Last
night was so hot I end up sleeping out on the balcony. The combination
of heat and humidity is so bad that it leaves you feeling nothing
short of claustrophobic. Today we plan to go to the sacred lake of
Pushcar. Only Brian and myself will be there, Stacy has work commitments
in Delhi. She hasnt explained what they are - I can only assume
they have something to do with her job as lecturer in South Asian
Studies.
By
10am Pappu has taken us down some obscure side street and points
us in the general direction of the lake. En route we meet a very
happy young man. He gives us flowers and wishes us a pleasant time
at the lake. How lovely! How wrong. The flowers are there as a marker.
No sooner do we go through to the Ghats than we are mobbed. There
must be eight or nine hustlers at our throats, all keen to see their
Brahmin bless us. Somehow, through all the confusion we are assigned
a holy man each and go down to the lake. I ignore the manhandling
and make a determined effort to tune in to the spirituality
of the Pushcar holy lake.
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Holyman
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Throughout
the blessing which is in Sanskrit, my holy man keeps reverting back
to the money tongue, English. He skilfully weaves demands for rupees
into the prayers. And to be honest, hes not half bad. I end
up dropping 120 to his holiness, more than I had intended to. On
we go with the anointing and the demand for dosh continues. To be
honest, Im now beginning to get annoyed. 'Listen man, youre
only getting 120. This could well be the one and only time that
I ever do this, please don'truin it for me.'
The
ceremony ends, somewhat tarnished but I still enjoy it. I am given
a small cotton braid to put on my wrist. This, I am told will make
my life happier. If you were really cynical, you might also think
that it would tell the people working the streets that this person's
already been done - I mean blessed. As a final word the Brahmin
tells me to make a wish
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Indian
Ghats
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Meanwhile,
Brian comes away from his experience looking disgusted. He was well
and truly cleaned out and has no immediate money left. Back at the
hotel, we make our way to the pool. Our Jewish friends are out in
force. They are providing the tunes once more. However, the Acid
Techno of yesterday has been replaced with Pink Floyd's 'Wish You
Were Here.'
I end
up talking to one of the girls again. This time she tells me her
name, Monica Levinsky. After swimming a while, we agree to meet
for a walk after dinner. We head off behind the hotel, through some
ploughed fields. The whole landscape has changed in no time at all.
Just beyond the fields is a scary wilderness. Overgrown temples
and miles of almost impenetrable thicket. On the way back we bump
into her best friend - Esther. They invite me up to their hotel
room and offer me tea. We share tales of our travel experiences
and families. I decline their offer of locally produced 'tobacco'
and stick with my trusty Bidi's.
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