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Mamallapuram
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Home
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First, a quick visual recap of my trip so far
Without Geography We're Nowhere
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I flew into Mumbai, then went almost immediately to
Pune, to stay for 10 days...
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...at the home of Madhu, the father of Amolika, with
whom I worked in New Jersey
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I then trained it to Pushkar, for the camel fair
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I caught a bus to Jaipur, where I spent a couple of
fairly unexciting days
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Then a couple days in Agra, to see the Taj Mahal
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And over to Varanasi for nine days on the Ganges
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After traversing the northern tier of India--Rajasthan,
Uttar Pradesh--I was anxious to escape to warmer climes
So I boarded a sleeper train for the 36 hour journey
from Varanasi to Chennai. Two nights on the train and I was getting
restless, though I had some good company in the persons of some Brahmins
who are Vedic scholars
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After disembarking at Chennai I boarded a bus for the
two hour jaunt to Mamallapuram
You can see that I'm now solidly in the south of India
and I'm warm
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Mamallapuram is a functioning fishing village, with a
sizeable tourist area
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facing the Bay of Bengal
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Bringing in the direct-drive engines, after bringing in
the day's catch
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mending the nets
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I stayed there two weeks, and used it as sort of
R&R, such as New Year's Eve at Gecko Cafe
India is hard work, and occasional rests are
welcome
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If you had to choose one word to associate with
Mamallapuram, it would be stone. Nestled against the town is a small
hill profusely strewn with boulders
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and exposed rock surfaces
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One of the largest rock faces in this hill has been
sculpted into Arjuna's Penance, a massive open-air bas-relief monolith
43 feet high, 96 feet long
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Here with a stage set up for their annual dance festival
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The cleft between the two portions is said to represent
the descent of the Ganges River to earth
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Check out those elephants, tending their young
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Arjunas Penance showcases more than 100 figures of gods
and flying celestial creatures, birds and animals, along with human beings
and saints.
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Not far from Arjuna's Penance is Krishna's Butterball
What keeps it there?
If my boulder rolling days weren't behind me, I'd go
looking for a peevee to dislodge it
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The hill contains even more structures, known as
monolithic architecture--carved out of single pieces of stone
Ganesa Ratha
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These remind me of Petra, in Jordan (see my Jordan/Syria
blog)
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Ramanuja Mantaram
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In addition to open-air canvases and monolithic
architecture, Mamallapuram's love affair with stone involves over 200
sculptors working in the area
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They receive commissions from around the world
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Arjuna's Penance also provided the dramatic backdrop for
Mamallapuram's annual festival of folk and classical dance
I attended three evenings
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One of the best was Uma Ramesh, who performed
Bharatanatyam, a classical dance with very expressive gestures--something
typical of Indians
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blog entry Walking the Neighborhoods
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