Archive for April, 2008
Gilly Danda
April 27, 2008Mumbai Indians versus the Deccan’s Charge
Gilchrist’s bat did kiss and tell
Hitting the fastest hundred of IPL
At first for home crowd it didnt jell
But then they stood, applauded, saying what the hell!
Kurukshetra - A picture post
April 25, 2008Ramey and I decide to visit Kurukshetra, which is a three hour drive or so from Delhi.
Kurukshtera - the land of Mahabharata battle…an ancient region that included Panipat, where three great battles were fought…A land that has absorbed so much blood…And also the land that gave the world the great wisdom of Song Celestial - The Bhagawat Gita…A land dotted by hundreds of Theerthas…A place visited by nine of the ten Sikh Gurus…
Ramey and I fixed to meet at 6 AM, at Rajghat, and drive from there. Rajghat, the resting place of the great Mahatma, seemed such an appropriate place to start from…The great Mahatma Gandhi, who was a living commentary on the Gita…The man who stood for Ahimsa…
Heres a picture taken at Rajghat…
It was a nice drive. Some two hours down the road, we stopped for breakast at a Dhaba. Everyone was eating Aaloo Parantha and Dahee. We did likewise. Ramey also bought some fresh milk cake.
Heres that dhaba.
Past Panipat, Karnal….we reach the turn to Kurukshetra.
An arch welcomes all to the holy land. A narrow busy bazaar road leads one to the heart of the town. Heres a picture of one of the statues that one saw on the road. A statue of the might Pandava, Arjuna.
Our first stop at Kurukshetra is the Brahma Saras, a.k.a Brahma Sarovar…the sacred water tank…We find a festive atmosphere, and lots of people…The Amavasya (new moon) is about to end…People come to Brahma Saras to do Shraaddha (offer libations to their forefathers), especially on Amavasya day…
We went to the Saras, and had a refreshing dip;
Heres a picture of Ramey in front of the lake.
This is my second visit to Kurukshetra. I was here a couple of years ago, for the first time. With Ramey and his sons…Now, the second time, courtesy Ramey too..Long live Ramey!
There is a small temple of Goddess Katyayani near the Saras. A traditional Veda Paathashaala was functioning here. A group of pilgrims were sitting around a fire, and some priests were conducting a Havan…It was a Chandi Homam…And they were chanting the Devi Mahatmyam…In chaste Sanskrit…The pronunciation was perfect…Amavasya, was moving on, and the first day of Vasanta Navaratri was commencing…
I wanted to do Shraaddha, but hadnt brought any Til (sesame seeds)…I asked one of the young Brahmachari lads at the temple, and he went in and brought a small packet of Til, which I gratefully accepted. Went to a nice, quiet part of the huge garden next to the Saras, and did the Shraaddha. Ramey did his Sandhyavandanam.
In that huge garden, we saw a big statue of the Gita Upadesha scene. This wasnt there the last time we had come here. Just been made, and not yet inaugurated…It was still half-wrapped in plastic sheets…
Heres a picture…
We then hired an Auto Rickshaw and visited a few places. We first went to Jyotisar, the place that marks where Sri Krishna is said to have given the exposition of Gita…A holy tree marks the sacred spot…A Sarovar (bathing tank) has been built here…We walked down the ghat steps and sprinkled some water on ourselves…
Heres a picture of the tree that marks the Gita Upadesha place.
A nice statue of Gita is enclosed in glass, behind the tree.
Heres a closeup picture.
From Jyotisar, we go to Baan-Ganga…A temple marking the place where the mighty Bhishma lay in the bed of arrows…From there we went to the Bhadrakali temple, one of the sacred Shakti Peethas in the subcontinent. The place where Sati’s ankle fell…As per the local lore, this was where Arjuna offered worship to Durga, just before the commencement of the great war…Just prior to the exposition of Gita…
The last time around, we had visited a few more places…the Sthaneshwar Siva temple, and also the tank where Duryodhana is said to have hidden, before his final mace battle with the mighty Bheema…
Heres a picture of the towers of one of the many temples of Kurukshetra…
We left Kurukshetra around noon. Had lunch at one of the hotels on the highway. Stopped for a quick visit to the lake Karnal…Karnal, named after Karna, one of the key heroes of Mahabharata…The man immortalized as Daan-Veer, the King of those who Give…The man who could not say no to any seeker of help…
From Karnal, back to Delhi…5 pm or so…With Ramey getting a message on his cell phone…”Aaj ghar aanaa hai ki naheen?”
IPL after six…
April 22, 2008Bala!
You had asked - “What’s your take on the IPL so far after about six matches? Cricket? Entertainment? Cheerleaders?? Bollywood production??”
Well, here goes…
Cricket has been entertaining all right. You get to see Ponting and Ishant on the same side! A horror of a wicket at Eden Gardens, that turns square, keeps low, or bounces high…Some fabulous batting knocks…Lot of intensity…
It is interesting to see the body language of someone like Ponting, who is every inch a ‘Captain’, playing under another captain. Or Aussie fielders for Indian bowlers! Different cultures in one stew! It all seems a bit mixed up, and quite a free for all sometimes! But good for the game!
TV has been a flashy new world. Hunky sort of young guys doing the basic anchoring. Many preferred Mayanti Langer who did that role for the ICL tournament
. To my mind, the commentating could have been better…you still hear the same sort of value-less comments like “umpires are very strict to anything outside the legstump”, or “he is a real contender for the DLF maximum sixes award” (Which I think has been mandated for a commentator to say every time a batsman hits a six)…
Ads are just a bit bugging. Couple of times an over the screen will suddenly become smaller and an Ad will take over on a substantial ”L” part of the screen, making noises that drown the commentators words (but they have stepped down the noise now, I think). Replays have not been good enough. Ads come double-quick, and the action replay is often delayed or dropped. Some commentators have been good, tho.
Cheerleaders… quite a circus! But the choreography of the dance steps seemed substandard. ICL was better.
Bollywood… Pretty Zinta hasnt had much to cheer about! Lalit Modi with his arm around Pretty Z, or Rahul, SRK swinging in the stands, Priyanka and Robert cheering in Kolkata - all great photo ops… Politics-Bollywood-IPL, what a sangam!
So, a quick sum… Good start… but getting to be a bit of an overdose…
A days outing from Bangalore…Part-2
April 19, 2008This is in continuation of this picture post…
Date Mar 22, 2008.
From Kokrebellur, we drove down to Melkote. Its one of the most venerated places of Vishnu worship. Ranks up there along with Sri Rangam and Kancheepuram.
Melkote is a little temple town in Pandavapura region of Karnataka. The town is also known as Tiru-Narayanapuram, after the presiding deity of the temple town. And our first stop was the temple of that deity - The Tiru-Narayana temple… also known as Selva Narayana temple, the temple of Narayana of Glorious Wealth. Who is also known as Sampath-Kumar.And we had arrived at Melkote during the time of the famous Brahmostavam. Purely by happenstance.And when we reached the temple of Selva Narayana, we were told that the Lord had left on the festival procession, and would be camping near the Pushkarini water tank. So there we went. Lots of pilgrims had gathered there. Many were sitting on the steps of the tank.

After the rituals of worship were completed, the priests took that idol down the tank steps, and the idol was given a ritual bath. Lots and lots of devotees jumped in as well…some swam, while some were content to stand and take a dip in the waters. Yours truly joined the latter group. Felt really wonderful. Sky was overcast. Weather was wonderful. The atmosphere was electric. This was heaven.
The Brahmostavam at Melkote is an annual festival. On the first day of the festival, the idol is adorned with ‘Vairamudi[ - a priceless crown, whose origin is so ancient, that it is a part of mythology. Hundred thousand and more pilgrims gather at Melkote to have a glimpse of the Lord wearing the Vairamudi. This adornment is on display only for a day. On the day that we had come to Melkote, the Lord was adorned with Rajamudi - another spectacular crown, made of Gold and inlaid with precious gems. This crown was given to the temple by King Raja Wodeyar who ruled here during the 16th-17th century AD.
Here is a picture of the Utsava idol - Lord Selva Narayana with his consorts. See the Rajamudi crown on the idol of Tirunarayana in the middle.

After Darshan, we had lunch at the house of one of the priests. Delicious.
Around 3 pm, we went to the main temple that had reopened. Here is a picture of one of the carvings in the temple, Narsimha in a pillar.
Then we climbed up the hill, to visit the Narsimha temple on top. It was a stiff climb, and left us quite breathless. It started raining as well, more than a drizzle, but not very heavy either. Sharing one umbrella between the two of us, taking shelter here and there, we made our way up. Here is a picture from somewhere up there….
IPL - The Premier’s Premiere
April 18, 2008It was the opener for IPL tonight
Entertainment taken to a new new height
McCallum blazed like a new Bradman might
And Ishant Sharma was Lancelot, King Arthur’s Knight.
IPL had all the Kings horses and all the kings men
Pawar, Modi, SRK, Mallya, every cock and hen,
Money rules, money rules, money is God and Zen,
Money has put Humpty-Dumpty together again.
Why Woodlands Drive in was special…
April 17, 2008One of my friends, Sowmya Simhan, who founded and runs an NGO that deals with Disability issues, wrote to me about the restaurant.
Physically challenged, she drives around in a specially designed scooter, and is more active than most people.
Sowmya had this to say about the ‘old reliable’.
I give her mail below.
***
dear kamesh,
actually i am very sad today. You know why. because
of the closure of woodlands drive in. You know it was
such a wonderful place. I have been going there for
the past 20 yrs because they used to serve in our
vehicle. I used to sit in my scooter and eat. Even
when you had to go inside there was no steps etc. so
it made things very easy for me.prices were also very
cheap. no parking problem. i cld go there all alone
also.you can be as long as you pl. it was so very
wonderful. we can never get something like this again
in chennai. its a great loss to the glory of chennai.
all that i hope now is that these polituicians dont
mess it up by making it another concrete jungle.
sowmya
****
Sowmya runs an organization called Sukriti Social Foundation.
You can see their website at http://www.sukriti.org/
And you can know more about Sowmya at:
For whom the Cathedral bells tolled….
April 12, 2008They closed down Woodlands Drive in yesterday.
Cathedral Road, Chennai, will never be the same again.
Todays Hindu reports that by an order of the High Court, the drive in restaurant stands closed from Friday 11, Feb, 2008. Feels as if one more nail has been driven into the coffin of ‘old and gentle’ Madras. Woodlands Drive in : Rest in Peace.
The saving grace is that it seems that the Government wants to convert that campus into a botanical / horticulture garden. Thats what they say. Time will tell.
Woodlands belongs to the collective memory of most who have been in Chennai (e.k.a Madras city). A sort of Mysore touch in the middle of Madras - A Malgudi hotel on the road that connected Marina to Gemini Studio. One still remembers the arch of Gemini Studio at that end of Cathedral Road. All that has gone. The friendly environment of USIS Library (United States Information Service, that was in the US Consulate there), has been trasformed into an Alcatraz sort of barbwired fortress. And the last of the bastions, the friendly Woodlands Drive In restaurant, has now downed its shutters.
What a watering hole it was. People from all walks of life converged there. There were the legends like the famous playback singer PB Srinivasan, with his characteristic cap, a dozen pens sticking out of his shirt pocket, sitting in the Self-service side of that restaurant, composing and writing lyrics for new songs. Industrialists like Arjun Raja, who would come directly from Board Meetings, to enjoy the open-air-ambiance, delicious tiffin and coffee. Or the youngsters from colleges nearby. Families…And the germinators of Software Industry - the young colts from TCS offices in Lloyds Road, Cathedral Road and Bishop Wallers Avenue….
Tin-steel-topped tables. Old fashioned wooden chairs. A choice of dishes. A just-right dish of Pongal Avial, a cool-cool dish of Bagaala Bath, a greasy spread of Chana-Batura, a nice large plate of Masala Dosa, or simple dishes of bisi-bele-bath, or tomato rice with pachdi…Coffee in Tumbler-Davara, sugar seperate.
And after that, to relax on the circular platform in the shade of the spreading Peepal tree, chewing pieces of poisonous paakku (supaari).
After a lapse of many years, by some stroke of providence, I visited “Woodlands Drive In” just a week ago. On a hot afternoon, I walked across to the restaurant, and had a plate of Chana-Batura. I had no idea that it was going to be closed down soon, but did get a sepulchral sort of feeling as I looked around. But the old tastes still lingered. The old waiters were still there. It was like seeing an old, classic, black and white movie, once more. It felt like home.
That home now is no more.
Goodbye Woodlands Drive in. Goodbye you ‘old reliable’, and God Bless.
***
Folks! The Memorial Register is open. Type in your tributes.
Time was when men were…
April 10, 2008This post is from Dan Balan, free thinker, author, classmate, a Chicagoan… One of the few who feels and touches time…He wrote this piece as a mail to his classmates - a bunch of us, who, among other stuff, have seen a lot of movies together…
***Dan’s mail below***
Dear Classmates,
Charlton Heston, one of the greatest Hollywood actors, has died. He acted in epic movies like Ben-Hur, Ten Commandments, The Agony and the ecstasy, and many others. He played historical roles as Moses, El Cid, John the Baptist, Judas Benhur, Julius caesar( which I enacted in high school myself for which I won the best actor in 10th std.).
He symbolized Hollywood in an era of larger-than-life movies. These movies were more than simply celluloid; they conveyed an american ethos, virtuous, righteous, and one that seemed even right. The world saw America through Hollywood movies. Hollywood became synonymous with America and vice-versa. It was an explicit era of good triumphing evil; righteousness restored and the wrong punished.
Heston was in the company of Montgomery Clift, Robert Mitchum( Ryan’s daughter ), Clark Gable, John wayne and many immortal Hollywood names. BenHur won eleven Oscars. The only other movie in recent times to win a bumper crop was the Titanic.
The movies made then had historical plots, elaborate settings, extensive cast, and enchan ting scenes. Who could forget the chariot races in Benhur, or the parting of the Red Sea in Ten Commandments… It was the era of the magnum opus in Hollywood when Heston reigned.
Contemporaneously, the movies produced in India then were also historicals. NT Rama Rao, Sivaji, MGR and others played roles from chronicles of history. That era is over now, perhaps never to return.
Charlton Heston was from Chicago, attended Northwestern University where he studied acting and speech.
He cut his chops in Chicago theatre, where he played biblical roles. At 6′ 2″, he was imposing with a handsome face, vulnerable, heroic, tender, and rugged all at once— he had no difficulty cracking Hollywood .
In later years Heston was the frontend for NRA–the national Rifle association, the lobbying group that advocates right to bear arms. He also worked for Screen Actors Guild tirelessly.
Three years ago, President Bush awarded him the Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honor. It’s the equivalent of Bharat Ratna in India.
Another page in history has turned…. the world moves on…
-bd
A days outing from Bangalore
April 7, 2008The date was 22-Mar-08, Saturday.
Shankar has a list of places-to-go in the intray of his mind, and after evaluating a few, we decided that we would do a days trip to Melkote and there-around.
We left at around 6:30 am or so. It was drizzling a wee bit. We took off on the route to Mysore. Shankar had his old reliable Santro, whose tyre took a liking to some nail on the way, grounding us for a while, while Shankar’s driver got the spare tyre into play.
As per plan, first stop was Kokrebellur, where the noise of mind gives way to the divine in the form of village folks and birds.
Having dropped off the demands of workaday centrifuge, with minds somewhat less cluttered, we drove down the highway Mysore.
Somewhere near Bidadi, our mind’s sensors picked up some signals, and so we deviated from the main road, and drove down a few kilometres to Dhyana Peetham. After a brief tour of the Ashram, we proceeded with our trip. More signals, and we stopped at Aprameya Swami temple at Doddamallur. This is just past Chennapatna…Go past the bridge, and there it is, on the left side of the highway, going towards Mysore. This is a nice old temple, where Saint Purandaradasa sang that immortal song “Jagadodharana”.
A group of some 30 or more ladies were chanting Vishnu Sahasranama when we went in. Even as we completed our Darshan of the Lord, the Sahasranamam also concluded.
The Yatra was proceeding nicely. Like a river flowing on its own.
From Doddamallur, we went towards Mandya, stopping for breakfast somewhere along the way, where we also got the tyre-puncture fixed. The next stop: Destination Kokrebellur. This is a little village near Muddur which is famous for its birds. Painted storks and Pelicans come here for nesting, every year, and Shankar had researched and figured that this was a good time to go sight them. That meant going off the highway and taking some narrow and rough roads. Which always is always a good thing to do. For you then see some ‘unmarked’ sights.
We had stopped to chat with some villagers to figure out the way to Kokrebellur. And in the timeless way of rural India, we had to breathe in the ‘local presence’ first, before we wandered into the future. And as a part of that ritual, the villagers asked us to climb a small ridge on the left of the road. We clambered up some mud and stone…Slippery bund….
And heres what we saw from the top.
And on the other side of the road was green fields, as far as eye could see.
With some divine visitors from the sky camping out on the green.
With some guesses, asks, and turns, we finally reached Kokrebellur.
Kokrebellur means - ‘the village of storks’.
Pelicans and painted storks are ancient visitors to this village. And like some other parts of village India, here too, the village has adopted these visitors as their own family. And they take care of these winged visitors with all the concern given to Gods and children. They look forward to the arrival of these birds every year, ensure that no one disturbs them at all, help with hatching eggs that have fallen off…In general, they let the birds be, and in return, they get the droppings of the birds, which is precious fertilizer.
We parked the car on the main road, and walked in to one street that ran into the village. A pretty street. A pretty picture.

Soon a swarm of busy kids buzzed around us, shouting all at the same time “muree, muree, muree….”… which means, baby-birds… They wanted to show us nests and little birds…
Heres a picture of the kids….’Smile please….’, lovely village children guileless smiles.

All around the village, migratory birds from I-dont-know-where were perched on all trees. So many of them. With my simple look-and-shoot digital camera I couldnt get clear pictures. But heres one anyway, where you can make out birds on the tree top.

These birds are parivrajakas - peripatetic. Moving all over the world. They come for a few months every year to this perch in Karnataka. And the villagers welcome their coming. Like welcoming the village daughter coming home for delivering a child. And in the rare event that the birds dont come in a particular year, they know that the birds have sensed a drought. And that the seasons will not be good. For the villagers, the birds are the harbingers of goodness.
We focus on a mother bird perched in its nest. With some ‘murees’ at its feet. It is in perfect stillness. There is silence. Except for the song of the wind, the sounds of birds, and the occasional laughter of kids in joy. Silence is not about decibels. Its about the state of mind…
That bird up there is a sage.
Here is a picture.

With some reluctance, we walk back from this garden of eden, trudging our way to the car, followed by the happy gaggle of kids….
….To be contd….
















