in Japan, Kannon, (from where the camera company name Canon comes from).
[5] The Laughing Buddha. In China he is called Budai and in Japan, Ho Tei.
[6] Our son was a very auspicious Golden Pig, a combination which only occurs once every six hundred years or so. Apparently, this is because a pig is jolly and fat, which is also symbolic of wealth. Vietnamese (and Chinese) folklore has it that a child born in the Year of the Golden Pig, will certainly experience a prosperous and healthy life. Note the focus on material prosperity here.
[7] Chùa = Temple

[8] Her full title is ‘Bà Chùa Xứ Núi Sam’ (The Sam Mountain Lady). French anthropologists and historians state that the idol is a statue made by the pre-Angkorean Khmer people who lived in the region and is a feminised version of the Hindu god Shiva but local legends state that the statue grew naturally from stone and was found by villagers after the goddess appeared to some people in a dream. It may be this aspect of her legend which connects her with the similar idol at Châu Ðốc 2. Whatever the case, the deity of Châu Ðốc is a prosperity goddess who brings wealth to those who ask for it and who protects the border with Cambodia.

[9] This was the Ba Chúc Massacre on 18th April, 1978 when Khmer Rouge soldiers crossed the border from Cambodia (then Kampuchea) and massacred 3,157 local villagers, (only two survived the slaughter). Their motives were never clearly explained although traditionally many Khmers think of that area as their land occupied by the Vietnamese. This unprovoked attack was one of the main causes behind the 1979 Vietnamese invasion of Kampuchea. Incidentally, this should not be confused with the 1957 Châu Ðốc Massacre in which 17 people were killed by anti-government forces, possibly communists or followers of the Hòa Hảo sect.

[10] Incidentally, researching for this article I discovered that the whole site, which is named Tắc Sậy was levelled and rebuilt in 2004 and that today a grand basilica occupies the spot where the humble mission church once stood. Probably necessary to accommodate the thousands of pilgrims but in my mind, a bit of a shame and I wonder whether Fr. Diệp himself would have approved of it…? 

Friday, 17 October 2014

Incredible India: Part 8: Jaipur – Jaigarh Fort, Tiger Fort and Amber Fort

world-map delhi
Greetings!

This week’s posting is a little earlier as I’m off this evening for a weekend of learning with my trade union. As part of the GFTU they run some excellent courses for members. This one is about ‘Understanding the Economic Crisis’ (I wish I did), whilst the last covered ‘International Solidarity’. A weekend immersed in Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia and other Latin American states has made me think seriously about future plans to visit the region. Watch this space… comrades.

Keep travelling!

Uncle Travelling Matt
Flickr album of this journey

Links to other parts of the the travelogue:






















map_india_northwest 5

Jaipur

It was dark when we rolled into Jaipur's main station. I took a tuk-tuk through the busy streets to my prearranged hotel, 'Stephels Guesthouse' (500 rupees p/n) and then headed straight to an internet café before it closed to upload some videos and engage in a conversation with Nina, a former colleague of mine which was most fitting since, although Pakistani, she is a descendent of Rajputs, the noble class of Rajasthan.
'Stephels Guesthouse' was unlike the other establishments that I'd stayed in so far in India in that it was aimed at the backpacker market rather than local business travellers or the package tourist trade. As such, it had a somewhat different ambience, being more than just a collection of rooms and instead centred around a small garden where one could sit and order beers. Having not had a drink since leaving Britain's fair shores, I decided to take up the opportunity and indulge in a bottle or two whilst reading 'Hinduism: A Very Short Introduction' in an attempt to try and comprehend something of India's majority faith.

My path to enlightenment that evening however, was to be barred, for JP, the hotel's proprietor, unable to bear seeing one of his customers drinking all alone, came and joined me and a few beers later was pouring out his entire life story. It transpired that my host for the night had been born into a poor Hindu family, made even poorer by the fact that his father had died when he was seven. But JP was – according to JP – a hard-working chap who so impressed his Muslim boss that the latter formerly adopted him and thus now he was running said adoptive father's Jaipur hotel, (he'd been working in the Chandigarh and Agra establishments before), being paid the princely sum of one million rupees per month for his efforts.1

JP's story might sound strange to our Western ears but out in India and it is not so weird. When I lived out in the Far East it was quite common for promising young men to be adopted by their bosses, (it is the case with the boss of Sony in Japan I believe), and not seen as unnatural, particularly if the boy in question has no father. In societies where corporate culture and loyalty are strong, then this is far more understandable than it would be in Europe with its strong individualism, although any reader of Dickens or our other famous novelists of the 19th century will realise that it was not so bizarre a concept to our Victorian forefathers. But for me, a fiery trade unionist who enjoys nothing more than bringing a substandard supposed superior to book, then such absolute subjection to your employer is nothing short of heresy.

But to be fair, in the case of JP at least, it does seem to work. He literally lived his job, sleeping on the floor like a common servant, 'Stephels Hostel' occupying his every waking minute and thought, and doubtless a few of his dreams as well. He may be spectacularly paid by Indian standards, but he also put up with far more than I could even imagine, let alone endure.

Which is probably why my salary has never been described using the word “spectacular”.

But as the night progressed we moved on from the mundane topic of work and onto the very essence of who JP was. He was not married but had once fallen in love with a “crazy Korean girl” who had been staying in the Agra hostel and had returned to India to see him. But his real love in life, the romance that brought him to tears, was not one of his own but instead love on the silver screen; Rose and Jack, meeting, falling in love and then dying on the 'Titanic'. “I have watched it twenty-two times,” he told me, eyes welling up as he played 'My Heart Will Go On' on his mobile phone.

Copious quantities of beer and heartfelt outpourings from a man in love with Kate Winslet do not make for an early start the next morning and it was around 11 o' clock before I was off. JP sorted me out a tuk-tuk who would take me around the sights beyond Jaipur, the idea being that I concentrate on the Pink City itself the next day.

My driver was a chirpy young Muslim chap who was delighted when I informed him that I was planning to visit Ajmer after Jaipur, and that I liked Qawali music2 very point. At this point he put on a tape of said Sufi singing and turned the volume up on his tuk-tuk's impressive sound system so that everyone knew we were coming as we careered through the picturesque streets of the Pink City. It truly was a great ride; the most aesthetically pleasing of all the cities that I'd visited so far in India although the image that most sticks in my mind is of a Muslim girl who we passed, whose top half was veiled as befits a modest lady, but whose legs were squeezed into a rather lewd pair of skin tight trousers that I'm not sure the Prophet would have approved of!

Our first stop was the Royal Gaitor (Cenotaph of the Maharajahs) on the very edge of town in a dip in the hills beneath the Tiger Fort. They were architecturally impressive monuments of finely-carved stone with a peaceful, tranquil ambience but just as interesting, if far less artistically remarkable was an ancient Shiva temple with a lingam.

II034 At the Royal Gaitor

Thanks to 'Hinduism: A Very Short Introduction', I was now aware of what a lingam is. A smooth, cylindrical stone, it represents Shiva, one of the principal Hindu deities, a representative of the Supreme God, part of the Trimurti – the Hindu Trinity – and partner of Shakti/Parvati, the Divine Female. The symbol itself is very ancient, possibly a relic of the pre-Hindu Indian religion and is thought by many to be phallic, (it is often found next to the yoni, the female symbol). Such aniconism – representing the Divine with symbols, not statues – is rare in Hinduism with its thousands of idols and many scholars believe that it became popular after Hindu culture met that of Islam which also shuns representations of both Divine and human forms.

I mentioned earlier that, as part of my preparations for the trip, I'd watched a number of Bollywood films and foremost amongst them was 'Jodhaa Akbar' which I've already discussed. Now however, it was time to clock up a few of the filming locations around Jaipur.

The first, which was reached via a rather pleasant mountain drive, Qawali music still blaring out as we swerved round hairpin bends, was Jaigarh Fort. A seat of the Maharajahs of Jaipur, (to whom there is a museum inside), this fort was noticeably barer and more austere than its counterpart in Agra, but the fortifications and location were impressive and I wandered around interested for a good hour or so, (some of it with an unasked for soldier guide who insisted on giving a rather unintelligible commentary not dissimilar to the one that I'd received at Fatepur Sikhri), notable stops en route being the Charbagh Garden from which there were incredible views down the valley to the more famous Amber Fort, the Jaivana Cannon which claims to be the biggest in the world and a puppet play.

II035 Amber Fort from Jaigarh Fort

After the Jaigarh Fort it was onto the Nahargarh Fort (commonly known as the Tiger Fort) at the other end of the mountain ridge. On the way we saw a rather strange temple with what looked like an observatory attached and so I asked Mr. Qawali to pause awhile so that I could find out more as I wondered if it was perhaps in some way connected with the Jantar Mantar, Maharajah Jai Singh's incredible astronomical observatory in the centre of Jaipur.

Upon visiting I found that the temple was dedicated to Krishna, in my opinion the most accessible of the Hindu deities and the bearded Brahmin presiding blessed me and tied a sacred thread around my wrist. As for any astronomical connections though, I never learnt one way or the other, although when I visited Jantar Mantar the following day, the temple was clearly visible and seemed to be in line with some of the instruments there.3

II036 With the Brahmin priest at the Charan Mandir

We continued onto the Nahargarh Fort, outside of which is a terrace which commands incredible views across the city of Jaipur. Whilst photographing them I fell into conversation with a businessman from Delhi who was visiting with his family, and attracted the attentions of some kids who wanted their photos taking. What struck me as whilst they were all very forward and modern, just behind them stood a girl in traditional Rajasthani costume, silent and unmoving, her whole face hidden by an orange veil.

II037
II038 Rajasthani youth, both bold and shy

The Nahargarh Fort was quite different to the Jaigarh Fort even though both dated from the 18th century and were connected with the Maharajahs of Jaipur. Whilst the latter was very much a fortress, this was far more a palace, set around a rectangular courtyard. In fact, for some reason that I can't quite place, it reminded me strongly of the Topkapı Palace in Istanbul, but unlike the Ottoman edifice, Nahargarh Fort was rather dilapidated in parts including several dark rooms absolutely full of sleeping bats.

II039
II040 Inside the Tiger Fort: Top: Me; Bottom: Bats

Having sampled the two hilltop forts, we then headed down the mountain to the most famous fort of them all: Amber. This was Jodhaa's home in 'Jodhaa Akbar' and I remembered the scene when Akbar rode up the steep road to its main gate on an elephant as I laboured up the same road on foot.

Amber Fort truly is spectacular. Many years before I ever clasped eyes on the delectable Aishwarya Rai in 'Jodhaa Akbar', I watched the even more scrumptious Indira Vama cavort in 'Kama Sutra: A Tale of Love'4 in a Rajput palace. That was probably the first time that I ever thought that India might be a place worth visiting and walking into Amber I realised that this was another ambition that I had fulfilled for I recognised this as the location for that film as well.

Learning from my Agra Fort experience, I took an audio guide and wandered around the fort/palace freely, taking in the sumptuous settings and spectacular views over the lake below, my only regret being that I didn't have either Aishwarya or Indira to enjoy them with. However, even with the greatest of all the Rajput forts to entertain and scantily-clad Bollywood beauties to daydream about, my feet were now tired and the tragic fact was that, this being my third fort of the day and with Agra Fort only two days before, I had seen as much palatial glory as a man can take in and so when I eventually emerged I was glad. Once again, India was proving to be too in-credible and I just wasn't managing to appreciate fully its wonders.

II041
Outside the Amber Fort

On the way back we stopped off to photograph the stunning – but inaccessible – Lake Palace and then to visit some obligatory tourist emporiums – I bought Tom a set of India pyjamas – before depositing me back at Stephels.

And that was that for the day except that, well, I'm afraid I have a rather embarrassing confession to make: that night I dined at McDonald’s. Yes indeed, in the heart of foodie heaven, I went straight to the bottom of the pile. And my excuse? Well, it was late and most of the other places were shut. But do you know what was worse? Well, I'm sorry to say it but I really enjoyed my McPaneer burger meal.

II042
The Lake Palace


1According to JP. However, as that is around £13,000 per month, I suspect that there is a degree of exaggeration or perhaps misunderstanding here. 1,000,000 a year maybe, although that would still be an exceptional wage by Indian standards.

2Sufi devotional music
3Further research has taught me that this temple is called the Charan (Foot) Mandir and is sacred because there's a naturally-occuring footprint of Krishna there. As for the observatory, it's merely labelled as an 'observation tower' and no connections to Jantar Mantar are mentioned although I still suspect that the two are somehow related.
4N.B. This is not the X-rated film of the same name. It is ten times better than that one. Not that I've seen the other of course... well... maybe...








































Saturday, 23 February 2013

2013 Travel Update VI - Delhi

Greetings!

Ok, first things first, this may be my last travel update of this trip before returning back to beloved Blighty and so if it is, then please, please check out my YouTube Page as I've uploaded several more V-logs from the trip which aren't included in all the other posts. Here's what I've put up so far in chronological order but there will be more so please revisit regularly since even when I'm back home I hope to do a few V-logs of destinations a little less exotic.

Al-Ain Oasis, Al-Ain - 11/02/2013

Dubai Creek, Dubai -11/02/2013

Burj Khalifa, Dubai -11/02/2013

Slums, Delhi - 13/02/2013

Golden Temple, Amritsar - 14/02/2013

Schoolgirls danicng, Indo-Pak Border - 14/02/2013

Another Golden Temple in Amritsar? Amritsar - 15/02/2013

Emperor Akbar's Tomb, Agra - 16/02/2013

Agra Fort and the Taj Mahal, Agra - 17/02/2013

Agra Fort, Agra - 17/02/2013

Jain Temple, Ajmer - 21/02/2013

Reflections on the Dargah of Khwaja Muin-ud-din Chisti, Ajmer - 21/02/2013

Reflections on Pushkar and the trip so far, Pushkar - 22/02/2013

The view from my hotel, Pushkar - 22/02/2013

The holy pool at sunset, Pushkar - 22/02.2013

Qawali jam, Pushkar - 22/02/2013

Right, so now you're up to speed with what's been happened, where am I now? Well, I'm back in Delhi, the chaotic capital and my last stop in India before jetting back home. I took an overnight train from Ajmer and arrived early this morning and since then it's been one very busy day. I checked out the National Museum which is notable for having lots of statues of big breasted women dancing in temples, (my kind of religion), the Government Buildings, the Bahai Temple, the ISKCON Temple, the Tomb of Safdarjang and Lodi Gardens.

India Gate, New Delhi

What can I say? Well, the Government Buildings were spectacular, (but there again, they were built by the British), and they obviously knew I was coming because all the TV stations were there in force, (nothing to do with parliament debating the recent terrorist bombings in Hyderabad), whilst the Bahai Temple, I must confess to being disappointed with. It's built in the shape of a lotus flower and whilst kind of clever and interesting from the outside, inside it's like a huge, empty concrete hall. A bit like those awful cathedrals that were built from the 1960s onwards, you know the ones, Clifton, Liverpool (RC), Coventry. In fact, most of all it reminded me of Liverpool's RC Cathedral since that does look rather cool from the outside but is naff inside. I once heard that building described as "A Hymn to Vatican II" to which my (Roman) Catholic friend Martyn replied, "Yes, and a suitably discordant one."

Bahai Temple, Delhi: Better from the outside

But if the Bahai Temple is debatable in its architectural merit, the ISKCON (International Society for Krishna Consciousness - i.e. the Hare Krishnas) Temple next door leaves no room for debate. It is quite simply the ugliest religious building that I've come across, some kind of Disneyland Hinduism which not only offends the eye but also offers a Vedic 3D Sound and Light Spectacular for only 200 rupees. Strangely, I did not buy a ticket.

Hideous (I mean the temple in the background!)


But after that the architecture got better. Safdarjang's Tomb is a 17th century example of Nawab Architecture which looks a bit like a mini Taj whilst Lodi Gardens are amazing. They're bascially the best city park on earth because in amongst all the beautifully laid-out (by the British) gardens are some incredible historical ruins from the pre-Mughal Lodi Period (15th century mostly). There were tombs and mosques and it was brilliant just to wander around (without having to pay) several world-class ruins that would be a major tourist draw anywhere else. Here though, they're par for the course.

A ruined mosque in Lodi Park

But spectacular as they all were, I was drawn away from them because at 18:00 Stoke City were live on Indian TV. To think, the boys famous all the way over here. It should have been the highlight of the day except that they lost to a crap Fulham side, missing a penalty en route. Oh well, there's always the cricket on the other side with the Aussies in real trouble against India. Please guys, hammer 'em bad. We need them demoralised for the Ashes!

Keep travelling!

Uncle Travelling Matt