
The International Writers Magazine: India- Life in Chennai
Journeys
End in Chennai
Colin Todhunter
Many
foreign tourists who visit Chennai do not stay long. The crowds,
traffic and the India-style chaos that typifies the subcontinent
overwhelm and more than a few try to take the first train out.
For them, Chennai is a mere dead end journey. This is such a pity
as Chennai is one of Indias better cities and possesses
a character that can grow on you if you scratch beneath the surface
and give it half a chance.
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Chennai is a comparatively
new city and was Britain's first major settlement in India. The villages
of Mylapore, Triplicane, Adyar and Egmore are part of Chennai, and all
have a recorded historical past centuries older than the city itself.
Out of all Indias big cities, Chennai seems more connected to
its rural hinterland. In fact many observers state that Chennai is indeed
a conglomeration of overgrown villages. This may be true given that
it lacks a city centre as such, with many different areas competing
for attention. The city of today has a population of over 6 million,
although when out and about and caught in the crowds you may be forgiven
for believing that the total population of India just happens to be
on the street you are on.
What continues to strike me about Chennai is its allegiance to ancient
traditions, no matter how modernised it has become, and its willingness
to spread out further rather than develop into a multi-storey concrete
jungle like Mumbai. The result is a widespread city still open to the
skies; a green, airy city with several vestiges of its rural past; and
a city that still retains the charm, values and courtesies of former
days.
Chennai is not really a place of outstanding tourist sites, although
there are great temples, a magnificent beach, a crocodile park, a snake
park and a nature reserve, to name but a few. Not everyone boards the
first train out. Some visitors stay long term to study yoga or classical
dance and music, while others come for the annual music festival in
December. If you have had your fill of temples, yoga or Indian dance
and music, then dont worry. There is still more than enough to
occupy the visitor. One of the best things to do in Chennai is to just
simply stroll around and soak in the ambience of daily life. In doing
so, you will feel alive in a way that you never did before.
Take a walk through the crowded Triplicane area of the city at dusk
and become part of the neon-hazed vibrancy. A cacophony of vehicles
horns will mingle with voices, overrun by the haunting call to prayers
from the citys largest mosque. Firecrackers seemingly designed
to cause maximum damage to the eardrum will explode as a funeral procession
goes by. Men will dance in front of the mini bus or cart adorned with
flowers and carrying the dead person, whose face is open to the watching
world. As you pass by the smell of rice and sight of cooked chicken
hanging in restaurant doorways will greet you. Women in colourful saris
will sell bright yellow marigolds used to garland pictures of Hindu
Gods, and sweet smelling jasmine, with which South Indian women adorn
their hair.
Watch boys play cricket in the back streets and children flying kites
from rooftops. Look at the intricately drawn kollams (patterns) on the
floor drawn by women at the entrance to homes and watch both young and
old stop to offer a prayer at a street side Hindu shrine. Maybe someone
will ask Which country? as he passes by. In response to
your answer he will smile, give a head wobble and continue on his way,
content in the knowledge he has met a foreign visitor. And
you will go on your way, fascinated by the cramped disorder of Chennai
life and more than happy to be there.

Spencer Plaza Atrium |
A
couple of kilometers from Triplicane you will find Spencer Plaza
on Anna Salai. Spencers is a cathedral to consumerism and is on
par with the best that Singapore has to offer in sterile shopping
malls. Inside, the place is a monument to cleanliness and order
and outside there is chaos and pollution: air-conditioned paradise
and pollution-choked hell. Around the corner is the plush, five
star Connermara Hotel, the ultimate den of opulence. A stones
throw away further down the street is a glimpse of shantytown Chennai,
with people living next to a stinking river in flimsy, makeshift
huts. |
The extremities
of India are part of its fascination. Eat like a king in an up-market
restaurant and minutes later pass a street dweller eating rice and sambar
(spicy gravy) from a banana leaf while squatting on the pavement. Call
in at the local Internet café and see a young man wearing the
latest fashion in jeans and T-shirt. Go back the next day and notice
that his head has been shaved after he has visited an auspicious temple.
Nothing is ever what it seems. Incongruity is the essence of modern
India.
Visit
a temple and soak up thousands of years of tradition. Then catch
a few seconds of MTV India with an Indian woman presenter who looks
like shes walked straight from a beach in California. Rub
shoulders with impeccably dressed computer savvy young men with
college degrees and then glance across the road to see generations
of the same family living on the street. Notice the subtle shades
of the night then gaze upward and be dazzled by garish billboards
advertising the latest Tamil film blockbuster. |
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The contradictions
can be too much to handle for many first time visitors. The extreme
contrasts and sense of otherness can be challenging to those
used to the more genteel subtleties of the West. For those who are rooted
firmly in their home soil the constant feeling of displacement takes
them to a place in mind where they would rather not be. But some are
able to move beyond this. Travel writer Pico Iyer summed it up best
by saying that we start out by laughing at what we regard as the follies
of another culture. Then we move towards bewilderment as we begin to
leave parts of our own culture behind. Eventually, we end up somewhere
completely different from where we set out. Hopefully, that new state
of mind is better than the place we left behind and is much closer to
the culture we find ourselves in.
There is a well worn saying you cant change India, India
changes you. It is well worn for a reason: too many mock what
they see before them and want everything to be the same as it is back
home. Call it a symptom of culture shock, intolerance or the inability
to embrace difference. For those people, their trip will be a dead end
journey and they will take the first train out. For others however things
will be different. India will draw them back time and time again. And
when it begins to do so, from that moment on, things can never be the
same. Theres no looking back. At that stage they will at last
be in that better place compared to where they originally were. The
journey will be complete. I left the train in Chennai and never got
back on.
© Colin Todhunter May 2005
email: colin_todhunter@yahoo.co.uk
More stories
from Colin about India here
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