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Travels, With My Rant Hi! It's me, Jay, and I'm heading off to India for a while. I fly out March 26, 2008. Namaste.

In Shillong, Meghalaya

INDIA | Saturday, 19 April 2008 | Views [425]

Hi all.  I’m doing a bit of a catch-up here, so this post will be high on forward motion and light on impressions and description.  We are now in Shillong, Meghalaya, the state south of Assam.  Shillong was the British capital of Assam when Assam covered the entire NE, what is today seven states.  It is in the highlands and was knick-named by the British the Scotland of India.  At 4,800 feet, it is very comfortable.  Today is Saturday, April 19, and I last wrote you last Sunday night.

Summing up:

Monday; Guwahati;  the first day of the Assamese New Year (from an email I sent home):

We met at Deboo’s and were invited for a traditional Assamese tea by Deboo's wife.  The 5 of us (4 really, as Deboo's wife's English is not so good) discussed permits, Bihu, the sweets she had made (there's always one that is nauseating, which you just have to grin and gag down) and our previous day.  Deboo then drove us to our third festival site (called pandals), as he was going that way anyway.

And there, again, we were celebrated as guests to the festival.  The invitations we had stumbled on the other day got us into the prime section, first behind a barrier, then in front, then in the front row.  We were each presented with another Bihuwon, a souvenir festival book (only 4 pages are in English!), given bottles of water and Sprite, and chips (crisps).  Later tea and cookies were served.

The last move, the one to the front row, was so we'd be next to the TV presenter, a beautiful woman of amazing complexion, dress, poise and English, who was narrating the event.  Apparently the evening was beamed live to the Assamese community world wide, to 22 countries we were told (".....including the UK, Canada and the United States.....")  Thus, when we were interviewed, God knows who saw it!  Amazing!  We had divided our story between us, so we could look well spoken and prepared.  But the interviewer set Ann back on her heals for a moment when she asked whether she thought that spreading the beauty and pageantry of Assamese culture could make a positive difference in the world.  Ann recovered nicely with a non-response response.  We joked later that, No, McDonalds will eventually crush you, but for now it's pretty wonderful not having a "Big MacAssam" on the menu.  (By the way, I've seen McDonalds in Mumbai, but not in Kolkata, though it is surely there.  But here, with nearly a million people, I don't think there is one.  Ahhhhh.)

Still later, we were invited to the offices of the organizers for some food.  We said yes because Ann needed a toilet and the pandal didn't have one, except in the office.  (Amazing, as there were probably 5-10,000 people there!  Of course it was trashed, but a western style, which Ann hates as there is the sit-or-don't-sit problem!)  Another problem was that this locked us in for the evening, so our planned "early night" ended at 01:20 when the auto-rickshaw dropped me at the turn-off to their hotel and I walked the rest of the way back to Deboo's.

Again the dancing and costumes, the music and pageantry were amazing, but there is little way to convey that in writing here.  And in the front row you got it full force, but napping was harder there and I was tired.  And there was always someone else to be introduced to.  I think the fact that we are from three different countries, with three different English accents, adds an air of "delegation" to us.

Tuesday:  It was back to work Tuesday on getting our permits.  The internet didn’t work, tours were way too expensive, and even the coffee place had changed its menu for Bihu and the “Black Coffee” option was not offered!  Things were pissy, we were irritable, and all was shitty.

Then, as if sent by the gods, one Aussie found another in a bar (how typical!) and all looked brighter.  Here’s what happened.  We had returned to a tour operator for the umpteen time looking for a woman who just would not show, and Jim spotted a bar.  A beer was just what we needed!  About 30 minutes later an Aussie with his Canadian wife entered the bar;  they were catching a train 3 hours later and planned to spend the time in the bar.  They had been in the NE for THREE MONTHS! and were full of advice!!!  It was manna from heaven.  And we all walked off intoxicated, in all ways.

Wednesday:  We headed off to Kamakhya Mandir for a gruesome morning.  This is worthy of a post of its own, so I will write about that next.  When we returned to Guwahati, we put the Aussies’ advice to the test.

Wednesday:  We headed off to Kamakhya Mandir for a gruesome morning.  This is worthy of a post of its own, so I will write about that next.  When we returned to Guwahati, we put the Aussies’ advice to the test.

Our call to Himalaya Tours in Bomdilla started badly but turned good immediately.  The person we were seeking was away, on his way to New Delhi, but he was still in Guwahati at the moment, where we were!  We called his cell number and he offered to meet us during the 30 minutes he had before he left for the airport.  We met on the street in front of the Museum of Assam, across from where we had called him and he made it all very easy.  His tour company could fax us our permits as soon as Monday, to wherever we were then (we had only to call with a fax number).  But to do that, we had to get him our information ASAP.  But we were ready, and we each whipped from our pockets a photocopy of our passport’s front page and our VISA page.  He was impressed, looked them over, and declared all was in order.  We also had to pay him, more than we had on us, so he suggested we deposit it directly into the company account. And lastly we needed to choose a date that our permit would commence.  A short confab about timing and we chose the 26th.

We spent much of the next two hours accomplishing the deposit:  two auto-rickshaw rides, a long walk, a wait in the ATM line and another wait inside the bank.  But we did confirm the account provenance before parting with our money, and we finally celebrated over a Kingfisher Premium and some bad momos (Tibetan dumplings.)

I moved out of Deboo’s place (he had some relatives coming) and into the hotel where Jim and Ann were.  And that night, we were taken out to dinner by Momita and her family (remember?, I met her on the train from Mumbai to Kolkata) to Delicacy, what the Lonely Planet calls the best Assamese restaurant in all of Assam.  She wouldn’t let us pay a dime.

Thursday:  Yesterday was all transaction time.  We arose early, had a breakfast at the hotel (that took forever!) and walked to the sumo stand near the train station.  Sumos are SUVs and, like the grand taxis of Morocco, they go when full.  We caught a sumo Shillong for 100 Rs each ($2.50) and 3 hours later we were here.  We had real trouble finding a place to sleep, but finally found something acceptable, Jim and I sharing a double bed.

Friday:  A day of rest.  I wrote most of this then.  But also Jim and I walked to Eiw Duh, the vast market where tribal people come in to sell their wares.  It was one part Asian chaos, two parts Middle East souk.  All the Indians wanted their photos taken, all the tribal people decidedly did not.  Some roasted nuts were forced on us, and we ate them overlooking the goat and sheep heads hanging nearby.  By the way, part of the Scotland of India thing is that people in the area wear their normal indigenous clothes, but then top it all off with a tartan headdress.  I can’t see that the different designs mean different things as they do in Scotland, but they are quick colorful and varied.

Saturday:  Speaking of varied, we just got back from the Don Bosco museum of aboriginal tribes.  It was very enlightening, explaining all the tribes that inhabit the NE.  They included Sikkim in the NE, so there were 8 states featured.  He was a missionary from Italy in the 1800s, and has missions all over the world.  But the museum was truly excellent.  It also gave us a good long walk and we took a taxi back.

Lastly we bought the book today that the Aussies recommended, Strangers in the Mist, Sanjoy Hazarika, 1994.  It's a bit dated but it will give us good background to the tribes.  (The Nagaland tribes, the Nagas, were head-hunters/head-shrinkers.  Some of the stuff we saw today was chilling.  We are assured that there is no more of that, but we also know that Nagaland is probably the hardest place to get into, and even harder to get into the interior, so we wonder.

Tomorrow, Sunday, and Beyond:  We are taking a tour of Cheerapungee for the day tomorrow, so we will be back here in Shillong again tonight and again tomorrow night.  Then we are off to the Jaintia Hills where we are going to take the invitation of a woman that we met at the museum.

Then on to Silchar to take the train north to Lumding, and on another stop to one of Jim's confluences (more on this later).  After that it is on to Tezpur, the jumping off point for Bomdilla and Tawang beyond next Saturday, the start of our permit to Arunachal Pradesh.

That’s it.  Consider yourself caught up.  I’ll add a post on Kamakhya Mandir and one on confluences when I can.  Signing out from Shillong.  Namaste.

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