Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Trip to the hills

Foot hills of Himalayas - Dec. 2003

We were on a short holiday at the foothills of the Himalays.The night saw us driving through the winding road, from Dehradun to Rishikesh… the road was unlit with the forest on either side…as if waiting and watching….and suddenly we sighted …half hidden among the night shadows a mother elephant with two calves…on the edge of the road...
The forest guest house at Rishikesh, where we were lodged, stands on the banks of the Bhagirathi…amidst the chilling fog that hung in the night air…we could hear the roar of the river…as we took a post dinner walk along the guest house’s driveway. We were asked not to wander too far into the darkness, as stray leopards were known to prowl in that area at night. Next day we went rafting and kayaking on the glacial waters of Bhagirathi. Crystal blue freezing waters, flowing amid lush green peaks…meandering like a blue serpent - sometimes flowing calmly…sometimes gushing and roaring over rapids….rafting over the rapids was an onslaught on the senses…. We also took a dip in the freezing waters….with life jackets tied to our chests and skin suits underneath….I have never felt so cold in my life before….the lungs inside my chest seem to freeze and I could hardly breath…
Next day we went to Rajaji National Park. It is huge and has a diversity of landscapes. Our jeep was following a dried river bed…on the white sands along the river bed we sighted elephant foot prints…a group of chital would suddenly appear from nowhere..a bulky wild boar..his fur coarse and dirty…small tusks sprouting out of the sides of his mouth. He continued digging the earth unconcerned about our presence. At places the jungle was so dense that the sunlight could barely filter through…at places it opened into dry scrub…tussoks of giant grasses and weeds growing along dried river banks…a Gujjar settlement…. silence and stillness
everywhere..occasionally punctuated with the cry of a bird somewhere in the bushes…sunlight would penetrate in streaks through gaps left by fallen trees…old and ancient….as ancient as life….to die and melt back into the furnace of life and death. We wandered in the forest for two hours and then returned to civilization reluctantly.
Amsterdam trip - Sept. 2003

I'm back from Amsterdam. Had a great time and met a lot of interesting people.
An old Dutch aqaintance who had been working on the anti-Tehri dam movement in Garhwal, took me to visit a samll fishing village - Vollendam, near Amsterdam :
The sky was overcast as we drove through the Dutch countryside. Rain drops drew transparent streaks on the misty wind sheild. The green fields were dotted with black and white Jersey cows that sat heavily mulching away, an occassional wind mill passed by, its fan swinging lazily in the cold afternoon air . Vollendam was a small village with its quaint traditional Dutch houses which sat huddled in one line. Laced curtains hung on the small glasswindows. An occasional bloom of flowers hung over some doors and windows.I spend some time sitting on a bench at the edge of thesea-lake. As the waves lapped close to my feet, gulls flew overhead screaming and small sailing and fishing boats bobbed and drifted by.
I was staying in Amsterdam with a Canadian couple...Derek and Emily. Derek has been studying the fishing communities of Gujarat and speaks Gujarati quite well.Derek's house was very interesting. It is actually owned by an artist from Columbia whose paintings and black and white photographs adorned the walls.The b&w photos seem to a have a distinct touch of Cartier Bresson. My room was on the top floor which had a wooden slanting roof and through its beams the afternoon light would fall in streaks. One of the rooms was full of musical instruments and was being used by a Cuban band for their practice sessions ! Amsterdamhas a lot of music and musical bands. This Columbian artist with his Dutch wife were away in Spain and had lent the house to Derek and Emily for a couple months.
Met a lot of interesting people at the conference I was attending -a lady from the DomincanRepublic studying the small fishermen there, a fisheries Prof. from Iran, a lady from Ghana who had encountered the civil war and soldiers with guns during her research. I also met a Portugese professor whose father used to serve in Goa during the Portugese occupation. I have visited in New York and New Jersey during my school days but the urban culture of Amsterdam, and perhaps also other European capitals, seem to be much more interesting and diverse than that of any American cities, including the grafftitti on the walls !! I found the youth from the colored communityof Amsterdam very interesting in the way they wore their hair and clothes.The deep guttural Dutch and German and the elegant French languages too, seem to capture a lot of passion as compared to the empty drawl of American English.

Korea Chronicles I


May 2006, Dae-jeon, S.Korea

Dae-jeon lies in a valley, surrounded by hills on all sides. The people here seem to be fond of trees and flowers which abound in every street and corner. The campus where my husband, Razi, works is especially green, and remindes me of the FRI campus in Dehra Dun - dense cluster of trees line roads and side walks, damp dark corners covered with moss and ferns, lichens and moss cloth the trunks of old trees whose barks are peeling off. It is spring time now, and the trees wear a deep green foliage, most plants are in bloom and young cones hang on the pine trees.
Sometimes it rains and with the rain comes a light haze which hangs above the river and hill tops in the early hours and evenings. In the silence of the evenings when most of the people have left the campus, one can hear the cry of the Golden oriole among the trees or catch a glimpse of the balck and white magpie.

Except for the office and school goers, most of the streets and roads are deserted during the day time. With the approaching dusk, the nocturnal denizens of the town begin to stir. As the night lights go on, people, young and old begin to spill out of the many restraurants and bars. Some of them are too drunk to walk straight. Smoking too is quite common here. The western influence is all prevading. I have yet to see a korean in a traditional dress. The night life lasts upto 1 or 2 in the morning.

Among the far east and south east asian races, I think the Korean and Japanese women are the most beautiful - with almond shaped faces and relatively sharp noses, slender neck and shoulders and a pearl white flawless complexion. They seem to posses a very delicate elf-like beauty.

Korea Chronicles II




May 2005,Seoul, S.Korea

Seoul is like a drained down version of New York – a city throbbing with life, skyscrapers, busy subways, exotic restaurants serving exotic dishes from almost all over the world, concerts and art shows being held everyday by artists from all parts of the world, world class stadiums, theatres and museums. A very colorful nightlife and city lights. The downtown area with its flea markets, pick pocketeers and street walkers. There is also a place called Itaewon. It’s a residential cum bazaar build around the settlements of the foreigners who have live in Seoul – Americans from the nearby US army base, Indians, Philipinos, Chinese, Mongolians, Bangladeshis, Europeans, North Koreans….
There are quite a few Indian restaurants – 'Chakra' that serves Mughlai, and South Indian. There is also a Nepali restaurant here!

We visited the War Memorial – it depicts the Korean war between N. and S. Korea that took place in the 1940s in all its details and vividness – it also depicts wars in Korea down the ages – real weapons, armaments and ammunition used along with the gear and dress worn, various modes of documentation and communications used. It’s a huge lay out and a lot of resources and research seems to have been put into it. We saw life size models of refugee colonies, people displaced by the war, historical footage. The memorial itself is housed inside a huge complex whose architectural design resembles the colossal Roman structures. ( I will be uploading the photos soon).

Next stop was the Folk Museum and Palace – again very interesting. I could have spent the entire day in this museum. It housed detailed depiction of the culture and history of S.Korea over the years including calligraphy, religion, architecture, house hold and agricultural tools, food and traditional dishes including kimchi – it is actually a spicy side dish consisting largely of pickled Chinese cabbage, spring onion, fish sauce, garlic, ginger, all fermented together in salt water. Kimchi is supposed to contain vitamins and minerals especially certain beneficial bacteria (lactobacilli) that aid digestion. There are over 100 varieties of Kimchi using different vegetables. Another interesting food is a kind of Korean ‘sattu’ it contains a mixture of dehydrated and powdered shrimp, ginseng, algae, herbs, some vegetables, red rice and soyabeans. You just have to add water and sugar to it and drink it. It appears to be a very healthy wholesome food. We also went on top of the Seoul tower, which is supposed to be the second highest structure in Asia. It was built on a 262 meter peak, the tower reaches to 480 meters above sea level. The observation platform of the tower is at 370 meters above sea level; 2 elevators cover 135-meter height in 30 secs to reach observation platform from the base.
Of course the biggest blast especially for the kids was the Lotte world in Seoul, where we spent an entire day – screaming down the roller coasters, giant swings and drops. Danish was scared out of his wits by ‘The Pharaoh’s fury’: it’s a kind of a theme adventure which takes you back to the times when the pyramids and its mysteries and curses were being discovered and suffered. I think that it was very well done. At one point there is this rickety-rackety jeep that takes you down through the underground chambers of some pyramid and at one point all the fires burning along the dark corridors suddenly go out and the jeep plunges into a dark abyss – a bottomless pit, boy, that scared me too!!!

We traveled back to Dae –Jeon from Seoul in RTX train, which again is the second fastest train in Asia with a maximum speed of 300km/hour (I think !!).

Haseena Begum

Raunak Manzil stands at a forgotten corner of Kashmiri mohallah in old Lucknow. Over two hundered years old, drained of all its ancient grandeur by misfortune and age, its derelict walls propped up with cheap woodwork and plaster symbolize all that remains today of the great Nawabi culture of Lucknow. Within its many dimly lit rooms lives Haseena Begum with her family. Like her childhood memories, the photographs of her Nawabi ancestors posing with shikar trophie or a British General, adorning the old walls, have begun to fade.

Haseena herself is an antithesis to what her name suggests. Thin with dark shriveled skin and a rather ugly face, she is more of a joke among her community. Women mock at her futile attempts to cover up her ugliness with silk and jewelry and her lack of grace and dignity are considered rather unbecoming for a Nawabi begum. However, Haseena has more than made up for the physical ugliness of her personality with a great sense of humour and there are many evenings when she entertains her guests from India and abroad with numerous anecdotes from her child hood.

My first visit to Raunak Manzil was to meet Noori, one of my friends who had been recently married to the elder son of Haseena Begum. Noori comes from what is considered to be one of the top Sayyed families of Lucknow and she is as beautiful as they come – a pleasant reminder of the Central Asian lineage of her family. As I entered the dim and damp interiors of the manzil, my heart began to sink, did Noori deserve this, I wondered, but when I saw Noori’s gleaming face and her doting in-laws besides her I realized that she had become literally the noor for Haseena Begun. The noor, that had lit up this old haveli with her beauty and grace. Haseena Begum now attends every social gathering along with Noori, showing off her prized possession to the envy of all. She seems to have had the last laugh at fate and her community by bringing home one the most beautiful girls of the Shia community of Lucknow as her daughter-in-law.
This write up has also been published in the 'Indian Express' .

Science and Islam

A three page commentary by Ziauddin Sardar, a London-based writer, in a recent issue of ‘Nature’ – one of the top international journals of Science, outlines the major historical forces that led to the divorce of science from Islam and the consequent decline of Islam as an intrinsically rational world view.
He begins by ascertaining the fact that the scientific culture in Islam has changed since the golden era of Islamic Science. This, contrary to popular belief, is not because the teachings of Islam go against the scientific temper as the Quran itself has about 800 verses which encourage the reader to examine and understand the material world and nature using reason. Ziauddin quotes the Prophet as having said that, ‘An hour’s study of Nature is better than a year’s prayer’, and ‘listen to the words of scientists and instill unto others the lessons of science’. If this is the case, what was it that slowly eroded science, learning, knowledge and creativity from Muslim culture? Colonization and wars could be partly responsible for this decline, Ziauddin points out that while its teachings essentially remain the same, the practice of Islam has changed over the years.
Islam is a way of life, as a faith and culture it represents a holistic world view. Conceptual values such as ilm (knowledge) and ijtihad (the quest for sustained reasoning) were an integral part of classical Islam with science and reasoning at their center. Ziauddin argues that a systematic reduction in the meaning of the fundamental principals of Islam was the cause of decline of science among the Muslim societies. This reduced Islam from a holistic world view to a one-dimensional faith and arrested the creativity of Muslim societies. He further agues that science was an integral part of Muslim history. It helped the growth of industries, the science of mineralogy, chemistry, hydraulics, botany, agronomy, hydrology, geology, architecture, city planning etc. played an important role in the rise of Muslim civilizations as a city-building culture. Muslim trading routes thrived world wide due to developments in astronomy, geography, map-making, observational devices etc. During this golden era science prospered and served society and the state itself was its greatest promoter since it was dependent on it for engineering its cities and wars. The charitable institution of Waqf, too had a broader framework and functioning. It received Zaqat, the annual payment required from all Muslims, and used it for social purposes such as education, health and alleviation of poverty.
According to Ziauddin, the, so called, age of exploration by the European powers in the fifteenth century, was actually an attempt to suppress the rising political and economic clout of the Muslim world. And this could not have been possible without advancement in science. This led to colonization and the transfer of scientific knowledge from the Muslim to the European world. In order to ensure dependence, compliance and subservience the colonizers introduced their own system of administration, law, education and economy. Thus began the gradual downfall of the economic and political status of Muslim society along with the decline of Islamic science. Western education, under the colonial rule, did not recognize Islamic science as real science, distorted history and portrayed the Muslim world as backward. Hence, the practice of Islam was reduced from a broad holistic one to a narrow religious one. Ziauddin further laments that while the definition of knowledge (ilm), which during the classical period included everything from science to art, philosophy and theology and all learned men, including scholars and scientists constituted the ulama, under colonialism ilm was reduced to mean only religious knowledge and the ulama – the authority whose thought and opinion was worthy of social and cultural attention, now constituted only of religious scholars.
Ziauddin points out that the democratic concept of ijma (consensus of the people), which dates back to the time of Prophet, was central to the political life of Islam. Before making any major decision, the Prophet would invite the entire Muslim community to the mosque for a discussion and a consensus would be reached. Hence ilm ensured that majority of the community and the entire ulama was learned and ijma ensured that an informed and democratic decision was taken. However with the changed definition of ilm, ijma was reduced to the consensus of religious scholars.
Hence, Ziauddin concludes, the deterioration of Islamic science was a result of combined forces which brought about a reduction of Islam as a holistic enterprise. He suggests that science will take root in the present Muslim societies if a conceptual shift is brought about on how we perceive and practice Islam – as an integrated way of knowledge, being and doing. Muslims, Ziauddin concludes, have pride in their scientific heritage, but it is time they got over this nostalgia for the long departed golden era of Islam. They have to reinstate the original definitions of ilm, ijtihad and ijma, and make this way of knowledge and thinking in tune with the present times.
This write up has also been published in the 'Indian Express' .