Sunday, 17 November 2019

Benaras Diary




9:30 a.m.. Varanasi Junction. You can’t set a foot on Platform No.1 without either trampling on a fellow human or on fresh poo. Its Dev Deepawali. Millions across India and from abroad are converging at the ghats of the Ganges. This occurs each year fifteen days after Diwali on a full moon night of Kartik Purnima. Gods descend from heaven on this day to bathe in the Ganges; hence, the chaos.

As festivals go, this is as big as it gets at Benaras. All the 80+ ghats are lit up with diyas, the sky is smattered with firecrackers rarely seen, sound and noise pollution levels touch new highs and brisk commerce is undertaken by vendors in temporary stalls. The boatmen make their annual killings on this evening. I overheard one of them quoting a lakh to an inquiring customer for a one hour ride.

Yet it all merges to produce a spectacle worthy of the gods.




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Breakfast. The mandatory fare is all about kachori-sabji, hot jalebis and malaiyo. A bit more about that last item. Milk is left out in the open at night to catch the dew. A sprinkling of cardamom, saffron and sugar is followed by vigorous churning to generate a frothy output. This is then topped with pistachio crumbs. The end result transcends you to heaven.
Ram Bhandar, in Thatheri Bazar, is supposed to set the gold standard for kachori-sabji-jalebi. As a non-regular, please factor a half hour wait and serious jostling before your turn arrives for the goodies. The stuff is good, but there’s a better, lesser known option around. You need to move away from the ghats to get a taste of the real deal. This is a hole-in-the-wall outlet at Chetmani Chauraha. The place sets the Nadia Comaneci (Montreal edition) standard. Its the mix of black grams and paneer in the sabji that does the trick. As you munch your jalebi, the crackle can be heard for miles around. 


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The `bhakts’ may continue to holler. Their worthy opponents may shout themselves hoarse. India has only one religion, one opium for its people. Its called cricket.



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Rahul catches me at Chet Ghat. His English is fluent. He sizes me up, and says I must be from Canada. Canada?! I get the drift of his observation and deduction thereafter. Chet Ghat houses a mutt of Sachchidananda Maharaj. The Maharaj has huge following of Indian origin from Canada. Rahul concludes that I must be one of them. He escorts foreign tourists around the city. He’s disappointed that I’m not a newbie to the place. But his commentary on the history of the fort at Chet Ghat, the battle with Warren Hastings, is a gem.


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There’s something about anchored boats on a shoreline. It brings a sense of serenity, a lightness of being. It contributes as much to making Benaras what it is as any other theme.


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Across the river, clinging to the walls of Ramnagar Fort, there’s Shivprasad Lassi Bhandar. They serve lassi of a semi-solid variety that you need to eat with a spoon; not drink. Default toppings comprise malai and rabri. A large `khullar’ of the stuff, a proper meal by itself, sets you back by forty bucks. Its a steep increase from the twenty rupees I shelled out six years ago. The post-consumption bliss remains unaltered.    

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Babu is a Benaras-bred Bong from Bangali-tola. His dad was a fitter in the mechanical section of Indian Railways at the local DLW. The youngest child of his family, Babu peddles `babaji ka prasad’. He stocks stuff of high quality. Unfortunately, he himself has succumbed to irretrievable depths from his own addiction.

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At Babua Pandey Ghat, you can’t miss the bright signs of Lucy’s Heritage Cafe. It essentially serves vegan fare and offers a stunning view of the ghats. A few months ago, the river overflowed. The resultant floods wreaked havoc on the city. Lucy’s was practically under water for some time. It took two months for the delightful cafe to be restored and for operations to resume.


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The `Swachh Bharat’ mission was a five year drive launched in 2014 to tidy up India and to bring in a culture of cleanliness. The project served its purpose for the government’s headline management. It may also have created awareness. At ground level, however, old habits are deeply embedded and die hard. On an early morning visit to Vishwanath Temple, I stood in a long queue behind a dhoti-clad, lota-wallah in his forties. He maintained a torrent of spit on the walls of the temple as the queue progressed. All in the name of faith and Bholeynath!

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8:30 a.m.. Clear skies. The morning stroll along the ghats begins. But its soon brought to a halt by the strains of a `bansuri’. I follow the sound. Perched on a ledge above Tulsi Ghat is a young flautist, constructing an impeccable Ahir Bhairav. Its evident that he’s professionally trained. A unique act, in a matchless setting, for an audience of one. A surprise awaits you around every corner at Benaras.


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