09/01/2013

Reminiscing 2012 -- A Trip to the Holy City


Another year passed by, what remain are memories- both good and not-so-good ones. For me, it was a year of some dreams coming true while some others shattered, a year of welcoming new relations while letting go of some, a year of watching an awesome Life of Pi while being a witness to incidents of monstrosity against women- in a nutshell, 2012 was a mixed bag. But one thing I must admit that I've traveled a lot last year-visited many places, watched new things, tasted different food items and enjoyed the utmost. Traveling is something I just love doing but then, who doesn't?? I've visited some of this places earlier but this time I was thinking that I may not have the time and opportunity to visit these places again once I start working, that maybe this is for the last time I'm going there. Silly thoughts I know, but who knows what the future has in store for us? For instance, this was my fourth time in Varanasi. I've been there one winter as a 8 year old kid, two times in spring and this time it was monsoon. This time the ghats are half submerged under the river Ganga. But I really want to visit Varanasi during Diwali one time. Its the Festival of Light and its during this time the entire stretch of the ghats along river Ganga are decorated with diyas. I've heard its a treat to watch but I don't know if I can really make it.

The Ganga itself is mesmerizing to watch during sunrise. You can see all sorts of activities people do on the ghats- people selling flowers, offering tarpan and taking a bath, people eager to take you on a boat ride, sadhus and sanyasis all over the place, there is even a ghat where dead bodies are cremeted, Manikarnika Ghat. There's an age-old saying that people who die on the banks of river Ganga here are washed of all sins they've committed over their lifetime and they find a place in heaven. So, many people, in their deathbed, were brought here as it was their last wish to die here. In the evening you can see the Ganga arati, where priests offer prayers to Mata Ganga after sunset.











  

And the most famous gullies of Varanasi- narrow alleyways between tall stone buildings in the old part of the city, most of them leading to ghats. Let's say you are walking through a gully, and suddenly you see an ox standing in the middle of it, blocking the whole alleyway and you don't know what to do- that's precisely what happened with me. There are heaps of trash, cows and dogs eating the leftovers from them, cow dung on road here and there, people on cycles coming from the opposite direction with speed- I'm standing in the middle of the gully trying to figure out how to go past the ox dodging the cycles!! But despite all of these, they've got this old charm, an ancient feel that gets me hooked to the city.


 Varanasi is also known as the City of Temples or the Holy City. It has got temples literally at every nook and corner. Well, till date, I've been to the Vishwanath Temple, Sankat Mochan and the Kalbhairav Temple. City- dwellers have got a strange connection to their deities. Every Gods and Goddesses have got a specific day of the week on which there's a surge of number of worshipers at the temples. For instance, Monday is for Baba VishwanathJi, Tuesday for HanumanJi and so on. The crowd is immense on those days.

There are a lot of  places to visit in and around Varanasi apart from the temples. Some of them are the Sanchi Stupas where you can see the ancient ruins of the Buddhist monastery and an adjacent museum where you can see the relics excavated from the site, the Ramnagar fort on the opposite bank of the river which is the palace of the erstwhile Maharaja of Kashi and a museum showcasing the paintings of the Maharajas in addition to the guns,swords and cars of that era, The Benaras Hindu University campus etc.









I admit that I'm a self-confessed food lover. So this post is not complete if I don't mention about the specialty of Varanasi in that field. The city is famous for its two delicacies- raabri and malai. These are the two things I just love about Varanasi. There's this small shop near Kedar Ghat that makes the best raabri and malai I've tasted so far. Another item is besaan ke ladoo, the best found at a shop  inside the Sankat Mochan Temple. They are made of ghee and tastes heavenly. Next comes the chaat, dai vada and laung lata. Till now, I've only tasted the tomato chaat from a junk food joint and dahi vadas made of rasgullas. Really tasty!! That shop inside Sankat Mochan Temple also sells the best laung lata. Your trip to Varanasi is not complete if you've not tasted these.

This is just my experience during my four visits to Varanasi. And I'm always looking for an opportunity to visit the city again specially during Diwali. I hope that I'll make it someday... :-)