Starting in Delhi was a great way to get our feet under us for the next few days. We visited the Shah Jahan mosque, the largest in India, then took a bicycle rickshaw ride through one of the older markets. THIS is where you really get a taste of India. Blank faces of half naked men gazed at our rickshaws as we fought to squeeze through the narrow streets. The children were the ones begging for money while the adults just looked at us as if we were from another planet. Once we got back in our luxurious air conditioned van we reflcted for several moments about different tidbits each one of us had seen. Some include: a naked man walking comfortably down the street, a man getting a straight razor shave from another man in the middle of the street, and many people hawking produce such as roots of the lotus flower. We had a total of about 6 hours to tour Delhi before heading to Agra, which was plenty.
Once again, I wasn't kidding
Around 3pm our driver picked us up from lunch and we set sail for Agra. My friend Adam Weinstein made this trek last year and told me to make sure I stayed awake for the 5 hour journey from Delhi to Agra; boy was he right. Sure, leaving the city you see less motorbikes and much less air pollution, but there are a whole set if different things to see that made horrific stories of poverty suddenly come real. Once we scratched the outskirts of Agra we were suddlenly let down to see some unusual gridlock traffic. We sat with the van in park and off for about an hour. We later came to find out that what was apparently a car accident turned out to be a riot. Many police officers lined the streets all weilding some sort of giant night stick, while riotors came by screaming Hindi chants. Welcome to Agra. No less than two hours later after a wonderful impromtu dinner at reataurant Maya, we saw around 200 people in the street outside our hotel. Evidently a kid dropped a gun and was shot in the head on accident. Not sure about this one. We went inside to decompress and get ready for the Taj Mahal the next day.
Taj Mahal: a memorial for Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan's favorite wife, Mumtaz Mahal. It took 22 years to complete and the help of over 2000 people. Words cannot describe how magnificent this structure really is. One cool thing that we learned was that there were plans for another Taj Mahal, a black one, built for Shah Jahan himself. The foundation and garden were complete but Shah Jahan's son, the succeeding Emporer, had him arrested for spending too much of the peoples money on himself. Shah Jahan was said to be the richest ruler in the world by a landslide. Out of the many wonders of the world that I have now seen, this one rivals Petra and Machu Picchu closely.
The last important part of our stay in India was Diwali, India's festival of lights. This is similar to the 4th of July celebration in the US where everything revolves around lights and fireworks, except Diwali celebrates a significant Hindu holiday. I had read somewhere that Diwali outdid any other firework celebration in the world. Beth and I certainly confirmed this. For a solid week everyone and I mean EVERYONE is lighting some sort of "cracker" all day and all night. What we first thought were gun shots in Mumbai, were actually just M80s. It was such a great coincedence to be in India for this gigantic festival and to spend it on the rooftop of our hotel, Cabana.
Leaving India was sad, but we had Thailand to look forward to. The stink of our last day in India was that I came down with a bad cold, which came with a fever. Luckily Beth and I somehow got upgraded to First Class on our flight to Bangkok which made everything much better.
I think these are my favorite pictures yet. Great job, you guys. Be safe and keep having fun!
ReplyDeleteMonkeys...hmmmmm! they are a little agressive sometimes. Beautiful pictures guys!
ReplyDeleteIncredible pictures.
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