Recently, I invited a Donald Trump admirer (who has the honesty to admit that she would have voted for certain elected dictators had she lived in those times) to read Gandhi's 'The Story of My Experiments with Truth'. But she said it was too long for her. So she tried German Wikipedia instead. Soon I received a text message from him: "Hey Dhruv, I have read the part where he is in South Africa - he seems to be a thorough racist." She followed it up by some corroboratory evidence in an email which said: "They must have read Wilipedia: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-34265882".
Friday, January 22, 2016
Thursday, January 21, 2016
an exceptional traffic story (the discovery of India road trip)
22 December 2015
Fabian was very keen to visit one of
the waterfalls near Khajuraho, but Tim was not, since he wanted to write
postcards. So Fabian, Joline and I decided to go. The drive lasted a couple of
hours, but we never made it to the waterfalls. We did not correctly insert the
address in the GPS device, and it took us to the end of the street on which our
Ashram was situated. But that part of the street was perhaps the most chaotic
little street I had seen. Scores of motorbikes, bicycles, feral cattle, bullock
carts, busses, hand carts, hawkers selling vegetables. So we decided to
properly enter the address for the waterfalls in the GPS device and we were set
in motion. Very slowly.
Khajuraho (the discovery of India road trip)
22 December 2015
Of all the places we have visited so
far, Khajuraho was the most overrated destination so far. I had expected to
discover many more nuances about this city and its culture, but it seems to me
that there isn’t much more than what has been published about it already. The
only other culture on display was one in which touts chased tourists to sell
their wares. The city is essentially a dust bowl, and a few temples from the
Chandela Empire. The temples are pretty, no doubt, but the few that have
remained have been so overexposed that there is almost no sculpture one hadn’t
seen before in pictures. The sculpture of Varaha – the third avatar of Vishnu
as a wild boar – was most impressive. One that I had not seen before, the
sculpture was a stylised representation of a boar. The stone is minutely
sculpted to bear distinct representations of about a thousand gods, goddesses
over its body.
Koliwada (the discovery of India road trip)
Sunday, 13 December 2015
Incredible as it was, the last bit
of the lawsuit work had spilled over, and I had to go to notarise my affidavit
at 08:30, this morning – a Sunday morning. But once this was done, it was done,
and finally, we were able to go to Elephanta. It took us all day and we took
one of the last ferries back to Bombay. We were rather tired and hungry when we
returned home at about 19:00.
Salty breeze from the Arabian Sea & Prince of Wales Museum (the discovery of India road trip)
Writing from memory at dawn on 18 December 2015
Friday, 11 December 2015
I am a witness for my father in a
court case, and I was supposed to spend the morning at the lawyers’ offices. The
plan was to thereafter visit the Elephanta Caves, and see some of old Bombay. However,
the morning extended into the evening, and I returned home only at about 18:30.
I was afraid that JF&T would be bored, and annoyed with me. But it seemed
they were quite happy to have found the time to relax, and recover from the
fatigue.
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