Here are the first of what we expect to be a growing list of sections:
Quantum Mechanics
Close your eyes and imagine a photograph taken in India. Perhaps it is a woman
with a red scarf over her head. She's looking straight at the camera. Perhaps it
is a beggar. He is looking straight at the camera. Perhaps it is a group of
children. All are looking straight at the camera.
When you arrive here you'll realize that these Indians have not been looking
at the camera. They've been staring at the big fat rich white foreigner. The big
fat rich white foreigner happened to raise a camera to his eye. The Indians kept
staring.
It is impossible to observe the phenomenon that is India without disturbing
it. The instant that you step onto the street you will become the focus of
attention for beggars, mercants, and the merely curious. This makes it very tough
to get photos of Indians merely going about their lives. What's worse, the
begging-money-from-tourists culture means that as soon as you find an Indian
doing something worth photographing, he or she will drop whatever it is and try
to do something that seems to them more likely to result in a typical happy
tourist photo and a typical happy 10 rupee baksheesh.
An odd way to work through this problem might be to go on an organized tour.
You are more likely to be ignored if you're one of 30 rich foreigners than if
you're the only one. And every block in India has enough beggars to surround one
photographer and prevent him or her from working. But very few blocks in India
have enough beggars to surround 30 foreigners.
Cultural Background
In touring the United States and understanding its people and appreciating its
art, music, and architecture, you will draw on many elements of the standard
Western liberal arts education:
- Homer's Iliad and Odyssey
- Ionian pre-Socratic philosophy
- Athenian philosophy, art, and literature
- Pre-Christian Jewish history and beliefs
- 2000 years of Christian thought
- Roman history, art, and literature
- European history, art, and literature
- specifically English history, including the Norman Conquest, and literature
such as Shakespeare
- American history, art, and literature
(Plus Native American culture, history, art, and religion if you want to have
any hope of understanding the original occupants of the continent.)
In visiting India, none of the preceding is of any use. You'll feel like the
worst educated person in the whole country. And guess what? You probably are.
Ideally, before leaving for India you should familiarize yourself with the
most important literature of the subcontinent: Mahabharata and
Ramayana (both available in translations, as videos, and as abridged
English books on tape). Read at least one book on the history of India (see
below). And try to become familiar with the main tenets of the Hindu, Muslim,
Buddhist, and Jain religions.
Despite your best efforts you'll probably find yourself continuously hungry
for more knowledge. One way to deal with the situation is perhaps to take a trip
with your college's alumni association. These are often lead by scholars of
Indian history and literature. As noted in the "Quantum Mechanics" section,
traveling in a group might not be such a bad thing.
Adjustment Period
You might want to allow at least one week to adjust to the cultural
differences between India and the West. The noise of car horns, the dirt, the
worries about food-borne and water-borne illness, the constant onslaught of
beggars, aggressive merchants, and scam artists in the street, the language
barrier. Your natural first reaction may very likely be to retreat into yourself
and into a comfortable hotel. Especially if you've flown directly from the US and
are jetlagged, it will probably take you at least one week to come out of your
shell.
It is pretty easy to understand what an American would find difficult about
India. But when you encounter Indians who've traveled West it is interesting to
ask what they found hard to accept about the West. Here are some of the things
that I heard from Indians:
- formality -- they feel like they've got to put on fancy clothes to sit in a
restaurant, call a friend before dropping over to his or her house, etc.
- insincerity -- why do Americans say "Have a nice day" if they don't care one
way or the other?
- violence -- accepting with equanimity violence in schools, movies, etc.
- the assumption that everyone has a car and the third-class citizenship of
those without cars; in India there is always some form of public transport
available from Point A to Point B. You might be riding in a truck but you'll get
there without having to hire a taxi or depend on someone else
Architecture
India's civilization goes back 5000 years but the climate and construction
techniques did not favor preservation. The oldest extant buildings are generally
from the 13th century. Most of the best-known tourist attractions date from the
Mughal period, around 1600. These Muslim conquerors destroyed many of the Hindu
and Buddhist temples within their realms. Therefore you won't find too many old
Hindu or Buddhist sites unless you travel south beyond the areas once ruled by
the Mughals.
Camera Gear
If you're in India to photograph architecture, you really ought to pack a
perspective correction lens. Even though some sites ban tripods it really would
have been nice to be able to bring back some undistorted images. The Canon 45 and
90mm lenses would be fabulous for capturing doorways and detail. Just hire a
guide for $1 to carry your gear!
If you're interested in photographing people, keep in mind that the scenes
change fast. Indians are in constant motion. Even if your subject is stationary,
in the half-second that it takes for a point-and-shoot camera to focus a
pedestrian has very likely walked in front of your lens. A 35mm autofocus SLR is
a good tool for people photography in India. But the bigger and more
expensive-looking it is, the more disruptive your presence will be.
In the cities, you might want to consider working in black and white. Given
the crazy quilt of paints that are used on the various building you're very
unlikely to get a balanced color composition. Furthermore, a lot of buildings are
gray unfinished concrete. Farms and national parks can be very lush, especially
during the late summer monsoon season. Here working in color would probably be a
better choice.
If you're using a digital single-lens reflex with interchangeable lenses,
e.g., a Nikon D1 or a Canon D30, keep in mind that India's dust will eventually
work its way onto the CCD sensor. Make sure that you carry the necessary
knowledge and tools with which to flip up the mirror and clean the CCD (if all
else fails, set the camera to manual and a shutter speed of 30 seconds or Bulb,
remove the lens, lie down on a bed, hold the camera body lens-mount facing down,
release the shutter, blow gently into the body).
Be careful with contrast. India is a very sunny place. If your digital camera
offers adjustable contrast, pick the lowest setting. If using a film camera, try
low-contrast film. In black and white you can adjust the contrast by shortening
developing time and increasing exposure. With color film you'll have to buy the
right film. Fuji and Kodak both make ISO 400 professional color negative film
intended for weddings. These would be good choices (see
the
photo.net film recommendations article for specific emulsions).
Planning Your Trip
The best time to visit India is in the winter: October through February. If
you go early there will still be some water left over from the July through
September monsoon. Migratory birds stopping in various sanctuarys are at their
peak in December and January.
Try to give yourself a week to adjust to the time change and, more
importantly, the cultural change. Though he brought a copy of the Bhagavad-Gita
with him to his cabin at Walden Pond, it seems doubtful that Thoreau would have
adjusted quicky to mainstream Indian life. Peace, quiet, and solitude are mostly
impossible in a country crammed with 1 billion people. It seems that Indians have
given up on the idea. Public spaces such as restaurants are filled with blaring
music from loudspeakers within and blaring horns from cars without.
Unless you're young and intrepid, you might want to budget a day of relaxation
for every two days of photography and sightseeing. India has some fabulous
"heritage hotels" where you can sit by the pool, tour a wildlife sanctuary, eat
elaborate meals, etc.
Beginner India tourists generally restrict themselves to the "Golden triangle"
of North India: Delhi, Agra, and Jaipur. These three cities contain many of the
finest sights and the surrounding countryside includes tiger and bird
sanctuaries, pilgrimage towns, and agricultural villages. You'll fly into Delhi.
Two or three days is enough to see the principal sights. From there I recommend
driving to Bharatpur and staying for two nights. You can spend your days at the
bird sanctuary and also visit the abandoned Mughal capital of Fatehpur Sikri.
From Bharatpur go back to the chaos of Indian city life in Agra. Two nights there
will give you enough time to visit the Taj Mahal twice plus the other main
sights. If you're pressed for time, head west to Jaipur and the Rajasthan
countryside. Perhaps bracket your trip to Rajasthan with stays at Sariska
National Park and Ranthambhore National Park. If you fly out of Jaipur you'll
need to choose a connection through Delhi or Mumbai so for variety you might
consider stopping in Mumbai for a day or two.
Frank Kusy's Cadogan guide to India
(see below) is very useful for identifying interesting regions.
Survival
Almost everyone, including American citizens, needs a visa to visit India.
Check the Indian consulate's Web site in your country for the location that
handles residents of your area. It is best to allow two or three
The time in all of India is GMT+5.5, i.e., five and a half hours ahead of
London and 10.5 hours ahead of New York. Thus if it is 9:00 am in New York, it is
already 7:30 pm in Paris.
Electricity in India is 220V at 50 Hz. Most laptop computer and digital camera
power supplies can function on this power and at most you'll need a mechanical
adaptor, which fancy hotels are accustomed to supplying.
The country code for India is 91. If you're European or are an American GSM
tri-band mobile phone owner, you'll find sporadic GSM coverage throughout India.
Keep in mind that they use the European frequencies of 900 and 1800 MHz so an
American Voicestream phone won't work unless you've had the foresight to get a
special multi-frequency model. I was able to make long-distance calls with my
Orange UK mobile only from the following cities:
Money is the rupee. You can get rupees with an American ATM card from some
bank machines in very large cities. Don't rely on ATMs, however. The tourist
capital of Agra, a city of 2 million people, only has one ATM and it isn't
equipped to handle foreign cards. Carry US dollars in cash and/or traveler's
checks. Government-operated tourist attractions generally charge an admissions
fee of $5 or $10 and prefer to be paid in US dollars. So it is useful to arrive
with a wad of five dollar bills. The exchange rate in March 2001 was about 47
rupees to the dollar.
Oh yes, speaking of money... most people in India don't have any. This is a
country where wealth is primarily based on land. India's population will soon be
larger than China's but the country is only 3.2 million square kilometers in size
(China is 9.5 million square km) **** of China's size. The railways and other
facilities built by the British colonists were sufficient for the population of
the time: 200 million. With more than 1 billion people crowding the subcontinent
today, these facilities are now woefully overtaxed.
Physical Survival (Health)
Visit tripprep.com **** to figure out what immunizations you ought to have
before visiting India, or any other country for that matter. Personally I think
you ought to have the new Hepatitis vaccines and maybe rabies if you intend to
offer some comfort to the stray animals that you encounter.
Carry an anti-diarrhea medicine such as Immodium AD to treat symptoms of
stomach upset and also the antibiotic Cipro to treat the causes. Brush your teeth
with and drink only bottled mineral water. Drinking tapwater, even in the biggest
cities, is by far the most likely way to give yourself dysentery or cholera. Food
at reasonably clean restaurants is likely to be reasonably safe. Still, if you
want to absolutely positively avoid emergency trips to filthy Indian public
restrooms, follow this regimen:
- only vegetarian food
- no salad, fresh fruit, or uncooked vegetables
- only expensive restaurants ($10-20 per meal per person), preferably inside
luxury hotels, or McDonalds
If you're worried about crime you might be comforted by the words of B.M.
Chopra: "We believe that those foreigners who come to India and hire a pre-paid
taxi or authorised tourist operators are seldom duped or murdered."
Indians are not averse to crime per se, as evidenced by a government
filled with corrupt and wealthy officials. But most Indian cultures discourage
violence and, in any case, it would be tough to get away with a violent crime in
such a crowded country. There is simply no way to be alone on a city street. So
if you keep your passport and most cash in a neck wallet and stay in better
hotels, you're unlikely to suffer from crime.
Probably the easiest way to get killed in India is to walk down the street and
not listen for car horns. Drivers expect pedestrians to jump out the way, in
predictable directions, and within a predictable amount of time. If you violate
these rules, none of which will be familiar to you, you'll be flattened by a huge
bus or truck.
Language
Suppose that you want to be able to communicate with the average person in
India. You'd have to learn dozens of languages, none of which is more related to
another than French and German are to each other. Indians from different regions
must communicate in either Hindi or English but the vast majority of Indians are
fluent in neither language. More young people these days are attending schools
where 100 percent of the instruction is in English, especially in the south. The
bottom line is that you can get by quite nicely in larger towns without learning
any Indian languages.
Literature
Some of the best young authors writing in English are Indian. For a modern
perspective on the country, read The Romantics by ****. If you've got a lot of
patience and yearning to dwell on the children of Partition, dip into Salman
Rushdie's Midnight's Children.
The classics of English literature regarding India include Kipling's stories
of India and Kim, E.M. Forster, ****.
Important travelogues include Area of Darkness (V.S. Naipaul
1964). May you be the Mother of a Hundred Sons -- A Journey Among the Women
of India (Elisabeth Bushmiller 1990).
In case any Cultural Studies professors are reading this we'd better not
neglect the cinema, starting with, of course, the great auteur Albert R.
Broccoli, producer of the James Bond series. Octopussy is partially
set in India. Perhaps the photo.net readership will alert us to other Bond
sightings on the subcontinent. Also see Heat and Dust, Passage
to India. Film connoisseurs would tell you not to miss the entire output
of S**** Ray, India's answer to Akira Kurosawa.
Guidebooks
Frank Kusy's Cadogan guide to India
is good for background, history, cultural education, and picking a
region and route.
Budget travelers seem to like the Rough Guide and Lonely Planet.
The Dorling Kindersley Delhi, Agra, and Jaipur is useful for its
inclusion of photographs of every tourist attraction. Unless you're staying at
five-star hotels, you'll find the book weak on preparing you for the practical
realities of traveling through India.
Shopping
When shopping for souvenirs keep in mind that the Indian economy produces two
classes of goods. Mostly you'll see stuff that is so cheap and tacky that it
isn't worth the space in your suitcase. It only costs 10 rupees but you'll have
to throw it out when you get home. If it isn't hideously ugly and cheap you'll
probably find that you can't afford it. The Taj Mahal cost $1 million to build.
And that was 400 years ago, when $1 million would have been real money.
Businessmen, corrupt politicians, and foreign connoisseurs sustain a market for
$10,000 inlaid marble tabletops, $3,000 carpets, and $200 pashmina shawls.
If you're going to buy something expensive be prepared to be, uh, doing your
share to contribute to India's economic development. Unless you're an expert
there is probably no way to determine the fair price for an item. In the better
shops you probably won't be defrauded but the price tags only indicate what the
Indians think a rich foreign fool might pay. The real price is probably one third
to one half of what the tag says.
Getting There
Air India is essentially part of the Indian government where civil servants
make your local department of motor vehicles look like a gold standard of
efficiency. Indians avoid Air India unless the price is much lower than foreign
carriers.
Flying from the US, you'll generally have to connect in Europe or the Far East
and then proceed to Delhi or Mumbai (Bombay). From the east coast of the US,
British Airways has a pleasant schedule. From the west coast, you might prefer to
connect through Japan or Korea.
See
the photo.net international
airline guide for general recommendations. For domestic airlines, see
below.
Getting Around
A camel train
slogs along in the slow lane. A cyclist going the wrong way comes toward you in
the fast lane. A stray cow rests on the median. In the opposite lanes you gaze
upon a truck filled with gravel that is in turn topped with four families. The
back of the truck says "Horn Please" and in fact the double-ridden motorcycle
passing it obliges by honking several times.
Where are you? National Highway 2, the best interstate highway in India, going
between the nation's capital (Delhi) and the tourist capital (Agra).
If you're like most upperclass Indians and tourists, you've got a driver. With
an International Driver's License, you can rent a car and then you'll only need
the three standard things for Indian driving: good brakes; good horn; good luck.
Professional drivers get into an average of two or three accidents each year so
definitely take the collision damage waiver!
Driving at night makes the daytime seem tame. Oncoming cars will not dim their
highbeams for you. Heavy trucks drive at night to avoid encountering policemen
who'll demand bribes to overlook their various loading and safety violations.
Everyone swerves to avoid bicyclists, none of whom have reflectors or reflective
clothing.
On balance, hiring a car and driver is a great way to see India. Most of the
life of the country is spread out along the roads and you'll see unforgettable
things from your car windows. Furthermore, as long as you stay in the vehicle,
your presence is unlikely to disrupt the locals' behavior. Taking pictures from a
car window becomes an attractive idea but just remember that Garry Winogrand's
artistic career went into a rapid decline as soon as he relied on this crutch.
Finally don't plan to go more than about 200 km. per day by car. Even with
someone else driving, car travel in India is slow and tiring.
For long distance travel the train offers scenery through a dusty dirty window
and an authentic Indian experience. Speeds are somewhat slower even than
America's benighted rail system. The schedules are geared for Indian business
travelers who may wish to make a day trip out and back. Thus you may find
yourself having to get out of bed at 0500 to make the train. Get your ticket from
a travel agent. You don't want to be waiting in lines, maybe for hours while the
railway computer systems come back up. Hard to argue with the prices, though. For
the US cost of a big bottle of mineral water, two cups of tea, a Coke, and a
light breakfast, you get ... big bottle of mineral water, two cups of tea, a
Coke, and a light breakfast, plus a 310 km 5-hour train ride to Jaipur
from Delhi on the Shatabdi express.
Despite the low prices, in the end it may be easier to fly. For example,
suppose you wanted to go 600 miles south from Agra to the tech city of Hyderabad.
This takes 24 hours by train but a 4-hour drive back to Delhi and a 2-hour flight
can get you there refreshed.
Almost any domestic destination can be reached by jet in under two hours;
India is, after all, a fairly small country. However, you'll find that flights
are infrequent and only available from a few hubs. Mumbai (Bombay) is the major
hub with Delhi not too far behind. Calcutta, Bangalore, and Chennai also offer a
variety of flights. As far as domestic airlines go, you've got India Airways, the
domestic arm of the dreaded Air India, and Jet Airways. The latter airline is
greatly preferred. Jet Airways has a fleet of Boeing 737s with an average age of
three years. Service is efficient and business class has very comfortable
four-across seating.
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