Friday, November 25, 2011

A Little Tibet in South India

Bylakuppe is a small Tibetan settlement in Karnataka, about 200kms from Bangalore. The settlement houses Tibetan refugees who were driven out of their homeland due to Chinese invasions in the 1960’s. The refugees have now settled down here, and made the place a mirror image of their Himalayan homeland. I visited this place on a grey rainy day, and for a while you would think that you’ve actually reached the Tibetan plateau in the distant Himalayas! The Buddhist monasteries outlined against the dark cloudy skies makes you forget that you’re actually in Southern India.

Entry to the main hall of the Namdroling Monastery
Namdroling Monastry

The most famous monastery here is the Namdroling Monastery, which is also known as "Golden Temple". The name probably comes from the gold-plated statues of Buddha’s inside.

Statues of Buddha (center), Guru Rimpoche (left), Buddha Amitabha (right)
Gold-plated statues

A lion guards the entrance to the main hall
Entrance to Namdroling main hall

This place is wonderful, and quite worth a visit. Outside the temple complex on the narrow road leading up to the temple, there are small restaurants selling traditional Tibetan food.

Tibetan food
Food

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Rock Concert in Whitefield

Yesterday I attended a live concert by Parikrama in Whitefield. Here’s a video I shot using my N8.


 
These guys are good with their music, although the mixing was a tad off in the concert. It was all going fine, until a Bollywood-Pop singer called "KK" came in and spoiled the show!

Friday, November 18, 2011

Fatehpur-Sikri

The twin sites of Fatehpur-Sikri lie just on the outskirts of Agra, and while visiting Agra to see the Taj Mahal, most tourists stop here to see Akbar's palace and Salim Chisti's tomb. Akbar, as the 16th century emperor of the Indian subcontinent, needs no introduction. Salim Chisti was a sufi saint, who lived as a hermit in the hills of Sikri. 
Before 1569, Akbar had no heir to his throne. Akbar's first three children - a daughter Fatima, and twin sons, Hussain and Hassan - died in infancy. Akbar, a very worried and heir-less emperor then approached Salim Chisti, in the hope that divine intervention could help him with his heir troubles. It is said that he even moved his pregnant wife to Sikri, so that she would be in blessed surroundings when the child came. 
All this paid off, and a son was born to Akbar in 1569, and named "Salim" after the saint. Salim would later become famous as Jahangir, but that's a different story.
Akbar now started considering Sikri a lucky place for him. He decided to move his capital from Agra to Sikri, and started building a royal city around Salim Chisti's hermitage. This new city was named Fatehpur or "victory city". Two years later, in 1571, Akbar moved to this new city with his family and courtiers. Red sandstone was the building material that was available at that time, and you can see the entire complex in Fatehpur is made of this material.