Mumbai, Day 2
- At August 27, 2023
- By Jessica
- In Travel
- 0
Slightly exhausted from last night's reveling we woke up early to attend a Mumbai Mela. A "mela" can best be described as a cross between a folkloric and a bar mitzvah.
It was great fun! Colorful entertainment, turban tying, bangle making, henna painting, and more.
We rushed back to the ship to shower and eat lunch then off to what was billed as a custom tour of private art collections and high tea at the Taj Mahal Hotel.
Upon returning to the pier, we had the following conversation :
Jessica: I wonder what happened to all the dogs we saw last night.
Eberhard: Check your lunch.
Our first stop after lunch (chicken, not dog) was the city's arts district. There are many cultural institutions here, such as the National Gallery, Institute of Science, and Prince of Wales Museum. The architecture is a mix of Victorian Gothic (late 19th c) mixed with Art Deco (early 20th c). The Prince of Wales Museum was built in 1904 for the then POW's 1905 visit. We saw art and artifacts very steeped in Hinduism. No private art collections. Duped again.
Then we headed to the Taj Mahal Hotel for high tea. Taj = crown, Mahal = palace. The story goes that Jamshetji Tata, an Indian salt, cotton, and opium tycoon was turned away by all the elegant hotels in Bombay despite his vast wealth and prominence. During colonial times these hotels posted the following notice: Dogs and Indians not allowed. He decided he would build his own hotel. The Taj, opened in 1903, was the first Indian-owned hotel in Bombay, the first building in Bombay to have electricity, and the first licensed bar in Bombay (the latter not until 1946.)
Tata traveled around Europe, cherry-picking the best each country had to offer, such as elevators from Germany. The current management proudly boasted that its German equipment is still functioning. Eberhard could say the same.
Lots of famous people stayed here from Alfred Hitchcock to Barack Obama.
George Harrison got guitar lessons from Ravi Shankar here.
This really is the trip of a lifetime. If our ashes are strewn in the Ganges River think we get to do it again?
Not planning to test that theory any time soon!
Mumbai, Day 1
- At August 20, 2023
- By Jessica
- In Travel
- 0
We were completely unprepared for how stunning Mumbai is. We've read many books about the slums, political and religious strife, gang rapes, hotel massacres, and vast disparity between rich and poor. All of that exists amidst architecture that is magnificent and grand, thousands of trees, a beautiful beach that runs the length of the city like a sparkling collar. It is extremely painful, however, to see barefoot children and babies living on trash-strewn streets.
An astonishing 62 percent of Mumbai's 22 million population live in slums or on the street. Many others live in dilapidated housing with no gas lines and toilets without water. Yet every other building looks like it's part of Oxford University.
Imagine walking down Fifth Avenue and a cow is blocking rush hour traffic. That's just what happened to us today in Mumbai. Alas.... Bovines, bovines everywhere, but not a steak to eat in this mostly vegetarian culture.
It was a beautiful, breezy, not so humid day in Mumbai or what is still called Bombay by the locals. In 1534, the Portuguese named the city Bom (big) bahai (postal area) - not very glamorous when you dissect it, is it? The city came under the control of the British Crown in 1661 and was immediately leased to The East India Company for 10 pounds per year. The name was changed to Mumbai, as part of the Decolonization Act in 1995. The city's name is derived from Mumbadevi, the patron goddess of the fisherfolk who migrated to the islands from Gujarat centuries ago.
Mumbai is India's wealthiest city, home to Bollywood, and beautiful art deco cinema palaces and hotels reminiscent of Miami Beach. Originally, the city was seven islands inhabited mostly by fisherman and salt merchants. Fortification and land reclamation efforts undertaken by the British made one land mass. This project was completed in 1918, which explains the preponderance of art deco buildings along the shore.
Victoria Terminus Train Station is a magnificent building melding multiple architectural styles. It is beautifully lit up at night, apparently electrified for the G20 meeting.
Trains are the city's lifeline, where 8 million people commute daily. Local trains leave every three minutes and have NO AC. Each train has twelve coaches of which three are exclusively for women. During the lengthy security procedures every time we get on or off the boat, men and woman must be separated.
It is fascinating to us how common it is to have many generations of family living together under the same roof of a rambling old apartment. Our dinner hosts have a 50 year old son, his wife and child, and their 45 year old unmarried son all living with them. She says, "It's a party all the time." We just read a book called Family Matters by Rohinton Mistry (yes the same author as A Fine Balance) on this subject. It was terrific.
Mumbai is known for its diversity of neighborhoods so we embarked on a walking tour to get a first hand feel. One area looks like Embassy Row in Washington, DC, lined as it is by former English private clubs. We were invited by friends to fine at their club last night. The club is still named after British Lord Willington.
The Malabar Hill neighborhood faces the Arabian Sea. One of Jessica's book groups read The Widows of Malabar Hill a couple of years ago. Another interesting read.
According to Hindu religion, ashes of dead persons must run through the waters of the sacred River Ganges in order to return to the cycle of life to be reborn. The Ganges does not run through Mumbai but human beings are nothing if not resourceful so we visited this lake fed by a fresh water spring reputed to originate at the Ganges.
Before 10 am every morning Mumbai residents can be found performing these death rituals. First they immerse the ashes of the deceased, then they shave their heads, (there is an enterprising barber at the lake,) then they bathe, then they go to temple but only after ten days of mourning.
After our fascinating walking tour of Old Mumbai, we proceeded to a fashion designer's home/showroom. The charming Portuguese style home has been in the designer's family for 220 years. Jessica made a new friend in the dressing room - Sangeeta. We will meet her again. Needless to say, we made a huge contribution to the Indian economy before leaving the shop.
Certainly the highlight of the day was a wonderful dinner with our friends mentioned earlier. Their club is gorgeous, like stepping back in time to the Raj era. And we let them order for us so we sampled a smorgasbord of Indian delicacies. We wonder how you say smorgasbord in Hindi?
It was a little creepy coming back late at night. The port is abandoned save for starving packs of stray dogs (and we don't just mean the cab drivers). Next time we travel abroad we're going to pack a suitcase full of dog biscuits.
Goa, Southern India
- At August 13, 2023
- By Jessica
- In Travel
- 0
The state of Goa was the cultural center of Portuguese India for 450 years. Its capital is called Vasco da Gama City. This was the first region in India colonized by Europe, and the last to get its freedom in 1961. Nowhere in India, we've been told, is the colonial influence so prominent. About a third of Goans are Catholic and the colonial styles of the Old Town extend to many private homes. Among its magnificent cathedrals and monasteries, the Sé Cathedral is one of the largest churches in Asia. The Basilica of Bom Jesus, one of India's finest examples of baroque architecture, holds the remains of St.Francis Xavier, the city's patron saint. Hindu mosques and temples are also ubiquitous here….as are slums and heaps of trash.
Cave drawings prove that hunter/gatherers lived here at least 30,000 years ago. During the 16th and 17th centuries, the town was ravaged by malaria.It is one of the wettest areas in India and one of the most fertile. The climate lends itself perfectly to growing spices, especially pepper. It also provides the ideal habitat for crocodiles.
As an adjunct to the spice trade, Ayurvedic medicine is big here. Goa has 33 beaches (and 300 churches) and is known for having been a hippie Mecca in the 1960s. Goans are entitled to Portuguese passports and pride themselves on equal legal and financial protection for every man, woman, and child. Prior to Portuguese colonization, the Arab countries bought spices from Goan Muslims. The plantations were and are Hindu owned, often for hundreds of years in the same family. The local Muslims acted as middlemen due to the language barrier. When the Portuguese came they by-passed the local traders and dealt directly with the Hindus. They were desperate for pepper because salt cured meat only stays edible for 6 months but pepper preserved meat and fish for over two years. Also, pepper killed threadworm and other parasites. Feeding all those sailors during the Age of Exploration was no easy feat.
In light of this thirst for spices, and because we're maxed out on pagodas, temples, and mosques, we decided to visit an actual spice plantation.
Here's a synopsis of what we learned down on the farm:
- Betelnuts were the first CBD gummies
- Fenni is a 40 proof alcoholic beverage made from the fruit of the cashew tree after the nut is removed.
- The biggest cash crop in Goa is the cashew!
- Pepper is a terrestrial parasitic plant. It has no leaves or chlorophyll of its own. The flowers smell terrible and are pollinated by flies and beetles.
- Pepper mixed with honey cures a cough.
- Pepper brewed as tea "eliminates" an upset stomach.
- Vanilla is also a parasite. The best vanilla comes from Madagascar where tiny indigenous hummingbirds pollinate the vanilla plants. Vanilla grows in Goa but the hummingbirds do not so the plantation uses toothpicks to pollinate the plants manually.
- The best cure for migraines is a tea brewed from lemongrass, ginger, and cardamom.
- Coconut trees live up to 300 years. They have no season and produce fruit four times a year
- Turmeric is used as an anti-bacterial and anti-cancer agent. Indian women mix it with yogurt to use as a face mask
- Cinnamon comes from the bark of the cinnamon but the leaves are used as a bay leaf substitute and the oil, called Indian Magic Oil, is extracted and applied for pain relief.
- Nutmeg (fruit) and mace (leaf) are from the same tree.
- Basil is called "holy" and the "Queen of Spices" because it increases the oxygen in the body and is basically good for everything (especially with tomatoes and mozzarella.)
- Chewing on green cardamom relieves motion sickness
A couple of other observations, not related to spices:
We have seen swastikas liberally painted throughout India and Sri Lanka.
According to our guide, it is a Hindu symbol of peace. According to Google,
"The word swastika comes from Sanskrit, meaning 'conducive to well-being'. In Hinduism, the right-facing symbol (clockwise) is called swastika, symbolizing surya('sun'), prosperity and good luck, while the left-facing symbol (counter-clockwise) is called sauwastika, symbolising night. In Jain symbolism, it represents Suparshvanatha – the seventh of 24 Tirthankaras (spiritual teachers and saviours), while in Buddhist symbolism it represents the auspicious footprints of the Buddha."
Delightfully, there are little cows sitting everywhere along the roads like household pets sit on porches elsewhere.
Milkbones for Bovines, anyone?