31.1.12

Gangavarhe Village, Nashik




Mother at work.

In a farm growing 'table' grapes near Nashik. And it's mothers who actually work in India. You will be surprised by the number of men you see reeking of alcohol in our countryside during the day.

Closer to home. My wife works, and I loaf around clicking photographs. Luckily, I can't get high and click photographs at the same time.







This is the Godavari valley as seem from York Winery.

These images are extras from a story on the Indian Wine Industry by Anil Padmnabhan for Mint Lounge.

17.1.12

Sinnar-Ghoti Bypass



Rotten Fresh Tomatoes?

I was surprised by the number of packaged amino acids, minerals and natural chemicals that come in packets that help to grow and protect the tomatoes we get in the market. In fact, you do not get the tomatoes from this farm in our markets, they are exported. But this is apparently how tomatoes are grown. I will go eat some chicken and pigs grown in badly ventilated, anti-biotics pumped enclosed places, I think.

These were the packets that were thrown around. Most of them were locally made in Nasik District.











13.1.12

Shirdi















Holy Cap! Street Fashion of Shirdi long-distance walkers.



Thousands do the walk from Mumbai (and other places) to Shirdi every year. Mumbai is filled with Padayatra mandals. They walk all the way to Shirdi over a few days. Most groups have a hired van with cooking utensils and blankets that go ahead of them and wait at strategic locations, where they camp and prepare the food for the devotees. The poorer padayatra mandals make do with restaurants along the road.

4.1.12

Malegaon





Mohammed Zahid's home. Extra Shots from How do you keep the faith?
The story of 7 Muslims of Malegaon who spent 5 unjust years in jail In Tehelka by Sai Manish.


This is where Mohammed Zahid's family lives. Zahid was one of the originally accused in the Malegaon Blast case and then let off. This is how his family lives. This is most of us live. When we open a tap there is no water. When we toggle a switch, nothing lights up.

In Malegaon, almost all homes have these recycled chemical barrels to store water. The rich have space to store it indoors, 99% of them have it crowing their door steps.

Also look at the storage space in the home. Recycled lockers.

We get along with things we stand in queues and collect. Lock up whatever we get hoping that it will be useful. We allow nothing to go waste.

Today, the queues are not as bad it was 20 or 25 years back, for some, but the majority have no option but to stand in queues. The politicians continue to come with new ideas to make us stand in queues with their meager handouts and a fat commission for the middlemen-hoarding-herders. They hope that we will also queue up and vote for them one day for giving people the privilege to stand in queues. They, led by Rahul Gandhi, talk of two Indias. But the two Indias are probably the ones who don't and they who get to stand in queues. If they can get us to stand in queues they can control us. If you refuse to stand in queues...

It's also funny to see how other politicians mock Rahul Gandhi. To make himself worthy of being a Prime Minister in their eyes, he should probably engineer a riot or two like his seasoned friends. Order a few killings that do not lead back to him. Find a nice province for himself where he can collect more money than regional leaders to fund elections. How will he lead a war against Pakistan or control our atomic bombs if he can't do these simple things that even petty politicians do every day?

Politicians can order killings and tie-up with the most wanted Indian who lives in Pakistan and build towers. But if you are an ordinary man, stand in that queue and thank generations of politicians who dole out subsidized FCI grain, don't make friends or talk to people who have SIMI or any suspect links like Zahid did. Even if you haven't killed anyone or thought of making a bomb that will kill someone, you could be in jail just because you spoke to someone suspicious. Zahid's dad (picture below) warned him to be careful of the friend he makes, but he never guessed that it would take away the prime years of his life.

The Life and Times of Michael K.

There's a 1983 book by the South African writer JM Coetzee called The Life and Times of Michael K. It's about a slow man with a cleft lip who grows up and lives in "war-time" South Africa. It's cleverly written. It doesn't mention the colour of anybody's skin or who is fighting whom. That also makes it easy to draw parallels with any conflict in the world, India, and the plight of an individual caught in it. Michael K is defined by a man on the opposite side of the conflict, in one of the pages, like this:

" With Michaels it always seemed me that someone had scuffled together a handful of dust, spat on it, and patted it into the shape of a rudimentary man, making one or two mistakes (the mouth and without a doubt the contents of the head), omitting one or two details (the sex), but coming up nevertheless in the end with a genuine little man of the earth..."


The book is the journey of the little man of the earth trying to escape the system. There are probably many Michael Ks in India. There are episodes in the book that will remind you of the innocents who are picked up and branded as enemies of the system. In Malegaon, Mumbai, the heart of India and the borderlands.












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