Friday, October 21, 2022

That's a wrap, folks


Yesterday evening, as the sun set on our last week together in India, Allie and I performed on the back lawns of the Fulbright House at 12 Hailey Road. I opened the evening with a twenty-minute pakhawaj solo--the culmination of six and a half months of lessons and practice here in Delhi (I sat for my first lesson back on April 3). Allie then joined for a short kathak recital. Both performances featured the illustrious Anil Mishra ji playing nagma on Sarangi. Hiring that fella was the best decision we could have made. A consummate pro.

Post-performance photo op with USIEF staff

Sharing material we've been wrestling with for some time now felt like a worthy conclusion to this memorable chapter. Our performance was well received by an audience of fellow Delhi Fulbrighters, U.S. embassy personnel, and USIEF staff. Accounting for the odd mistake, we were both quite pleased with the outcome. For your viewing pleasure, I've resisted the urge to chop up shorter clips and uploaded the whole performance via YouTube.


Enjoy!

Monday, October 3, 2022

Loose Ends


Allie and I are back in Delhi following a much-needed week of vacation exploring the backwaters and chilling on the coast of Kerala. For both of us, it was the farthest south we'd ever traveled in India. You really can't go much farther. After months enduring the heat, pollution, traffic, and crowds up north, the natural beauty and perfect weather of Kerala in late September calmed our nervous systems and rejuvenated us for the home stretch. Multiple ayurvedic massages didn't hurt either... For three years running, we've made a habit of traveling the weekend after Allie's birthday. I dare say this was the most memorable birthday trip yet.

Sunrise on the backwaters. We woke up at 5:15 am for a three-hour kayak journey and stopped off at the fish auction for milk coffee and banana fry, a Kerala specialty.

Vijeesh, our host on Munroe Island. He navigated this large wooden canoe, containing six passengers, through some of the narrowest canals I've ever seen with nothing more than a long bamboo pole and an intimate knowledge of the landscape. Vijeesh is my age and has been leading trips on the backwaters for over twenty years. 
A lesson in punting. Harder than it looks.

Allie after the first of two massages in Varkala. 
The second was better, but she seems to be doing ok here.

Sunset chai

Yours truly on Varkala Beach

And just like that, the end of this India chapter is clearly within view. Allie flies the night of October 23rd and I'll follow one week later. Projects of this nature rarely reach a tidy conclusion. Research is ongoing--it doesn't end when the clock runs out. Relationships endure well beyond the date of physical departure. The quest continues, regardless of where I unpack my drums. But the period of my Fulbright grant is finite, and it is drawing to a close. We are in the midst of preparing a thirty-minute drum and dance program for Delhi Fulbrighters to be held the evening of October 21. Our remaining lessons and daily practice will be geared towards that performance, which provides a punctuation mark amidst an otherwise arbitrary ending. I think it's safe to say we're both starting to feel the wear and tear of all this time away from home. Although much uncertainty looms, we're excited to spend time with our loved ones stateside before long. The blogging will likely thin out even more this month with all the running around to lessons, shows, and archives; the final this and the final that; and the inevitable procession of goodbyes to friends and teachers. I'll check in when I can, and we'll be sure to share clips of our performance when we have them. 

See you on the other side.

Sunday, September 25, 2022

The Golden Triangle



Simon and I set off early Thursday morning for Jaipur after a couple days recalibrating back in Delhi following the trip to up Dharamshala. We spent two days sightseeing and two nights luxuriating at the charming Khandela Haveli in Bani Park before heading to Agra, by way of Fatehpur Sikri, prior to sunrise Saturday morning. By sundown, we'd braved all the crowds, snapped our obligatory photos in front of the Taj Mahal, and safely reached Delhi via the trusty Yamuna Expressway. Absolutely exhausted, we climbed the stairs to the flat only to find my landlords already in the apartment--but that's a story for another time.


Sunday we rested and packed. Simon finally had a chance to meet my roommate, Kyle, who had made his way back from Bikaner while we were traveling, over happy hour drinks on the rooftop of Summer House Cafe. We gorged on tandoori momos one last time, then Harpal (our driver from the Jaipur-Agra trip) arrived around midnight and drove us out to the airport under cover of darkness. I tagged along, as Simon did me the enormous favor of hauling a couple rather large pieces of my luggage back to SFO in anticipation of the impending return to California. Indira Gandhi International is a happening place in the wee hours of the morning, but from what I gather he made it out of there in one piece. No major crises or health problems to report. We sure packed a lot into sixteen days, and what a joy it was to share so many experiences with him here in India this month.

I'll let the pictures tell the rest of the story.





Tuesday, September 13, 2022

Amritsar-Dharamshala

Sipping coffee in Delhi this morning after four nights on the road. A beautiful, sobering trip up through Amritsar and on to Dharamshala. After settling in at the Hotel Exotic Thursday afternoon, we paid our respects at the relatively new Partition Museum just a few minutes walking from both our hotel and the Golden Temple. The Golden Temple, a Sikh pilgrimage site, is the city's main tourist attraction, but the Partition history also runs deep. Amritsar is a mere 17.4 miles from the India-Pakistan border and just 29 miles from Lahore, Pakistan--once a major cultural and literary center of pre-Partition India. Images at the museum show overcrowded trains running between the two cities in the weeks and months after the British withdrew, leaving a hastily drawn border and unimaginable chaos in their wake. Some of those overcrowded trains arrived without any living passengers aboard as rioting and communal violence proliferated in fractured Panjab. I'll spare you more dark history here, but I'd highly recommend a visit to the museum to anyone passing through Amritsar. The history is hard to stomach, but the exhibits are beautifully pieced together.

From the Partition Museum, we proceeded down the street to the Golden Temple just as the sun was setting. I've seen a lot of monuments, mandirs, and pilgrimage sites in North India, but the Golden Temple is truly without equal. It's beyond words, so I won't even try. We perambulated clockwise around the man-made pool, pausing to take in the sights and sounds with a nearly full gibbous cresting over the horizon. Live kirtan and chanted recitation pumped through the sound system as thousands of tourists and pilgrims milled around the complex. We opted not to enter the temple that night, due to the size of the crowd, but returned Friday morning and waited in line for an hour in the morning sun to glimpse the interior. The best surprise--beyond the awe-inspiring workmanship--was seeing the musicians playing inside the temple. With the music being broadcast professionally through the entire complex it had been hard to tell where the musicians were actually located. After waiting in line and sweating with thousands of Sikhs (there were numerous fans, at least), we finally caught a glimpse. Hiding in plain sight.

(Simon gets a photo credit for this one)

On Friday, the drive up to Dharamshala took longer than expected given a choreographed exchange of vehicles and drivers somewhere shy of Pathankot and the sorry state of roads heading up into Himachal Pradesh. They were at least passable, though we did get stuck for a few minutes ascending from Dharamshala to McLeod Ganj and had to wait for a bulldozer to grade and repack the road so we could pass through. Although Dharamshala proper is considerably larger than McLeod Ganj, it seems to me McLeod Ganj is what most people are referring to when they speak of Dharamshala. McLeod Ganj, a smaller village up the mountain from the main city, is home to the Tibetan Government-in-Exile, the Dalai Lama Temple, and the bulk of the Tibetan refugee population.

the first of many momos

From our base at Heaven's View BnB we enjoyed a weekend of cool weather, occasional rain showers, abundant momos, excessive cappuccinos, numerous hikes up to the central bazaar, and yes, breathtaking mountain views. Saturday morning, on our first descent back down Temple Road, we stopped off to pay our respects, and take shelter from a quick cloudburst, at the Dalai Lama Temple. It felt quiet and empty compared with the bustling Golden Temple, though it sounds like the place really fills up when His Holiness is in town.



Everything is a hill in McLeod Ganj, and the climbing really piles up after awhile. Saturday we enthusiastically ascended the kilometer trek from our hotel to the market on three separate occasions. The second of those took us more than three kilometers up to Bhagsunag Waterfall, where we ordered masala chai and a hookah at Shiva Cafe, a hip little hideout tucked away above the falls. By Sunday evening we'd had entirely enough walking and resorted to hiring taxis to and from town. The locals seem to mostly use motorbikes, which they coast quietly down the mountain in neutral.



Following our final Dharamshala breakfast and one last round of cappuccinos at The Other Space, we set off for Delhi. To maximize time spent in the mountains and rest time on this end, we opted to squeeze the ride back to Amritsar and the six-hour express train to Delhi into a single day. Some thirteen hours travel time had elapsed as our auto from the train station dropped us in Hauz Khas last night, but everything unfolded without a hitch.


Today and tomorrow we rest and catch up on work, laundry, and practice. We'll probably sneak over to Humayun's Tomb this afternoon for a spell, and possibly visit the Gandhi Museum at some point tomorrow. I'm doing what I can to cram a week's worth of business into roughly 48 hours. Then off to Jaipur early Thursday morning with Si while Allie holds down the fort in Delhi. No rest for the weary.

Can anyone identify this creature? After several rounds of googling we remain uncertain.
(capture was thanks to Simon and his zoom capabilities from a distance of 30-40 meters)



Tuesday, September 6, 2022

Simon comes to India


Saturday afternoon, Allie and I hopped the metro out to Indira Gandhi International and scooped Simon at Terminal 3 following his 15 hr 30 min direct flight from San Francisco. The three of us hired an AC cab back to Hauz Khas and reached home in time for afternoon chai. Once he'd settled in a bit, we showed Si around the neighborhood on foot, pieced together a feast of Pushpa leftovers combined with Himalayan delivery, and capped off the evening with Gully Boy, a recent Bollywood classic depicting the improbable rise of a Mumbai rapper from slums to stardom.

    (yes, we're wearing the same pants)

We've slowly expanded our radius since then, with today being the first of uninhibited Delhi tourism. Simon accompanied me down to Badarpur for a lesson and lunch with Mohan Sharma yesterday, and we had taken auto rickshaws to restaurants and shops in various parts of South Delhi beginning Sunday evening. That first outing took us to nearby Deer Park, where we saw a staggering number of giant bats preparing for their evening rounds (along with the resident gang of monkeys), followed by a fantastic dinner at Coast Cafe, a favorite for Kerala cuisine in Hauz Khas Village.

  



This morning we met my friend Rakesh (of the Agra and Himachal excursions) who facilitated a day of geographically dispersed sightseeing (see pics). We began at Qutub Minar, one of the oldest architectural sites in Delhi, followed by a stop at the Baha'i Lotus Temple. Then Rakesh insisted on a bit of clothing shopping (the Cush Bros resisted the temptation to get custom suits tailored, but everyone walked away with a little something). Following a minor traffic collision (everyone was fine), we all ate lunch together at Haldiram's before one final stop at Safdarjung's Tomb on the way back home. Now Allie is off at dance class while Si and I rest up and do some laundry before another big dinner out. It's quite hot here again (did the heat ever really stop?) and taking a few quiet hours in the AC every now and again is essential.

Tomorrow afternoon we plan to head up to Old Delhi by metro to visit Lal Qila and Jama Masjid, accompanied, of course, by the all-important stop at Karim's for Mughlai cuisine whenever hunger strikes. Thursday it's off to Amritsar on the early train, then up to Dharamshala Friday. More soon.








Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Glimpses from the practice room...

Thus far I haven't made good on my intentions to share much of my own musical/practice journey since arriving in Delhi back in February. I chalk this up to a byproduct of relentless perfectionism, and the fact that I only starting playing pakhawaj back in April, but I'm renewing the intention to share more.

Last night, Shashi Kant Pathak (one of my three pakhawaj teachers) arrived in Hauz Khas with a sarangiya named Rajesh, who he works with at Kathak Kendra. It was my first time playing with sarangi, or live lehera accompaniment of any kind for that matter. An incredible experience all around. Allie snapped a few clips from the session so I'll share one here. Low light, grainy quality, all that... Who cares. 

Enjoy!



Monday, August 29, 2022

Mumbai


As the two largest of India's five megacities of ten million plus, Mumbai and Delhi enjoy a rivalry somewhat reminiscent of that between New York and Los Angeles. Both are major cultural centers, but their differences are significant enough to fuel their respective claims to supremacy. Mumbai, a former colonial port spilling off the Maharashtrian coast and into the choppy Arabian Sea, is home to the massive Hindi-language film industry (Bollywood) and serves as the nerve center of Indian finance. Landlocked Delhi, the national capital, houses countless government institutions and somehow makes Mumbai, a sprawling metropolis of some twenty million souls, feel small by contrast. The New York-Los Angeles comparison breaks down pretty quickly--this is India after all. Even the largest cities in the United States can't compete with the sheer scale of either.

Before last weekend, I'd visited Mumbai just once, arriving by train from Goa in the middle of the night and making my way by cab directly into the heart South Mumbai, the oldest part of the city. I'd wandered around sightseeing for a couple days before catching a flight to Kolkata to round out my post-language program travels back in 2017. Allie, for all of her prior trips to North India and all her love of Bollywood, had never been, which provided the impetus for our weekend getaway. We each have friends who have been doing research there this year, and the quick flight down from Delhi, along with free lodging, made it a relatively easy excursion.

We flew in Friday afternoon on a Boeing 777 (two aisles, nine seats across in economy), an alarmingly large aircraft for a domestic flight. My best guess is that Air India needed the aircraft in Mumbai and figured it made more sense to fly it down well under capacity than with no cargo at all. It made for a quick flight in any case, and no sooner had I finished my lunch of chicken biryani than the pilot announced we'd begun our descent into Mumbai.

Despite my concern about making it out of the unfamiliar airport and through Friday rush hour, we easily booked a car and found our way to Andheri West, where my friend Janaki (not Indian, despite the name) has been living this summer. Janaki and I first met in an introductory Hindi class at UW-Madison in 2016, then both travelled to Jaipur to continue our studies in 2017. That summer we spent a lot of time together within a small nucleus of friends, but until this summer I hadn't seen her since. Janaki is working on a Ph.D. in anthropology at the University of Michigan and had just been settling into eighteen months of field research in Shimla when covid hit in early 2020. The pandemic completely derailed her project, which she has since reinvented, and this year AIIS allowed her to resume her grant to carry out research for a new multi-site project on tarot readers and various occult divination practices that brought her to Mumbai. Although all three of us resided in Jaipur simultaneously for Hindi study in 2017,  Allie and Janaki had never met. I had a feeling they would enjoy each other's company and that proved to be the case. 

Friday evening we stayed in, chatting at length over chai and some vegetarian fare provided earlier that afternoon by Janaki's cook. Towards the end of the night, after showing off the various tarot decks she had collected in Mumbai, Janaki did readings for both of us. She's quite skilled at it, though I have little by way of comparison, and without offering any overtly predictive advice, helped us both wrestle with looming questions we had posed for the readings.




From there the weekend progressed in a pleasant stream of sleeping in, cappuccinos, and casual sightseeing. Mumbai may not be as large as Delhi, but it still takes a lot of energy to navigate--arguably more, given the absence of a functional Metro system. Yesterday afternoon, after heading south towards Colaba so Janaki could exchange the remaining rupee balance of her Indian bank account for USD (she flies home on Wednesday), we visited an impressive exhibit of Rini Dhumal's artwork at the Mumbai branch of the National Gallery of Modern Art. None of us had ever heard of her, but we were quite taken with her work and the way it was staged in the space.


We capped off the weekend by rendezvousing with Paige, a friend from Allie's Pune days, who is now living in Mumbai and happens to be part of my Fulbright cohort. She is working on a historical project that looks at women's roles in both the Black Panther Party and the Dalit Panther Party, which drew inspiration from the former in organizing for Dalit rights beginning in the 1970s. Discussing our various projects, and comparing notes on life and research in India, made for stimulating conversation over a leisurely dinner at Fatty Bao in Bandra.

Before bed we said our goodbyes to Janaki, who sleeps later than we do, and set alarms for seven to ensure we'd reach the airport with plenty of time to spare. The return trip to Delhi somehow went even more smoothly than the outbound leg, and we were back in Hauz Khas and ready for a nap by around two.

Once we were up and moving, Allie and I walked the hundred meters or so to our corner cafe, ordered sandwiches and espresso drinks, and sat for awhile settling back into the familiar surroundings. At one point Allie, who thoroughly enjoyed her first trip to Mumbai, looked up at me and said, "It feels good to be back in Delhi." I was somewhat taken aback, for until now I've always gotten the impression that Delhi's distinctive vibrational frequency was a bit too much for her, but I knew exactly what she meant. After visiting her in Lucknow, I'd said more or less the same upon my return. She acted like I was crazy every time I explained how once you adapt to Delhi something in you fundamentally changes. A love for Delhi is hard to explain to someone who hasn't felt it, but once you've felt it nothing quite compares. Nowhere else can fill or break your heart in quite the same way, for better and for worse. Not even dear Mumbai, with all its filmi glamour, its infinite skylines, and its delicious coastal breezes.

Thursday, August 25, 2022

Dome Sweet Dome

Neela Gumbad (Blue Dome) near Humayun's Tomb
 

Allie indulges in ice cream appetizer at a recent Fulbright banquet 
in "The Dome," Ambassador Hotel


Ceremonial masks at the Sangeet Natak Akademi Museum


First amrood (guava) of the season 


First tabla lesson (with yours truly)


Tough times near Hauz Khas Village


Independence Day at Lodhi Garden

Off to Mumbai for the weekend tomorrow morning, then back to Delhi on Monday to prep for Simon's arrival. More updates soon. For now, enjoy the pics :)