The city is not unfamiliar to me – I was here about 13 years ago, with my parents and brother. This time too, I was there with my parents.
As we left the station, and traversed across the town, we came across big, big bungalows with beautifully maintained gardens. All these crafted structures belong to the ranks of the administrative services; copper plates engraved with ‘Officer of the IPS’, ‘Collector’ etc. were nailed on the series of gates of all the different bungalows, all in a single linear road. Maybe that part of the town is the administrative hub of Puri.
Finally we entered the street along the sea. As usual, I couldn’t take my eyes off the water – breathing in the slightly salty air, and hearing the rushing sound of the waves. The hotel we were booked into (Puri hotel) is sea facing; situated directly across the street along the beach. We’d stayed in the same place, the last time we were in Puri. Due to the hotel being one of the oldest in the place, it is also one of the biggest and well established.
Even though Puri is quite a popular holiday destination for people of neighbouring states, especially of
Puri has a pretty long stretch of beach and the best part is that the beach is parallel to the east-west direction, along the
From the hotel, the beach is just about 5 minutes away – after all, all one has to do to reach the water, is cross the road, and walk across the sand. The sand of the beach preceding the water is not particularly clean – very dirty in fact. The scarcity of toilets and the abundance of homeless people have created their impact – mostly on the beach. Supposedly, (according to my mother) every morning, directly across Puri hotel (where the beach is relatively empty with no shops) from about 4am, people can be seen moving towards the sand, squatting, and after a few minutes, covering up their crime with the surrounding sand. Of course, the sea water does its job of cleaning the rest. Fortunately (again, according to source), this phenomena does not occur at all the stretches of the beach, and particularly not in the part of beach which has the evening bazaar. I, myself have never seen something like this happen, although I have seen people relieving themselves into the sand, just after entering the beach from the street, far (thankfully) from the water.
Due to commercialization of the place, and the immense crowds, to reach the actual room (where the original idols are placed and worshipped), one has to hire a local pandit, ‘Panda’. They start approaching you the moment you set foot in Puri. Starting from the railway station, all the way to the hotel, and even then if you don’t hire one and arrive at the temple yourself without a Panda (in foolish optimism that how difficult can it be to find one’s way in a temple), you’ll eventually find yourself obliged to hire one, just so that you can be guided through the labyrinths of the temple; spaces halls and corridors, and also through the swarming crowds. When you finally do reach the holy shrine, you are granted just a moment’s glimpse of the holy gods, above and past the bowed heads of people already standing there in prayer. I still remembered the crowds from the last time we were there, how I felt trapped inside a closed room with no space , except for the air above our heads (maybe that experience was worse so because of my age and physical height) . Add to that memory, my indifference regarding the concept of Religion (that’s another blog); I wasn’t really looking forward to the trip to the temple.
Fortunately, I was agreeably surprised when we entered to find the temple premises somewhat less crowded. Either it was the time (10:30 in the morning.. just a few minutes after which the shrine would be closed for the morning) or, as my mother surmised, it was because of the full moon (‘Purnima’) the next day, which is considered to be an auspicious day (hence all the tourists would have postponed their day of pilgrimage to the next day). Whatever the reason was, we (more so my parents) were able to pray peacefully and see the idols clearly (without being nudged, shoved or pushed from all directions). I’m not religious in even the slightest sense of the word; however, standing there, with the atmosphere around – the slight chanting, the scent of incense sticks, the idols projected as the centre of spiritual power, the dim light, people bowing in reverence, people prostrating on the floor, the ancient smoothened rock tiles, the darkened walls, the coolness of the temple interiors, all came together to bring about a certain indescribable sense of contentment. Now, when I think about it, I cannot explain that momentary bliss. For quite some minutes after we walked out of the inner chamber, that feeling remained.
The Jagannath temple is protesting against the years of neglect and use; the walls are crumbling at some places, while at others, the delicate carvings are getting eroded. The carved walls are being restored by some masons working at one façade of the temple and an enforcement is being built on another side to support the weakening beams of the aging temple. Outside the temple, it is a busy marketplace, filled with an assorted variety of shops – small and big, selling sweets or souvenirs, flowers or clothes. After a light feast of some of the tastiest Rabri of the world, we returned to the beach.
The evenings in Puri, especially at the beach, have a life of their own. From a distance, the beach looks like a house celebrating Diwali permanently; so many lights – concentrated at places while scattered at others. Lights of the recently constructed lampposts, extending to quite a length of the beach, lights of the temporary shops, lights of the lit yo-yos sold by the vendors, lights of the far away newly opened resort (at one end of the beach), and then when one looks at the sea, lights of ships (or fishing boats) far away, looking still in the water and yet moving, light of the moon in the sky – it is a dazzling array of lamps. All those lights emerge slowly, in an unintentional random sequence, as not wanting to cause a sudden glare to the eyes of the thousands of sea watchers…
First, as afternoon ends and the heat decreases, the sun starts its journey westwards, lower and lower; the blazing ball of fire, turning duller and duller. As one walks along the length of the beach, walking westwards, the entire time one can see the setting act; a gradual yet sudden event of the sun dipping into the extensive horizon. Usually (at least the day we were there), one can never see the sun actually touch the earth, because, at some point or the other, the clouds take over the western sky and engulf the saffron circle in their whiteness – creating a crimson hue all over the sky. At that time, the sea water turns yellowish, the reflections creating a breathtaking backdrop of shimmer and shine. The experience is wonderful, walking along the sands, waves almost lapping at your feet (especially when you’re trying to avoid getting your feet wet), the chilly breeze making you wish you had worn something warmer and finally the curtain act – the sun disappears into a golden haze, leaving splashes of red, orange, blue and white pieces here and there, and then finally darkness. If its a moonlit night (as we happened to be there during one)it gets even better… the tide grows higher, the moonlight creating silvery magic with the water – rays and fluid, shimmer and shine, stillness and motion; waves of white unfurling across kilometres and kilometres, almost at the same moment of time.
On the beach, besides the many daily temporary stalls, selling miniature idols, images, posters, shells, decorative pieces, traditional Oriya handbags, conches, Yo-yos, toys, bedspreads, food, and what not, there are also mobile vendors, selling the same stuff, except, they don’t wait for you to approach them; they’ll approach you and advertise their wares.
During the tourist season, the beach seems to have almost as many sellers as there are prospective buyers (tourists); the numbers are saddening. I often wondered, sitting at the beach and staring at the cold waves, while one vendor after the other came to ask if I was interested in buying whatever it was he was selling, whether they sold enough per day so as to make a living. Considering that the cost of making the things seemed higher than the price at which they finally offered to sell them (after a session of quick bargaining where the price reduced to less than half the initial price), it seems very unlikely that they manage to make much profit, if at all. Every other person is selling something, even small children; one kid remains vividly imprinted on my memory. This kid went from person to person, trying to sell wicker strings for oil lamps, and, taking complete advantage of his innocent face, he beguiled several unsuspecting tourists into buying the stuff they knew they’d hardly ever use. My mother bought the stuff once, but when he came around a 2nd time (obviously not remembering that he’d been here before), with his crestfallen face and angelic eyes, she understood that behind those downcast eyes, lay a very intelligent child, who had to sell wicker to make a living. I wonder if he went to school.
As soon as we reached the place, we were whisked away to an engine-powered boat, complete with a shaded enclosure. The boat entered the lake and soon, all we could see around us was water. Water everywhere, in each direction, with nothing but a few other boats, some fishing paraphernalia, providing welcome relief from the silent monotony. In the heat of the late morning, even the boat trip became sleepy, especially when we kept on wading around in the water for about an hour. Within that hour, we were shown dolphins - or rather, signs of them; one tiny fin bouncing up and down, on the far right side of the boat, another to the left, were the only proof that dolphins did exist here, in the middle of nowhere. Finally, after the never-ending hour, we could see the other bank of the lake – except, it wasn’t a bank, it was a beach. A beach on a lake? Amazing.
As we neared the shore, the calmness of the lake changed slightly; little ripples breaking into its tranquil sleep. It was then that I saw – beyond the shore/beach/bank, there was the ocean; the lake pours into the ocean…or is it the other way around? It’s a breathtaking sight – the unique confluence of sea and lake, calm and restlessness, still and moving, how the lake gradually transitions into the sea, as if it is but a natural everyday phenomenon (well in these parts it is). That single stretch of sand which provides both the water bodies with space to merge their waters, is entirely uninhabited, and because of that, the place is naturally clean, the waters clear, unpolluted and totally untouched. Beautiful… and yet not famous. Or maybe because Chilka is not so well known, it still remains beautiful. After about an hour of walking, collecting sea shells, we headed back to our boat for the long trip to the other end of the lake. A lunch at a ‘restaurant’ on the first floor of an unfinished building, and the return journey back to Puri ended the trip to Chilka. Worth it, but only after one has already seen the other historical treasures of the state of Orissa. For us, the experience was something new and hence totally worth it.