Awaiting the Millennium in Bangalore - a retrospect of the
last two Millenniums.
Sitting in Bangalore, perched up on her 3000-feet-above-sea altitude
(12deg 57' N. Lat and 77deg 35' E. Long.), feeling chilled and important,
surveying all around, and presuming that we are at the center of the universe,
only the fear of isolation brings us back to reality, to find that in today's
mad-rush world, we are but a 'dot' in a sentence of time. And if anyone
had to put down the things that Bangalore was famous for into a 'time-capsule'
and bury it till someone from the 'fourth millennium' finds it and wonders
how we ever survived for the period we have already crossed. Let them wonder,
we know we are living now in the present and that's counts. I am not going
to deal with the name of the City of Bangalore, although some are curious
about it. Perhaps in print it is well known, but on the Net, it is something
new. Let us say that there is a story about a King Vira Ballala who was
lost while hunting and turned up at an old woman's hut. She offered her
hospitality of shelter for the night and also offered him the only thing
she had that was beans to eat. These beans were called 'bengalu', and the
story took root so that when the Chief of Magadi, Kempe Gowda set up his
Capital, it was referred to as Hale Bengaluru, and corrupted to Bangalore!
When we enter into the new millennium (Y2K! as it's so called!), we tend
to get into a philosophical attitude, and we like to do retrospection on
the last century, that's the longest any of us could have lived. But there
are also memories that go way beyond that, some happy and some sad. India
being an old land has many faces of culture that has trickled down the
ages, through her local inhabitants (Vedic Age and the Epic Age, Buddhism,
Jainism, Guptas, Rajputs, Deccan and Gujarat, and the Maratha and Tamil
Kingdoms), and some added through her invaders and visitors. Going back
to the first millennium, we find that the trade between India and the rest
of the world was in coarse materials, like jute, spices, silks, and basic
labour intensive handicrafts. What was introduced into India from the Middle
East (then commonly referred to as Persia), China and Europe, was the methods
of life styles and communication of Islam, Judaism, Buddhist and Christian
cultures. We do need to remember those who have gone before us, fighting
for the freedom of our lands, fighting for justice, fighting hunger. Some
imprisoned wrongly, some killed for what they believed, some for because
who they are, some even make to wear a broom behind them so that they have
to sweep away their footprints. Don't we all like to forget these sad days?
What about those innocent women, men and children who were killed by tyrant
rulers of our lands. Is it poetic justice that we bring in the new millennium
with all the blowing of whistles and sounding of horns without pausing
for a moment in time to remember to remember? The soldiers who died in
a foreign land, just because they followed their adventurous spirit. For
those foreigners coming to our lands, there were options for soldiering
to be taken as a trade. What is so remarkably unnerving is that the very
people who sent them here, would not pay for their way back, so many just
drifted around, losing their identity, their families who accompanied them,
had no resource to go back, were poor and either the widows took to remarrying
or become part of the orphans that were so numerous, that orphanages were
more in number than churches. If you really want to step into time, 200
years into the past, all you have to do is visit the Agram Cemetery, and
you can read the headstones of the graves of those who died here. Not all
died of wars, many died of sickness (cholera, diptheria, malaria, dysentry),
children if they were alive after 4 to 5 years would somehow survive till
their 30's to 40's. These were the people that actually developed our city
called Bangalore. They imported ideas on sanitation, fighting the sickness,
establishing proper housing, roads, transportation, welfare, education,
and so many positive points, but because some of us who are narrow minded
enough to forget that we are what we are today because of them. I am not
saying that the other locals did not do anything, it was only after the
arrival of these people and their way of life that the others stepped in
to do their share. We have a fortunate heritage that brings with it goodness
like intellectual learning, religion, culture, but at the same time we
tend to forget that some of these same intellectual beings practiced and
practice casteism, indifference to the sufferings of the poor, the homeless,
the dying, the aged. Somehow, we Indians have kept a certain tradition
of looking after the aged because of joint families, but soon that is disappearing
as more and more young people are going their own ways. There is the call
to new futures overseas, to the so called lands of 'milk and honey',
where you are always the 'second class citizen', yet you love to go there,
leaving behind your heritage, your culture, your way of life, your food,
your families, your freedom
Looking at India from the Southern approach, Education was one of the
primary visual imported outputs. Introduction of trade, the new methods
of manufacture, the later influence of the East India Company, the Forts
that were established to safeguard a small population of expatriates. In
Cochin, there is the influence of the Jews, in Kerala and Madras the influence
of St. Thomas and the Christians, also the Dutch and French. The Mysore
and Bangalore areas were later under the influence of Hyder Ali and Tippu
(Tipoo). Small individual kingdoms of the South. These small rulers alienated
themselves to the Portuguese, Dutch, French and the British depending on
the political need, and advantage that it brought to them. The Portuguese
had lots of influence in the early period when the Jesuits were the advisors
at the courts of many a Raja. The Dutch could not hold much sway, being
chased from the East coast to the West and then finally out, not before leaving
a legacy in Cochin (Kochi). The French
somehow had a longer span, opening trading posts at Surat and then in Pondicherry,
till finally they also moved. But one must also have a background that
India was used as a chess board between the European countries, as it reflected
the wars and alliances of European powers. Sometimes they were allies sometimes
they were forced to be foes. The Portuguese after their hand at the East
coast, took up a strong bastion at Goa till recently they handed over to
India their property rights.
Bangalore being more or less between the coasts, had a certain amount
of stability, but at the same time there was much to guard from the local
chieftains who would try their hand at anarching the city. Mysore being
the principal city, the capital of what we call today as Karnataka, soon
found that it was not much to look forward to, and the British handed over
the rule to the local rulers, and moved from Seringapatam (after the defeat
of Tipu Sultan on 4th May 1799) to Bangalore (around 1800, the British
were in control of the Fort in the Pettah for Administration, thereafter,
they occupied the Cantonment a few years later. This is evident from the
fact that burials at the Agram Cemetery start around 1809, and the earlier
ones would have been around the Fort.) apparently for health purposes and
maybe closer to Madras. Just a impish thought … wonder what the state of
Bangalore would have been if the British had not defeated Tippu?!! … just
imagine our 'beauties' of Bangalore in purdha!! Thinking of what happened
at Mysore during Tippu's rule, it's quite a reality. Our 'dance' villages
would have been of a slightly different sort, remember that there were dancers at
the Persian courts…. the ones that could be popping rubies from their navels!!
Nothing serious, lets have a giggle for the millennium!!
Back to Bangalore, I really must have more control on my ramblings,
but this is the last time I am doing so for the century, so why not! I
was told to 'go for it!', wasn't sure what to go for!! There are some areas
that I have not done justice during the last three years, but I will do
so now, in this presentation for the millennium. I have had the time to
photograph new areas of my city of Bangalore, meet new people, such beautiful
people, and what is more striking is that the older generation are so concerned
about their city, and caring enough to invite me to visit them to capture
time.
Come along with me now, to these areas, to meet some of these people,
and share in the memories of Bangalore that they treasure still and now
you will see a little while more.
In August 1898, Bangalore suffered a set back in her healthy climate.
A plague broke out and the residents where forced to spread far and away
form the areas that were most affected. The Administration decided that
the cultivation lands around the Basavangudi Temple which lies to the South
of the Fort is ideal. It is open, it is the highest part of the City, and
so this was the place that needed to be immediately set up, with temporary
sheds for sheltering people. At first this area was for a few houses, but
gadually the demand was pushed for more and more settlements day by day.
Before this got out of hand, the Administration decided at once to lay out
a permanent extension of the City to meet the demand that had risen due
to the people leaving their original homes, avoiding contamination. This
resulted in the acquiring of 440 acres of dry cultivation land at the source
of the Vrishabhavati, and laid out as a suburb, named after the Temple
of Basaveswara (Bull God, also referred to as the Bull Temple), erected
by Kempe Gowda. Another suburb, named Malleswaram, after the Temple in
that area was also established, and 291 acres of land were acquired for
this suburb. These two areas made up around 731 acres, compared to the
City which was around 500 acres. It was said that when the extensions would
be completed, they would prove to be model hygenic suburbs, and are expected
to more advanced than some of the more affluent towns in British Colonial
India. In fact, it is reported that for symmetry, for regularity of street
frontages, for accessibility by the shortest routes, for air spaces and
public squares, for convenience of conservancy and perfect drainage, there
can be equalled to some of the recent cities in America at that time, which
was around 1900.
A few more areas that have to be updated are the suburbs on the Eastern
side of Bangalore about 100 kms, and another I hope to do shortly is Mysore.
Of course the Flowers of Bangalore have always a place in my heart, and
on my page. Whenever I see a beautiful flower or a garden I try to capture
it on film and share it with others.
There are other areas that I have photographed and which have not yet
appeared on India Hello Bangalore Walla Namaskara! I tried to get some
photographs of beautiful bungalows that I wasn't able to cover in my early
pages on Towns and Houses, but ran into some walls like, Tenant - Landlord
tussles, which leaves the poor building in a status quo condition. This
is probably the case in quite a lot of old bungalows that were leased out
under the Rent Control Act, and today when the lease is over, the Landlord
cannot get the house back. I don't envy the Landlords, because some of
these properties are very large, and beautiful, and probably on a ridiculous
rent! At the same time, but for the Tenants, these houses would have fallen
to the builders because of the boom in property rates and artificial advertised
claims. Bangalore really fell to the axe due to unscrupulous builders who
just went about demolishing old bungalows and today quite a few buildings
have not been completed because the bubble burst on the climbing rates,
and everything was exposed.
Before I leave you to visit my Bangalore, I would like you to pause
for a moment, and bring before you all the tragedies during the last century.
We have the Titanic, the Great War that is referred to as the World War
One, than there was peace for a long time from 1918 to 1938. Than the Second
World War, which brought out the worst in human nature, the holocaust,
when 6 million Jews were put to death for no fault of theirs, on the order
of one mad man. The loss of the HMT Rhona in the Mediterrian Sea where
over a 1200 soldiers died in the cold waters. Normandy beach, the Malaysian
peninsula, Burma and Singapore. The Korean War, the Vietnam War, the African
Civil Wars, the Indian Sepoy Mutiny, the American War of Independence,
the Boat People being gunned down, the Eastern Block wars, and the Indo-China
and Indo-Pakistan Wars. There is so much of turmoil, there is so much of
distress, there are the catastrophies that have over come many a city.
Wiped out from the face of the earth, take Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Bihar,
Orissa, Turkey, Iran, name the place and there is always a reminder that
once upon a time the land was turned around. In this fleeting thought,
while the sky is lit with crackers and fireworks bringing in the new Millennium,
let us hope that it brings in a new dawn of tomorrow and with it Peace,
Joy, Love and Happiness. Where people are recognised as the human race
and not by just numbers, where brother will remember brother, where a child
will remember his or her father or mother, where a neighbour will know
his neighbour, where a child will not have to starve, where a cripple will
not have to crawl, where a blind man will not have to stumble, because
there would be a helping hand stretched out to give that healing touch.
We celebrate the beginning of the third millennium, but we forget the beginning
of the first. A babe wrapped in swaddling clothes was lying in a manger
in Bethlehem, out in the cold, because there was no room in any Inn, has
caused this mark in time. The babe that is loved and hated by so many.
The babe that is to be the symbol of our helplessness in the present day.
The babe that many have died for, right from the time of Herod. The babe
who was visited by shepherds guided by angels. The babe that the wise men
of the East went in search for after seeing the sign of the star. The baby
who is to be the symbol of Peace, Joy, Love and Happiness. Two thousand
years ago that child was born. As I quote from the Holy Bible, Isaiah:96
"For unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given; And the government
will be upon His shounder. And His name will be called Wonderful, Counselor,
Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace."
Some call that Child Saviour; Some call the child Emmanuel, I just happen to
call Him, Jesus, a name that I call on when I need someone to listen to me in
my trying times.
We do not have to go back two thousand years to see this Child. We do not
have to be converted to Christianity to believe in this Child. We do not
have to give up our Faith to believe in the Child. We have just to believe in
ourselves in our hearts. We need to know that there is a Child in everyone of our brothers
and sisters, our neighbours and friends. Our relatives and foes. The Child
is in the rich and poor, in the sick and dying, in the hungry and oppressed,
in the imprisioned and scorned. Mother Teresa brought this Child to everyone by
her way of life, by her service to humanity, she brought Christmas to the dying, lonely
castaway, the destitute everyday.
Our skin is only an outward sign that the sun has been near us or further
away from us, but inside we are all the same. We are all created by the
one God. The God who created the Universe. The God who put a spirit within
us, a heart that beats with not only love, but also fear, jealously, hate,
envy. This is the cause that man will strike man to make another bow before
him. To show superiority and vanity. This little child will also bring
together those who are lost in the fast moving world. The little child
will also come to heal the wounds caused by the ugliness of selfishness.
These are my thoughts, you may agree or may not, but I do wish you the
Peace, Joy, Love and Happiness of that little Child they call Jesus, and
that is the meaning of Christmas. Sharing what we have with another.
As we enter the millennium, I wish you safety in your journey into the
unknown. I wish you the safety that covered the baby in Jerusalem in your
future. I wish you the Peace, Joy and Love for you and your families, your
friends and loved ones, your children and your old ones. May you experience
that warmth that can only come from the heart, and can be experienced only
from within. May you experience the child they call Jesus, today and always.
Good wishes my friend. Good wishes to you all, from the Bangalorewalla!
Happy Christmas 2003
and a Joyful New Year 2004!
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