Friday, January 18, 2008

 

Far from the Madding Crowd?....


Yes, it was a quiet and peaceful holiday – the last few days of December. Very peaceful, relaxing and rejuvenating it was, indeed!

No I did not read the famous Thomas Hardy book “Far from the Madding Crowd” of perhaps 1874?!! But, I’m reading another great book – a very recent publication – a New York Times Bestseller of 2007.

[“In vacant or in pensive mood”… View of the hills and the Valleys – Mercara…]



The book is “Three Cups of Tea” – One Man’s Mission to Promote Peace One School at a Time (in remote regions of Pakistan). It’s by Greg Mortenson & David Oliver Relin, that a dear friend brought me. I’m only half way through it but I’am loving it. It reads fast at times, slower at other times. Very inspiring and motivating none-the-less.

I’d like to share a few passages from the book that very much resonated with me. I’d also like to share some pics from our recent holiday in Coorg – at a Home Stay in a coffee plantation. And I contrast it with a few pics of Bangalore traffic and Tall buildings (with parks and flowers within - quite refreshing) – the city’s new signature, so much different from the pensioner’s paradise of yonder years!

…..

Some where in the middle of the book “Three cups of Tea” the author refers to a book he’d recently read, “Ancient Futures” by Helena Norberg-Hodge, was much on Mortenson’s mind. Norberg-Hodge had spent seventeen years living just south of these mountains, in Ladakh, a region much like Baltistan, but cut off from Pakistan by the arbitrary borders colonial powers drew across the Himalayas. After almost two decades studying Ladhaki culture, Norberg-Hodge had come to believe that preserving a traditional way of life in Ladakh – extended families living in harmony with the land – would bring about more happiness than “improving” Ladhaki’s standard of living with unchecked development.

“I used to assume that the direction of ‘progress’ was somehow inevitable, not to be questioned,” she writes. I passively accepted a new road through the middle of the park, a steel-and-glass bank where a 200 year old church had stood… and the fact that life seemed to get harder and faster with each day. I do not anymore. In Ladakh I have learnt that there is more than one path, into the future and I have had the privilege to witness another, saner, way of life – a pattern of existence based in the coevolution between human beings and the earth”

Norberg-Hodge continues to argue, not only that Western development workers should not blindly impose modern “improvements” on ancient cultures, but the industrialized countries had lessons to learn from people like Ladhakis about building sustainable societies. “I have seen”, she writes, “that community and a close relationship with the land can enrich human life beyond all comparison with material wealth or technological sophistication. I have learnt that another way is possible.”
Just a few days away from Bangalore, the hustle-bustle of the city, neigh, the madness of the crowds here --- and it did wonders! It brought about a certain “grounded-ness” and a “connected-ness” to people, wilderness, nature. It brought peace and satisfaction. I’d like to share some of pics of the Coorg visit and others taken in Bangalore in my neighborhood at various times



[Cauvery River.. slow and steady flow …] --->

<--- [Village paddy harvest season - a Winter crop…]
View of the clouds, mountains and valleys on a beautiful day





<--- [Abby Falls – Mercara] [Forest land – not so dense] -->










Our Coorg “Home Stay” host’s parent’s house – in the middle of their 50 acre coffee plantation!


<--- [ And… the “Madding” Bangalore morning commute…]



[Off to school in Bangalore one morn.] -->

Just traffic...


<--[Just buildings – homes! [And More home in the making!!] -->



And all kinds of vehicles share the road...

Tall homes with beautiful small gardens and flowers...





High rises and low, and an aeroplane too!




And gardens within...



Maybe I should read the book “Ancient Futures” by Helena Norberg-Hodge, that “Three cups of Tea” author Mortenson often refers to…

Here’s another quote that I’d like to end this pictorial narration with…

“ “Norberg-Hodge admiringly quotes the king of another Himalayan country, Bhutan, who says the true measure of a nation’s success in not gross national product, but “gross national happiness.” On their warm, dry, roofs, among the fruits of their successful harvest, eating, smoking, and gossiping with the same sense of leisure as Parisians on the terrace of a sidewalk café, Mortenson felt sure that, despite all that they lacked , the Balti still held the key to a kind of uncomplicated happiness that was disappearing in the developing world as fast as old-growth forests. ”

Wishing you much happiness.

Best wishes!

-Sri
Comments:
Thank you for sharing, for continuing to write, I've enjoyed your posts. I just came back from a month long trip to india, few days in indore, couple weeks in Vizag, and couple weeks in Mumbai. Went to Vasai in Thane district for a couple days - fishing village on the outskirts of Bombay. The beauty and simplicity of the clear skies, and the cleaner air, simpler lives stood out in sharp contrast to the craziness that is Bombay. Much like you talk about in your holiday and life in B'lore.
Looking forward to reading more from you...
 
Hi SriLakshmi,

The word Coorg caught my eyes!! As you know I am from Kodagu/Madikeri. Please note for your and your Blog readers information there is no place called Coorg nor Mercara. That was the name imposed on the Kodava Country by the British. Yes it was neat little country till 1947!! My grandfather and up all worked for the Maharaja Of Kodagu. The Raja Seat scenery you see below is a desert when compared to what I saw 40 years back as a kid. Deforestation and hence lack of rain has had its toll. One day Maya will vist Madikeri and publish a photo from Raja Seat and it will look something from Phoneix AZ!! The paradox is all the city dwellers come to Madikeri and wish they stayed there and all the Kodavas including my father and most of us have migrated out of Kodagu to Bengalooru and other cities ... SriLakshmi that short lasting scenry you see below Raja Seat comes with a very high price tag ... We still have some 75 acres of Coffee and Cardamom estate out in Kodagu but finiding labaroures is very difficult. All of them have gone to Bengalooru to stay in a slum and work in a factory or construction or working for Ganesh Beedi!! So blank patches of land you see below your eyes is all wasted ground... after deforestation. Compared to Bengalooru, Madikeri will always be a paradise ... Thanks for taking me back to yester years from this far far west ...
best regards
anand
 
Hi Sri,

I came across your blog while searching for a French teacher in the Brigade Millenium area. Found many intersting things. However, if you know of a French teacher for my son, please do let me know.

Thanks in advance.

Nik
 
Hi Nik,
I could not write an E-mail to you, so responding to your query via my own blog comment!
My daughter used to go to French class right here in Brigade Millenium. The teacher (Divya who moved from Mauritius) lived in Mayflower block. Now she's moved to Indiranagar area. I do not know of another French teacher in this area now. Sorry :(
-Sri
 
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