Greetings from the tea estates of Munnar, close to the Tamil Nadu border, at a height comfortably above Ben Nevis. Even then, the temperature is 30 deg C. I’m being generously guided by an Indian university friend from fifty years ago.
Kerala - first time in India
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Gorgeous! Lucky you! .We have a local eatery: Dev's Kerala restaurant (aka Kev's Derala), which is very good. Hope you're eating well too!It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostHope you're eating well too!
Last edited by Keraulophone; 21-02-24, 14:07.
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View Post
Breakfast this morning in Munnar: wheat puris (most choose huge rice dosas) to dip in mint, tomato and coconut chutneys, potato on the right. Washed down with hot water.
From what I remember Keralan dips/spices are quite mild?
Can't be doing with even medium hot, misself.
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Originally posted by Old Grumpy View PostFrom what I remember Keralan dips/spices are quite mild?
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Yesterday one million women came here to Trivandrum for the Attukal Pongala festival. (In 2009 the 2.5 million pilgrims [in a city of 1.6 M residents] was a Guinness world record for a women’s meeting.) Groups like this one lined the streets offering food and drinks, first to the female deity, then to passers-by, whether Hindu or not. With so many local Christians and Muslims, there is a brotherhood of cooperation and respect. For example, churches postponed their morning services to the evening and accommodated the ladies as they prepared for the festival. A Brahmin priest, set up in a nearby shrine full of fruit, came and sprinkled their offerings with holy water. Sights, odours, sounds and tastes to remember.
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostYesterday one million women came here to Trivandrum for the Attukal Pongala festival. (In 2009 the 2.5 million pilgrims [in a city of 1.6 M residents] was a Guinness world record for a women’s meeting.) Groups like this one lined the streets offering food and drinks, first to the female deity, then to passers-by, whether Hindu or not. With so many local Christians and Muslims, there is a brotherhood of cooperation and respect. For example, churches postponed their morning services to the evening and accommodated the ladies as they prepared for the festival. A Brahmin priest, set up in a nearby shrine full of fruit, came and sprinkled their offerings with holy water. Sights, odours, sounds and tastes to remember.
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostWith so many local Christians and Muslims, there is a brotherhood of cooperation and respect. For example, churches postponed their morning services to the evening and accommodated the ladies as they prepared for the festival. A Brahmin priest, set up in a nearby shrine full of fruit, came and sprinkled their offerings with holy water. Sights, odours, sounds and tastes to remember.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
It's so good to be hearing this - there has been so much about Hindu nationalism of late feeding an unquestioning chain of negativity.
Neighbouring Tamil Nadu, with more than twice Kerala’s population, has a similar disregard for the Hindu nationalists of the north. Modi tried to make Hindi the only official language but the four southern states wouldn’t have it; that would have intensified Hindu nationalism, with its associated effects on civil liberties and local conflicts, often sparked by spurious claims for antecedent religious sites. English remains the official second language by which states with diverse languages (over 100 in India) can communicate on official business.
Modi’s support is strong in the populous north and the BJP is on track to win the general election in May.
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