Discovering Rabindranath Tagore



Labels: Amartya Sen, Argumentative Indians, Dalhousie, Darjeeling, Jana Gana Mana, Karwar, Rabindranath Tagore, Tagore and Gandhi
How IDEAS, COMMUNITIES and empowered ACTION create a better world!
Labels: Amartya Sen, Argumentative Indians, Dalhousie, Darjeeling, Jana Gana Mana, Karwar, Rabindranath Tagore, Tagore and Gandhi
Isn't travel supposed to broaden horizons?
Over centuries, travel to faraway lands had a sense of adventure and romance associated with it. Travellers intermingled with the local cultures, learnt something from them and gave back something from their own, to create new cultures. Travel is supposed to broaden horizons and expose people to new ways of thinking, new cuisines, customs & cultures. I once met a German teenage couple on a Frankfurt-Delhi flight - teenagers out to see India. They wanted to "explore life around the Ganges" and were travelling on a shoe-string budget (partly sponsored by their parents), without any specific agenda. They told me of a European custom where parents give their 18-19 year old children whatever money they can afford to so that their kids can "go see the world" for sometime! How romantic? A whiff of fresh air, when increasingly, people seem to want to travel within their "comfort zones" and to "branded destinations". Is this travel at all?
The Resort is the Tourist Destination!
Notice how people describe their holidays these days? "We went to a Club Mahindra Resort" or the Taj Exotica! The place they went to follows (if its a brand!) and they are completely stumped when you ask them what they saw, ate, experienced. I always wonder what people do when they go on a week long trip and stay at one resort especially in India where covering a radius of 200+ kilometers to see all the sites around is quite tiresome travelling out from this one "resort". So they stay back in this resort most of the time and come back after seeing the resort and eating Punjabi food, Pizzas or bastardized versions of local dishes (at those "colourful" buffets). All this, while they laugh at the poor old 60+ folks who take their once in a life time trip to Europe with SOTC with the comfort of maharaj-cooked Indian food.
Ask them what they saw and they would have missed out on some of the most memorable places in the area, because they thought it was passe or nobody told them about it. If its a vacation overseas, they may tell you quite excitedly about some malls, casinos, cars, airports that they saw, about "shows" in Las Vegas but nothing about The Grand Canyon nearby!
Aren't brands too common now?
We are a gregarious and vane species. We love to talk about the elitist things we did! Is going to a Club Mahindra Resort elitist anymore, or is it egalitarian now? Or visiting Disneyland, Goa or Singapore? How about trying some obscure locations, hotels and cuisines that you can "talk" about? Want to talk about a hotel, then stay at some of the great properties of the world once in a while (even if its for one night), high end Oberoi properties, Four Seasons, The Mt. Kenya Safari Club or The Royal Livingstone at the Victoria Falls.
Visit some obscure places, try the local cuisine and you'll hold your audiences spell-bound talking about it. Try Angkor Vat in Cambodia, Lake Naivasha in Kenya, Lapland Area of Finland and the 8 waterfalls in the Karwar region, Panhala, Arunachal Pradesh or Ladakh. Try foie gras and oysters in France, reindeer meat and salmon in Finland, crocodile and ostrich meat in Kenya and duck feet in Hongkong. In India, try out Chettinad food, Nethli fish fry, vathakulambu in Tamilnadu, Sarson Da Saag in Punjab, Mirchi Ka Salan in Andhra and you would at the very least make your audiences think about the shitty holiday they just had in Singapore where they did nothing!
Infrastructure in India sucks, but are we checking out infrastructure?
Ask people why they don't checkout "Incredible India" and pat comes the reply "Whats there to see in India? The infrastructure sucks, the Delhi Punjabis are rude!, whats there in the Himalayas and my kids want to go to Singapore?" Agreed, infrastructure sucks in India and it will take at least another decade for it to get better. Surely a country that is a microcosm of a whole continent with its 5000 year old history, its varied traditions, architecture, cuisines, natural sites and its varied geography does have something to offer for a vacation.
Having shown your kids the superb infrastructure of Singapore & Hongkong, its probably time to see India and show your kids too, so that they don't need to see it when they retire and come back at the sunset of their professional careers in the US (getting back to their roots), to see what their parents never showed them!
Labels: Duck Feet, Finland, Foie Gras, Goa, Hongkong, India Tourism, Indian Tourist Destinations, Karwar, Offbeat Holidays, Romance of Holidays, Singapore, SOTC
Power of the Contact Book
Most mobile phones (and increasingly land line phones as well) have contact lists and subscribers rely heavily on them, often not "remembering" any of the numbers that they have stored away. Once a number is stored away, it can easily be updated with a changed number when the subscriber changing his/her number informs the Closed User Group (CUG)! of "need to know" people. In fact, the Contact Book has virtually created a social revolution in the way homo sapiens manage (and forget) phone numbers.
Google Search and Online Directories
Easily accessible information on the Internet, can help look up any changed numbers if its so required. Companies who change numbers (once in maybe 10 years) could even use it as an opportunity to do some PR and increase contact with their customers! Solutions such as Plaxo, with its centralized contact books can help disseminate changes to CUGs through a few keystrokes.
Future Technologies - Name Lookup a la Internet
I am sure LDAP and DNS like services as on the Internet will soon be available to lookup phone numbers and other "public" information about subscribers on the fly. This will soon make a number and its "need for permanency" meaningless!
Based on past global experiences, current social changes and future technologies, TRAI in India, would be better advised to spend its energies on better concepts that truly keep service levels high and protect customers. Enforcing service providers to maintain mandatory Service Level Commitments, RTI (Right To Information) on Service Order Processing and increasing competition in other ways may be the more productive and efficient way of protecting the consumer!
Labels: LNP, Mobile Number Portability, Mobile Phone Contact Lists, Number Portability, TRAI
Labels: Cricket Sociology, Indian Premier League, IPL, Mumbai Indians
India's Naval Sites
INS Vikrant once India's aircraft-carrier is now a Naval Museum Ship, that is docked in Mumbai harbour next to the Gateway of India, is open to tourists curiously only during Navy Week and a little later (Nov & Dec). Another interesting site at Goa, attached to the Navy is the National Institute of Oceanography, that I saw as a kid. Remember seeing the large under-sea exploration capsules that scientists use for exploration. This organization is best known for being the owners of the Antarctica expeditions.
Project Seabird, the huge naval site at Karwar, covers @ 26 km stretch along the highway NH-17. Five!! picturesque beaches in this stretch, the backdrop of the western ghats and the sea so close to the national highway is one of the most picturesque parts of the West Coast of India (picture says it all). Karwar port is perhaps the only port where ships are docked a few feet away from the national highway. I have seen the Operation Seabird site @ 7 years ago, while it was still under construction and I understand its all done now.
Republic Day Parade
Every kid in India, grows up seeing this on TV every year on 26th January. As all of us know, its a huge attraction and draws many visitors from in & around Delhi and is a virtual show-case of India's military might. Every NCC cadet's goal is to be part of this parade!! With a tradition to invite selected world leaders to preside over the parade every year, its probably already on the international circuit.
Whilst visiting a lot of these sites may seem to be out of bounds for citizens, you would be surprised to know that it is not entirely so. Most of these sites have PROs and actually welcome people and take them around or is openly advertised open for citizens at specific times of the year.
Military Tourism - would go a long way in inspiring youngsters to join the armed forces. It may well help reduce the shortage of officers that the army faces. Combine this with some elements of introduction to the armed forces lifestyle - Officers Mess, RSI Clubs and the hundreds of Golf Courses that the armed forces own in various parts of the country and it could go a long way in getting youngsters to join the Armed Forces again.
Labels: Aero India, Khardung La, Military Tourism, Operation Vijay, Project Seabird, Wagah
Labels: Agriculture, Food Crisis, Importing Food, Imports
Labels: Delhi Hotspots, Delhi Metro, Delhi Tourism, Qutub Minar
Labels: Dharamshala, Himachal Tourism, Kangra Paintings, Palampur