Wednesday, April 04, 2012

The Forgotten People of Bhaktapur


The majesty of the Himalayas need to be experienced to be even savoured while describing it...As my flight neared Nepal, the white, serenely beautiful range of mountains materialised as if out of nowhere, perched amidst the clouds with little else from the earth for company...

For a moment, I rued that the camera's lens can never match the beauty that the human eye sees. However, my imagination crash-landed into reality on landing at Kathmandu and later as our pickup traversed dusty unpaved roads that criss-crossed kachcha houses towards one of the few star-hotels of the city. By then I had mentally decided that my stay in the Himalayan Kingdom could not end within the luxurious confines of the hotel and the false sense of decadence it lent to my first impressions of the country. 


So when a couple of friends suggested a visit to Bhaktapur, I leapt at the chance. Bhaktapur was the capital of Nepal once, I'm told, during the reign of the Malla kings till about the late fifteenth century. Walking into this world heritage site was much like stepping into a time warp.  I wish there was an easier way to describe the scale of architectural splendour that Bhaktapur proudly claims as its own. For, unless I explain the splendour, I cannot give you a sense of the struggle life must be for those that live and eke out a living in that mausoleum of royalty. 

Turn your camera in any direction and you are offered an exquisite frame. Temples, pagodas, shikharas - Hinduism and Buddhism melt symbiotically into one another, into a blend that only the Nepalese understand. Little has changed, except for the single lines of electricity wires untidily criss-crossing the skies and snaking into houses through the elaborately carved latticed windows. The grandeur of these speak about a prosperous past, but the little done for its maintenance and the dirty tattered curtains that flutter about speak of an abject poverty - about life struggling to keep its head afloat amongst the glorious ruins of a royal past.
                                           
As you walk into the majestically vast expanses of the Durbar Square, the dragons guarding the gates appear cold even in the hot merciless sun, stony in their perusal of the gawky tourists invading their grounds. The local population have largely learnt to ignore the invasion of their privacy, the constant clicks of camera shutters focussed on their doors and windows, voyeuristically capturing their daily lives - from the vegetables they eat to the clothes they wear. Equally insouciant are the flies that hover about...flitting from the heaped garbage here and there straight on to the faces of the mammoth dragons guarding every building in the vicinity. 
If they could talk they would have narrated their years of glory, soaked in the knowledge of their importance and relevance, and also of the sharp fall from grace as Bhaktapur gave way to Kathmandu as the capital - slowly slipping off the radar completely till UNESCO rescued the city from oblivion, marking it as a World Heritage Site. 

 Tourism, for the locals of Bhaktapur is the only way of life, this is a city that the tourists keep afloat. Every shop has roughly the same wares - while some have cheap trinkets, masks and souvenirs, the others make a killing on the soft as a cloud Pashmina. I must say I came back much more knowledgeable about Pashminas and far lighter in the wallet too...but that's besides the point. 

The narrow alleyways that once housed prosperous merchants now are barely functional residences, with their fronts converted into roadside stalls. I wonder if there is a fixed price for anything across Nepal, Bhaktapur was no different. The same woman that sold me a Buddha statue and a pair of earrings for about three fifty Indian rupees fleeced another for cheap earrings for about a thousand rupees. And she did it without batting an eyelid! 
                                         
Bargaining is the only way out, but somewhere you wonder if the value of the trinket that you coveted wasn't too cheapened by the ruthlessness of the trade. Then again, I guess, when survival boils down to a few rupees cajoled here and there, ethical selling is the last thought on the shopkeeper's mind too. If you are gullible, you are the fool. 

 The slaps of bright paint advertising Coca Cola appear rather incongruous, like an assault on the landscape that has largely changed little. The rickety boards that advertise 'Internet Cafe with lightning speeds' in dark pigeon-holed rooms deep inside the walled city leaves you with bubbles of incredulous laughter threatening to erupt. These are chords of dissonance - the attempt by the twenty first century world to make its presence felt in the forgotten metropolis. 

 As the sun climbed higher and the fatigue began to dim the need to explore the hidden alleyways, we sought 'modernity' - a cafe that wasn't in darkness, that could offer a modicum of hygiene and perhaps clean, western loos. The relief that we felt when we chanced upon one such is indescribable. Calling it quaint and charming now sounds hypocritical, for it had toilet paper and coffee machines churning out cappuccinos and moccachinos. Ohh and did I mention free wi-fi? As I sat in the cafe, sipping my coffee and re-connecting with the civilisation that seemed lightyears away, the sound track playing in my mind was the much stereotyped Dum Maaro Dum and Kaanchi Re Kaanchi Re from the film that made Nepal famous on the Indian silver screen - Hare Rama Hare Krishna... 

I was the quintessential tourist, intruding into every corner that I could, exploiting the lost splendour of a once proud city and its inhabitants. Today they are voiceless as I invade their privacy and thrust cameras in their face as if they were in a living zoo and in exchange throw a few rupees their way. I haggle my way, look for cheap bargains and consider everything overpriced. I am not proud, I was the tourist and this is how tourists behave. Each local calls himself a guide and offers his services for a hundred cheaper than what was quoted by the earlier person that approached you. I wait for the dirt-cheap offer and finally decide I could just read it all off the wikipedia.  
                                                    
 As I leave Bhaktapur hours later, my van kicks up a massive cloud of dust. I cover my face and hide my eyes behind sunglasses. But a terrible sense of unease tells me if I were to visit this forgotten city ten years from now, little would have changed, except for maybe an odd daub of paint here or there.

 

15 comments:

  1. This is the story of all 'tourist' towns and places. 'the local population have largely learnt to ignore the invasion of their privacy' is so true. They live in squalor behind imposing facades and eke out a living. The traders are outsiders, who employ the locals at a pittance. I can understand your unease and your behaving like a 'tourist'. Travelogue with a heart :)

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    1. Zephyr: True, but I guess this soul-searching happened because I guess this is my first visit to a nation where Indian currency is premium and preferred too! So far travels have been just about discovering the beauty of places that so far have only been visited through books. Suddenly, I was in a beautiful city - a place where royals can still descend in their splendour and walk through the Durbar square in a parade and they would hardly feel out of place. Those that are, are the locals living there now..peddling a past to make ends meet in the present...:/

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  2. Interesting narration and lovely pictures. I guess most smaller tourist places are exactly the way you have described them.

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    1. Sad that there is little done isn't it? In India, V, most places don't really have people living within the confines of the 'tourist spots' or mausoleums we visit, do they? I think that's what hit me most. People living in these really old buildings, solid because they were built at a time when things were only built that way. But that was all that was ever done.. remember those gorgeous victorian houses and castles in britain. Today they are modern abodes, with modern trappings and the heritage preserved..here that heritage is still providing sustenance.. Sad, but true..

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  3. didn't know anything about this place. thanx for sharing. but the story is really grim. nothing can be more heart-wrenching than watching the remnants of a glorious past.

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    1. Debajyoti, if you ever decide to take a trip to Nepal, ensure a day trip to Bhaktapur from Kathmandu is part of the itinerary. Its just about 13kms away from Kathmandu. :)

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  4. A thoughtful post by a wanderer who looked for the soul of a lost town in its crevices and corners and the faces of its people. Your observations such as the ones on the symbiosis of Hinduism and Buddhism that only Nepalese understand, and the slap of garish paint crying Coca Cola amidst the splendour of temples, pagodas, shikharas, dragons and gates, are profound.

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    1. It was a really humbling experience in a manner of speaking, in fact my whole visit to Nepal was an eye-opening experience...one part of it that I didn't write was, when we were leaving, there was this young woman, who came running towards us with satin mobile pouches that probably sell in India for about 100 a piece wholesale or at Dilli Haat. She was offering 5 for 100 and it suddently made me wonder what would be the margin she makes? 10 or 20 Nepalese rupees? How many do you have to sell one day to make ends meet? and how many do buy five pouches in one go??

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    2. You are a kind soul, Deepthy.

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  5. The post has a very Tolkenish feel to it Deeps; you beautifully captured the vibrant and magical energy of the place :)

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    1. Haha, thank you Drama Kumari for being one of those friends who suggested we go there..had you not suggested, we would not have gone there! So I have you to thank for!! :) Glad you liked it!!

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  6. This was a beautiful post and very vivid account of the long lost town of Bhaktapur!Ever since your guest post in Zephyr's blog I have loved the way you write and am following your blog now:)

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    1. Rahul: Welcome to my blog, I'm glad you liked the piece. The only recurring theme in my blog is that it's a hundred per cent original. Unlike the Zephyr, mine has little focus..It's just an online diary. But would love to hear from you time and again about my posts..:)

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  7. There was a magical aura to your words in this post. Beautifully narrated.

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    1. Choco: Thanks, its lovely to see you back here..:)

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