Saturday, February 02, 2008

India Journal -- Part 2 -- Monday, December 31

Day 4 – Monday, December 31

We had designated today as our Christmas Day. We had decided against giving each other gifts, but we had drawn names to stuff each other’s stockings. However, those who had the name of someone in the states had already given them their stockings and only those who had the name of Jessica and Elliott as well as the ones they had, were giving stockings. The stockings were duly stuffed and given, albeit, it felt a little un-Christmas-like. But there was appreciation and most importantly, there were cinnamon rolls. (I forgot to mention that we had gone to the only “Western style” grocery in Vellore the night before to pick up a few things like cereal and oatmeal and things we’d need for cinnamon rolls, like confectioners sugar and margerine.) I couldn’t find the white flour, so I made them entirely with whole wheat which made them browner than usual but still pretty good. It was odd sitting around in a simple, concrete block room with ceiling fans whirring having Christmas stocking and cinnamon rolls. But really--what a treat to be in India. We really didn’t think much about Christmas in the traditional sense.


The stockings were hung by the "chimney" with care.




A request fulfilled!


The traditional Cinnamon Rolls

We decided to take a hike today up to the top of the “mountain” at the outskirts of Vellore, just within a 10 minute walk of where we were staying. Elliott warned that we should do it early in the morning, but of course, by the time we got around, it was more like 10:30-11. However, we decided to go ahead, donning our hats, bug stuff, long pants (much tall grass and girls have to wear them all the time anyway). Had to walk through the local rock quarry to head up a not well defined path. Very rocky and tall grass (Please keep away, cobras!) and huffing and puffing, but we made it to the top!

On the way to the mountain...
Through the rock quarry and gravel pit...


Views on the way to the top
Top of the world! (at least Vellore area)


He's made the daring climb many times!





Above are different views of Vellore spread out below...

Much sweat; lots of water. Then getting down a different way following painted arrows on rocks was just as hard pretty much. We got back and lay down or rinsed off (some got a shower) and drank MORE water.


Views of rice paddies above in different stages of maturity.Back to the apartment building where we are staying in the Daley's apartment
while they are home in Canada.

Then Eden was determined to do some shopping. She was going to go to the market area alone to look for a material booth and a tailor. Collapse was more on my mind, but I realized I needed to “make the most of this cultural experience,” so I said I would go with her. A spirit of motherly protectiveness might have also influenced me. So after a brief respite, we walked to the corner, dodging garbage, motorcycles, and stray tiny little puppies (awwww, but eeewwww!) to hail a rickshaw. She is determined, so we walk several blocks (?) until we find a large fabric store with a clerk sitting behind the counters every 5 feet. She does not take long to pick something, inquires about tailors, but in the end, we just go out to find one ourselves. We go into a shop that only tailors for men. So we keep walking and pretty soon find a ladies’ tailor. It is right next door to a tea booth where there is loud music and a man making tea in a fancy way. I would have had some, but everyone drinks out of the same tin cups, and I don’t see a major washing happening between drinks. (see video) There is no room inside the little tailor shop to wait, so I wait outside for the measuring and determining of style. It will be ready in a week.
Colorful powders for sale in the market.
They seem to be used to decorate people and perhaps other things as well.Walking along the busy streets...Colorful paper star lanterns were a popular item.


The tea man in action (It's a video, so be sure to click the play arrow:)

It’s had gotten dark by then, so we soon hailed a rickshow and set off for home where the man who helped in the kitchen had put a turkey (actually a rather skinny chicken compared to what we are used to) in the oven for us and we were augmenting it with mashed potatoes and vegetables for our Christmas dinner. Compared to what we are used to, it was a bit of slim pickings, but that was also kind of good for us. I think a scrabble game followed for some and probably reading for others.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

India Journal -- Part 1 -- December 27-December 30

Day 1 – December 27

We spend the day getting packed and ready. Is everything in order? Is the dog taken care of? Do we have copies of all our important papers and are they in the right places? Are we packing light enough? What did the kids say they wanted us to bring? Do we have room for it?

The day is spent with questions and stomach tension although we are essentially ready and confident enough to leave the house by 7 pm for our 10:10 flight from Dulles Airport. After parking in economy and getting the shuttle in, we wait in line hoping our paperwork is in order. Our seat assignments have been changed, and we are not all together. Actually, none of us are together, but we are close by. We don’t lose our cool. In fact, we are patient and so is the airline rep. This pays off for us later. We pass through security and head out to the gate.

Boarding starts almost an hour ahead of time. It’s a huge airplane, and it takes time to fill. We are in the back with a number of families with babies and young children. Uh-oh. There is crying and wiggling. The young mom I am beside has paid for a seat for her baby, but there isn’t one. Fortunately, Jonathan has an empty seat next to him, so I move there to give her the seat she needs.

This is it. We’re going!

Day 2 – December 28

The days begin to get mixed up. Our flight on Qatar Airlines to Doha takes about 13 hours it seems. There is a very good entertainment system and we are fed as much as we want, so the time seems to go by pretty quickly. I guess I dose a little bit. Shortly before landing, Steve discovers that a friend of ours from The Falls Church, Anne Landis, has been sitting in front of him all along. She comes to say hi to me. She has a sister living in Doha. I am very surprised to see her!
Our layover in Doha is only a couple of hours. We meet a young man who is a graduate student at Penn State who is going home to a village near Vellore for the first time in two years. As we board to head to Chennai, our seats are changed again. We are seated together, and we are in first class! Steve thinks it’s because we were nice to the agent in Washington. Whatever it was, it sure is nice to have all that room for our last 5 hours to India.

Day 3 – December 29

We are well fed and get to sleep some before landing on time in Chennai, India at 3:40 a.m. local time. Yes, it’s the middle of the night and the customs agents look a bit sleepy. But once we get into the airport we find a huge throng crowding the rails to meet people. Elliott has told us to look for someone holding a sign with our names on it. He has gotten a driver from the Christian Medical College to meet us and take us to Vellore. We search the whole line of waiting and crowding people till it ends. Then we walk back up the line and find Raja holding a sign with our names on it. We walk to the parking lot and get into an older model sedan of some sort. Evidently most international flights arrive in the middle of the night.


First Class leg room...

Arriving at Madras Airport in Chennai

This is the first of several driving experiences in India. Since it is the middle of the night, traffic isn’t that bad, but still we notice that driving in India is a whole new experience. (I now have a whole new impression of the Penn State graduate student’s mother.) Raja says there are no traffic rules, at least none that are enforced. The basic mode of driving is to honk and then veer or hope the other car veers around. This is our most tame driving experience of our visit, probably due to the time of day and to Raja, whom Elliott says is his favorite driver. It is dark for most of our drive, but the sky is beginning to brighten as we near Vellore. The oddly shaped hills that pop up out of flat ground with rocky promontories begin to appear. We’ve seen them in Elliott’s pictures.

Daily's living room first morning

As dawn brightens to full day, we are being dropped off in front of a large apartment building, one of three in a compound surrounded by fencing. The apartment buildings are for staff of the Christian Medical College/Hospital. Raja had a key to let us into the Daly’s apartment, a Canadian family, the husband of whom is a doctor working at the Christian Medical Hospital. There was a squished little gecko on the screen door that continued to dry out throughout our entire stay. Elliott was soon at the door to welcome us even though it was still very early in the morning. He’d walked over from his rooms—about a 10-15 minute walk. We sat around dazed and said we didn’t need to sleep, but we felt pretty awful to begin with. We articulated how amazing it was to be here and sat in the simple and small concrete block apartment furnished only with a table and some hard wooden chairs with rattan seats. There was also a small, artificial Christmas tree with lights and a full size refrigerator. The rest of the apartment is two bedrooms and a kitchen with shelving, counters, and a pantry, and a bathroom, all joined by a short hallway. The beds, which seem to be typical for here, are wooden platforms with foam pads. They feel harder than we’re used to, but they’re not bad.

Elliott makes us all oatmeal after David, Jessica, and Eden walk over. They’ve just arrived last night from Delhi and Agra and points north where they had all sorts of adventures seeing the Taj, camel safaris, and being clobbered by a monkey with a brick (Eden). It is amazing to see Jessica; it’s been so long, it’s hard to let go.

After breakfast and “freshening” up (The bathrooms here don’t invite a comfortable relationship, just a necessary one.), we headed out walking to tour the Christian Medical College campus with Elliott. Interesting in light of the fact that I am reading Paul Brand’s book The Gift that Nobody Wants. The most beautiful spot was the chapel and surrounding gardens. See pictures. From there we went to cruise the neighborhood and surrounding areas. Wow! Very hot. And seeing for the first time what I knew was true—trash everywhere, dirt, open sewage, smells, animals (goats, dogs, cows mostly), people, living, walking, working, sitting. Saw rice paddies for the first time and people working in them.

neighborhood goat


CMC Chapel Garden



Elliott climbing a banyan tree whose roots grow down from the branches and make messy, interesting configurations. Isn't there a song about a banyan tree? Listen to this: ) http://www.icompositions.com/music/song.php?sid=33660
A friend to climb with (above)All kinds of housing in the neighborhood...
Not sure what was being communicated here by Mr. D. :)
More fancy housing of suburbia or at least outskirts of Vellore
Goats and rice paddies
Brightly painted structure with a kolam, a chalk drawing (redone each morning usually) that has some religious or superstitious significance. See http://www.tamilnation.org/culture/kolam.htm
Woman bending in a rice paddie...
and other paddie workers

After drinks and a little rest in the shade of the apartment, Then we walked to “the corner” past little carts and businesses and lots of stray dogs and puppies to catch a bus to downtown for dinner in a nice hotel restaurant—Darling Hotel. We stopped at the only grocery store in Vellore for some needed supplies. Quite small and crowded, but it is quite a super market for there. Glad that the restaurant (one of two Elliott considers completely safe to eat at.) is on the roof of the hotel, above the smells of an open sewage ditch and much of the honking vehicle and people noises.


At the Darling Hotel for dinner (above)

A delicious dinner of rice and various curry sauces and chipotes (flat bread like tortillas). We split up to take auto rickshaws back to the apartment. Elliott told us how much to offer him, but he wanted more. Elliott said to say that was fair, but he wasn’t buying it. We didn’t have any other money. So after an angry exchange, he left, but he knew where we lived! That scared Jonathan (and all of us) for a little while.

Day 4 – Sunday, December 30

We decided to go to St. John’s, a Church of South India congregation that was the closest English speaking worship. The service was typically at 9:30, but when we arrived, it was obviously in the middle of a Lessons and Carol service. Unfortunately for that service they’d had a special start time of 8:30. Oh, well. It was a pretty building, not full but comfortably full. There was a group of folks there from Hawaii, there on a short mission trip. At the end of the service they got up and sang a couple of songs too. Afterwards we visited with various ones. David met the parents of someone he had known a little at Calvin. The American missionary doctor’s family from Boston was there. It was nice to talk with them. A group of children came begging and wanting their picture taken.



David meeting the father of a friend from Calvin. That was a surprise!


The neighborhood kids doing a little begging for money or pictures...

The church building was near an old fort and other downtown attractions (Hindu temple and large market area), so we walked around a bit at the fort grounds and wall and then the temple. There were lots of people there. We got chastised by a temple guard for carrying our shoes instead of leaving them at the door. It seemed a dark sort of place—not by way of physical light, but with so many idols around and people milling about making concession to them. Again, it was hot, so we tried to find the shade to stand and walk in.

Everyone climbs another banyan tree at the old fort.

Gate of the Hindu temple as seen from the fort, I think

People walking into the temple area


On the fort wall (above and below)

The market area was large, with some of it being covered by grass roof and some just open-air. The booths were tiny and crowded together, selling everything from jewelry, food, flowers (many), and necessities of various kinds. It was crowded with people, and I was unprepared for what a spectacle we would present as a large group of white people. Many politely greeted us that you got the feeling may have been dared to speak to us.


Flowers are a very big item for hair and decorations of all kinds. Just the blossoms are cut off--no stems--and then sometimes woven together in necklaces, etc.

Flower decorations (above)

After the market and a stop back at Daily's to recoup a bit, we walked over to Elliott's apartment/rooms. He lives on what you could call a residential street, maybe the only one like it in Vellore. His landlady is a 92 year old woman who rents rooms out to folks mostly from the medical community, I think. It's about a 15 minute walk from the apartment building, past all the typical sites and sounds. David saw a "cotton candy man" but when he bought his, it was about a quarter of the size of what we think of as a bag of cotton candy.

Not sure what perspective this is on the house, but it isn't a very attractive one. Sorry, Elliott.
The desk where all the Skyping happens now also shared with Jessica.I guess Elliott wasn't expecting company. He forgot to make his bed! I don't know if the air conditioner works. He has never used it.
The kitchen areaBelow are goats on a major garbage heap...and Steve protecting himself from the sun with the umbrella. Though it was the mildest time of year, the sun was still really hot.
After a hot afternoon, we headed back to the apartment and got changed to go to the swim club Elliott belongs to. It is a beautiful oasis of lovely pool, changing rooms, gym with some exercise equipment and sort of tea/coffee bar with open terraces around it, including a ping-pong table and tables and chairs. After being out in the city, it really did seem like a quiet oasis of peace, and Elliott commented that we could see why he likes to go there at the end of a day.



The CMC apartment buildings as seen from the swim club


We ate in the “other” safe restaurant that night. Splitting up to go back the apartment, we jumped into the first auto rickshaw that presented itself and then realized that it had no headlight. So we held our breaths and hoped all those buses, trucks and other rickshaws hurtling at us would see us in time to veer. They did! This time we didn’t take the driver all the way to our apartment door, but stopped at the gate where the CMC security guard helped negotiate the payment. The movie you see below was during a daytime ride. It's even more thrilling at night. Well, really, you had to be there!