Tuesday, August 26, 2014

DAY 182 - SARNATH



182) MONDAY, 26 DECEMBER 1977 : 8KMS. - SARNATH
 
 
We got up before 5.30 a.m. and had some  coffee for the morning, then we quickly got into the tricycle to the bank of the Ganges, arrived  just  in time as the sun rising from the horizon. Once again ....we rented a boat,  moving  along the sacred Ganges river


 
The Ganges river at dawn - http://munichtomadras1977.blogspot.com



There were not too many people  bathing, some were standing in the water, eyes closed, hands clasped murmuring  spells.  Some people would worship the sun I saw many people used their two hands to scoop up some water in the handsThen they  let the water flow down into the river like devoting  merits.  Some were diving up and down for 5 times or 4 times, according to the Hindu belief to have a dip in the Ganges at Varanasi before sunrise, and ended  with paying respect to the sun accompanied by the sacrifice ritual of Brahman.




Bathing in the Ganges - Photo : mw-panoramio.com / Google images search

   

It was a bit cool in the early morning but it seemed not cold for those people on ghats  to take a bath with fervor.  Our boat passed through the washing ghat. There were people standing washing clothes by beating them with rocks in a row and let them dry under the sun  on the floor or steps.  Some were unloading clothes  down from donkeys  that carried them. On certain ghats,  there were some sadhus  or ascetics, bathing and  meditating on the waterfront.



Laundry time  - http://munichtomadras1977.blogspot.com


It was remarkable, incidentally that most men sat side by side together on the riverbank by the walk- paths doing  their morning toilets without shame.  Some were brushing their teeth  with  a popular Indian branch of the toothbrush or the mustard  plant (Salvadora persica) looks like Neem)  at the same time.  Some were doing their personal business, sitting with their faces to the Ganges.  They were not embarassed by passing boats  in the Ganges  or passers-by and by those people taking a bath  as well, who seemed indifferent and uninterested.   It was  even  worse, as when these people  finished their business, they  continued  to carry their sarongs or little piece of loincloths revealing  the  forefront  and buttocks completely, walking down to wash themselves  in the sacred river Ganges in deserted parts of the bank.  It was really a naive nature 

I saw this in India, but it reminded me to similar practice in Kabul in Afghanistan that it was so common to happen  at the parks, around the walls and into the dried river of Kabul as well.




Manikarnika Ghat  - Photo : varanasicityonline.com / Google images search


The boat brought us to the dock at the funeral ghat this morning. There were  bodies wrapped in white cloth and tied up ready  to be cremated with  a reflection in the river.  I took it with awareness of live and death.  The undertaker was preparing firewood on scale.  It would deal soon.   Anicca vata sankhara — "Impermanent, alas, are all formations!"  (Buddhism)

We got off  the boat when the sun rose highly above, it was  around 8:30 a.m.  We kept walking  to the north of the pier to  view bathing rituals  like yesterday.  We passed the cremation of one another. There were two burning places and a cow was standing looking at them.  The person responsible for cremation was standing nearby.  

At one of the cremation , I saw feet sticking out.  In the river,  birds were standing and awaiting  on bamboos floating (they probably could smell burning flesh).  As a Hindu. cremation is not a function of  relatives. It is the responsibility of undertakers. That was why we did not see any family members  waiting around to set fire to burn.  Besides, it is considered as unclean to mingle  with a corpse. In 1829, when the British occupied India, the “Sati(Satee)”  was canceled/prohibited - tradition of Hinduism, a Hindu woman whose husband died had to walk into the burning fire to death by her husband as well.

There was a Hanuman temple in the nearby area, where there were men came to  train in bodybuilding by raising the weight pendulum to  swing over the shoulders. It is customary exercise or traditional Indian culture….., a popular spot for the young Indian.



Dhamek Stupa -http://munichtomadras1977.blogspot.com

 
In the afternoon, we continued our  trip to SARNATH, where the Lord Buddha gave the first sermon to the five deciples  (Panja  Waccis)in the area of deer garden or a forest of Maruekhathayawan.  


 
http://munichtomadras1977.blogspot.com



There were ruins of temples  and  stupas scattered in a wide area, mostly built in the reign of Emperor Ashoka. There remains a pile of rocks or the base of the building and most of the remaining Dhamekh Stupa (6th century), very beautiful decoration art as noted from some of the remains.



SARNATH - http://munichtomadras1977.blogspot.com
 

Around Dhamekh  Stupa, it is a temple and  square stupa like in Bodh Gaya.  Within the base of the Buddha image, inside the temple, there are bone relics of Gautama Buddha. The walls are beautifully  painted with the life of the Lord Buddha by a skilled Japanese   painter


 
Me and Lhasa Apso BHALU - http://munichtomadras1977.blogspot.com


Surrounding the Temple is open air museum of China (Beijing, built in 1939) but there are also  a  Tibetan  temple and  the one from Thailand (in 1977)....




http://munichtomadras1977.blogspot.com



It is remarkable that both the Lord Buddha’s birth place in BODH GAYA  and SARNATH  are of wide areas and have been maintained very well. Although Buddhism Is not the main religion in India . it is evident that the Buddhist  faith  and the prosperity of Buddhism is quite in high level  and somewhat  stable (no entrance fees  but revenue came from donations.  I gave for donation RS. 5.-).

At night about 22.30 p.m.,  a rainy storm  was so strong and  scary. The storm shook our campervan and the lighting at the  entrance of  the Museum was flickering caused by thunder and lightning but it quickly disappeared remarkably.











Monday, August 25, 2014

DAY 181 - BENARES



181) SUNDAY, 25 DECEMBER 1977 : 0KMS. - BENARES

 
The morning of Christmas day ! 
 
The time to explore VARANASI has come. We took a ride on  a tricycle to the banks of the Ganges river at Dasaswamedh Ghat . There were beggars sitting aside the road to the waterfront. People of all ages came to take a bath in the Ganges river.  On the river bank,  Brahmins  were sitting under a big umbrella to perform rituals  or enchant sacred words to those who came to bathe in the Ganges river




Manikarnika Ghat - Photo : BEN BEISKE - flickr (goindia.about.com) / Google images search

We rented a barge cruising down the river, passing various  ghats of different  castes. These people will not share their ghats with people of lower castes.  We arrived at  the ghat pier , where  a cremation was taking place with the smoke billowing up. There were a lot of firewood piles on the ground and  flocks  of crows and vultures flying  high above in the sky.



Morning bath in the Ganges river -  http://munichtomadras1977.blogspot.com
 
 
As we saw on different bathing ghats,  Indian people did not feel ashamed or embarrassed wearing very thin clothes, men and women, that were almost see-through when they were wet.  Some men wore loinclothes, called a Langota - a white or brightly colored and patterned  triangle shape cloth  with a cord  tied around their waists (wearing normally as underwear). I did not noticed anything  but  could not help it, if I saw something  unintentionally. Some women also released their saris, diving bare chest into the river but I did not see anyone staring at them. The men did not need to be careful when they changed their clothes, some even did not mind to show their bottoms of the jet black skin!




VARANASI Street - Photo : sitemaker.umich.edu / Google images search


I saw some of the dirt in the Ganges river like fizzy water, ceremony flowers strewn  or ashes floating along the river.  

From the Ganges, we took a tricycle to see the city, crowded with lots of tricycles and bikes but less cars. Besides, there were also cows generally walking  into lanes of smaller niches and  littering their dung on city streets.

 










Sunday, August 24, 2014

DAY 180 - BENARES



180) SATURDAY, 24 DECEMBER 1977 : 0KMS. - BENARES

 

We visited Varanasi today, observing a particular lifestyle of people.  Even we were outside Europe, we did not forget that it was Christmas Eve today.  So we went to have special dinner at Chinese restaurant : Sweet and sour fish, fried chicken with mushrooms and spring rolls. I thought  it was unusual for India



VARANASI Sttreet - Photo : jimbojack.com  /  Google images search 



*** Merry Christmas! ***

 

WIKIPEDIA : Varanasi is one of the holiest cities and centres of pilgrimage for Hindus of all denominations. It is one of seven Hindu holiest cities (Sapta Puri), considered the giver of salvation (moksha). Over 50,000 Brahmins live in Varanasi, providing religious services to the masses. Hindus believe that bathing in the Ganges remits sins and that dying in Kashi ensures release of a person's soul from the cycle of its transmigrations. Thus, many Hindus arrive here for dying.

 





Saturday, August 23, 2014

DAY 179 - BENARES



179) FRIDAY, 23 DECEMBER 1977 : 0KMS. - BENARES

 

Our campervan has been under reparing in the garage …. and it was my third relaxing day in Varanasi , doing nothing ! 


 
AVARANASI Market - Photo : Jorge Royan (wikipedia.org) / Bing images search



WIKIPEDIA: The earliest known archaeological evidence suggests that settlement around Varanasi in the Middle Ages in the Ganga valley (the seat of Aryan religion and philosophy), began in the 11th or 12th century BCE, placing it among the world's oldest continually inhabited cities. These remains suggest that the Varanasi area was populated by Vedic people. However, the Atharvaveda (the oldest known text referencing the city), which dates to approximately the same period, suggests that the area was populated by indigenous tribes. It is possible that archaeological evidence of these previous inhabitants has yet to be discovered. Varanasi was also home to Parshva, the 23rd Jain Tirthankara and the earliest Tirthankara that is accepted as a historical figure, in the 8th century BCE.

  








Friday, August 22, 2014

DAY 178 - BENARES


178) THURSDAY, 22 DECEMBER 1977 :  0KMS. - BENARES


The second day of rest, one more relaxing day in VARANASI / BENARES.

 
 
Doing daily laundry in the Ganges - Photo ; images.lpcdn.ca / Bing images search



WIKIPEDIA :  According to legend, Varanasi was founded by the god Shiva. The Pandavas, the heroes of the Hindu epic Mahabharata are also stated to have visited the city in search of Shiva to atone for their sins of fratricide and bramhanahatya that they had committed during the climactic Kurukshetra war. It is regarded as one of seven holy cities ...