Tuesday, November 16, 2010

BEYOND THE HINDUKUSH

BEYOND THE HINDUKUSH

A 2-Pager by Ajit Chaudhuri

What lies on the other side of the mountains? This question has fascinated me from childhood. Subsequent travels in the Himalayas and much pouring over maps have revealed that, after the mountains come – well – more mountains. Going north from Delhi, one crosses the lower, middle and higher Himalayas into the frozen wastelands of Ladakh and then into the Karakorum and Hindukush Ranges to the north and west. And beyond? I had an opportunity to see for myself thanks to a short consulting assignment in the towns of Taloquan and Faizabad in northern Afghanistan.

The author (extreme left) and colleagues at the northern mouth of the Salang Tunnel

Northern Afghanistan is a little different! It is separated from Kabul by the Hindukush mountains, and from ex-Soviet Central Asia by the Amu Darya River. The main cities are Kunduz, a mainly Tajik city from where the Taliban ruled the north, and Mazhar – e – Sharif, home to the Uzbek Rashid Dostum, now on the wane but at one time the only warlord in the world to have his own air force. Afghan Tajiks and Uzbeks share linguistic links with their respective ethnic brethren across the border but cultural commonalities are few. Some official cross border trade happens along the bridges across the Amu Darya, but this is dwarfed by unofficial trade – mainly opium making its way from the poppy fields of Afghanistan to markets in Russia and the West.

Faizabad is the headquarters of the northeastern province of Badakhshan, one of the few parts of Afghanistan never to have been ruled by the Taliban. This was thanks in part to the province’s remoteness and to the Northern Alliance (Ahmed Shah Masood and Co.) policy of blowing up bridges and roads. It is only now that a road connecting Faizabad and Kabul has been rebuilt, and bus services between the cities (about 500 km and 10 hours) have resumed. I used the road to travel between Faizabad and Taloquan, but unfortunately could not go further because of travel restrictions on foreigners (read – Taliban in control of the road around Kunduz).

Faizabad is a sleepy little place, with the Kokcha River separating the old town from the new. I got to relive long forgotten pleasures such as roaming up and down the bazaar, speculating upon the wares of the chador clad women I passed. I made the discovery that masks and covers are minor barriers to signalling that you are beautiful – the choice of perfume, the cut of your salwar, the sway of your chador, the use of stilettos on a stone and mud street – there are subtler indicators than face and figure. As you can imagine, a fair bit of spare time was spent ostensibly looking for gifts for relatives.

The author along the Kokcha River


Badakhshan is famous for three reasons. The first is its mines – it is the source of lapis lazuli, a blue stone that is distinctively Afghanistan. The second is the Wakhan Corridor, a geographic relic of the Great Game that provided a neutral territory between the old British and Russian Empires. Wakhan is a narrow 250 km eastward extension of Afghanistan that separates Pakistan from Tajikistan and connects the Karakorum, Hindukush, and Tianshan ranges right up to the Pamirs (and China) in the east. The ‘Wakhan Walk’ up this remote valley to where the Amu Darya begins its 2400 km journey to the Aral Sea is considered the gold standard in machismo in the international trekking circuit. And the third is the game of Buzkajhi, played on horses with a goat carcass acting as a ball, which originates from this region.

How does one judge a place? I use three indicators – the opulence of its scenery, the beauty of its women, and the taste of its food. Northern Afghanistan scores high on all three fronts. The landscape is a sparsely populated desert surrounded by snow covered mountains, with harsh long winters and short but pleasant summers. The food is light and meaty, with Palau that is slow-cooked so that the taste of the meat seeps deep into the rice. The meat is soft and well cooked, and peals off the bone without effort. The vegetables, mainly cauliflower and lady’s fingers, are oversized and lightly cooked, settling well into one’s stomach. I also got to eat naan and kebabs in the market some evenings, where one pulls the meat off skewers with naan and washes it down with green tea. Having said this, I must confess that I returned to Kabul and eschewed Afghan food for heavily masala-ed mattar paneer and dal made especially for south Asian taste buds.

And regarding the women – I met a few in the course of my work and checked out more the old fashioned way, by hanging around the bazaar. ‘Easy on the eye’ would be an understatement. The women I worked with, mostly provincial government employees and local NGO workers, dumped their chadors as soon as they entered the office campus to reveal lovely faces, some of them with make-up, and sedate but fashionable dresses. All of them had obtained an education the hard way, and most had a thirst for learning (a trait shared with the men) that made teaching a pleasure. One of them, a smashing young redhead working in the anti-narcotics department, insisted that I visit her home for a meal, which I (and my interpreter) did. It was my first visit to an Afghan home, and we were given a treat of a meal washed down with salt tea. We did not, however, get a glimpse of the young lady who invited us, or any other women, and were instead entertained by her father and other male members of the extended family – tall bearded men who looked like they had launched a missile or two. I also saw a father’s pride in his intelligent daughter – he had encouraged her studies, kept all her certificates carefully (which he showed us much like recently married people show wedding photographs), and revelled in her responsible government job. I also saw a lot of young, beautiful, educated, single women around, and learned that Afghans do not pay dowry and there is no stigma attached to having daughters.

Yes, to those who are asking the obvious question, there is an active insurgency in north Afghanistan and had I not looked as Afghan as I do I would probably not have been able to hang around in public areas as much as I did. Some of my travel was curtailed, and one of the field visits we had planned could not happen for security concerns. After another field visit to a village in Kalafgan district, a group of middle-aged men came up to me and made conversation in Urdu, speaking like Kabuliwallahs in old Hindi films. It turned out that they had learnt it in camps in Mirpur (in Pakistani Kashmir) and had visited Srinagar and other parts of Indian Kashmir. It was a friendly conversation, and they were mostly looking to practise their Urdu, but we did stay away from topics such as ‘what exactly were you doing there?’

I got the impression that people were more frustrated with the administration than with the insurgency. Warlords were in control of government, corruption was rampant, doors were open only to those with connections, and an inherently egalitarian society was turning into one with a deep schism between haves and have-nots. My trainees expressed their frustrations to me, young engineers who joined the government to contribute to nation building, the management graduate from Kirgizstan who returned to Taloquan to marry the man she loved, the young women looking for any way to get out. And yes, foreigners were seen as a part of the problem, not the solution.

As I hope is obvious to the reader, I both enjoyed myself and was made very welcome in northern Afghanistan. It may not be every traveller’s cup of tea, but I do recommend it to those looking to go where footprints are fewer.

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

EYE CANDY

EYE CANDY

A 2-Pager by Ajit Chaudhuri

The problem with an end to a decade is that we are all bombarded by ‘ten best’ lists. My own contribution to the bombardment, which follows, is a listing of the ten best sights that I have seen in India. It is in no particular order.

One: The Indus in winter – Ladakh, J&K

Yes, the river that gives our country its name does flow in India. Most of those who have seen it during visits to Leh have done so in summer for the obvious reason that it gets a bit chilly at other times. A great pity, because the Indus in winter is an experience! It is a solid block of ice in the Changthang, where it enters India, traversing through a wide snow-filled valley that gradually narrows as it enters Kargil district. The ice recedes to the sides, with deep blue water in the middle, as the river flows along villages such as Dharsiks and Garkon – famous for their pure Aryan inhabitants (and beautiful women) – before going on into Pakistan at Batalik. The Dak Bungalow at Dharsiks is located up the mountain to provide a stunning view of the river. Winter is also a time when wolves and snow leopards come lower for their prey, and the chances of seeing them increases significantly. I was here leading a research team in December 1997 and February 1998.

Two: The Golden Temple at Night – Amritsar, Punjab

A visit to the Golden Temple at any time is an experience, even for the hardcore atheist like me, providing a sense of inner calm and peace in this tumultuous world. At night, when it is lit up, it is all that and more – a sight to behold that is difficult to describe in words. I visited with the family in 2007.

Three: Nancowry Harbour – The Central Nicobars, A&N Islands

This is a tough place to reach for remoteness and bureaucratic formalities, even by the standards of this listing, but if you do, the view of Nancowry Harbour from Komorta Island will make the hassle worthwhile. The harbour is famous as the location of the INS Vikrant during the 1971 Indo-Pak war. See it from the Komorta PWD Bungalow atop the hill, especially at night with the lights on, and you are in for a visual treat. I was on tsunami relief duty in the nearby island of Kachal in January 2005, and made the occasional journey to Komorta for a bit of R&R and, finally, to catch a ship back to Port Blair.

Four: Sunrise at Sangau – Lawngtlai, Mizoram

Sangau falls in the Lai Autonomous Council area in the south east of Mizoram, about a day’s drive from the state capital Aizawl. From here, one can see Mizoram’s highest mountain, Phawngpui. Seen early morning, with a rising sun and a dash of mist and cloud, and it is a sight to behold. I was here with my friend PL Liandinga in January 2008, enquiring into famine.

Five: The Flamingos at Chhaari Dhaand – Kutch, Gujarat

This is a huge water body north of Bhuj that I visited in December 2006 – in the aftermath of a good monsoon, with large colonies of birds to see, including the famous pink flamingos out in all their majesty. This is in the middle of nowhere, there are no roads or anything and therefore a vehicle that can perform off the road and a guide who knows the way are necessities. The family spent a day to remember, making our way slowly around the water body checking out the birds. The flamingos? To quote the kids – Awesome!

Six: The Brahmaputra in Spate – Jorhat, Assam

Getting to Majuli, a river island in the Brahmaputra, is quite a task at the best of times. Making the crossing from Jorhat when the river is in spate is an experience. The river is like an ocean, with a width that goes up to 17 km. There is little pollution upstream, no industries of any sort, and one can see river dolphin frolicking around. And the currents are something – my ferry once missed the jetty, and it took half an hour to turn it around and re-dock. My work took me to Majuli Island through 1996 and the first half of 1997.

Seven: The Sky from Sheruvala Basti – Bikaner, Rajasthan

This remote desert village, reachable only by a 15 km journey on sand dunes from the nearest road head, provides a sunrise, sunset and night sky that is worth seeing around the year. I had the pleasure of working here in 1991-92.

Eight: Tso Moriri Lake – Ladakh, J&K

This huge blue water lake nestles at about 14,000 feet in the Himalayas, surrounded on all sides by snow clad mountains and desert. I once journeyed from Leh to Spiti in 1995, which included walking about 30 km along the lake and camping overnight at Korzok and Kyangdom. What can I say? When I was tired, I just had to look at the lake and feel rejuvenated. And one of those nights had a full moon whose light reflected in twinkles off the water and off the mountain snow. A must see!

Nine: A Tiger in the Wild – Corbett, Uttarakhand

A tiger in the wild is a phenomenal sight. Corbett National Park is not one of those sanctuaries in which they pack the tigers in and where you are almost guaranteed a sighting – one has to be really lucky to see one here. My vehicle lagged behind the safari convoy one visit with the family in 2002, and the guide sort of got a whiff in the air that there was a tiger in the vicinity. We waited and waited and sure enough, there was one in the foliage – waiting for the sun to get lower before hitting on the deer in the grasslands a little below. The sight, combined with that hint of fear in the air, was something else!

Ten: Ambedkar Stadium when India is Playing – Delhi

I have had the pleasure of watching football at some well-known stadiums (including The Emirates and Stamford Bridge) but there is something about that little one in my own hometown that merits a mention in this list. It is unremarkable on normal matchdays, a little less so when a Punjabi team plays a Bengali one, but when India is playing, it transforms itself into something akin to the Brahmaputra in spate (see above). The atmosphere injects something into the national team, which has taken on and beaten much higher ranked opponents here, which in turn feeds into the atmosphere. The crowd is diverse, with the traditional football lovers from Daryaganj mixing with newer English-speaking types and the Bengalis, Punjabis and Malayalis. No wonder Bon Houghton insists on playing the Nehru Cup here.