Journeying In Gujarat


Pronouncing Jamnagar involves opening with the eponymous syllable that evokes the grandeur of the Ja’am Sahibs before settling into the rather mundane Na-gar. Jaam-na-gar. Rise-Thud-Thud. I found the mundaneness first.

A drab highway cut across arid plains. Saurashtra stretched ahead. An industrial behemoth would appear every now and then - an ugliness of pipes and tubes - a product of the infertile soil. Hot air pelted the face. Blazing heat bared everything even as it forced shut the eyelids. Existence seemed a weariness. When it seemed to wear on forever, the car veered off the highway, depositing me firmly into a two-month internship. Engaging work held me six days out of seven. The gloom of the seventh loomed as the week neared its end. I fled each time, returning to the highway, seeking new places. I found them in various corners of the peninsula.

I saw the uneasy truce forged between land, river and sea at Dwarka. How illusory was the concept of ground beneath one’s feet! If ever there was credence to the frequent mythological refrain of land being reclaimed from sea, here was living proof. A land so precariously perched amidst the watchful eyes of predatory waters that have enveloped it many a time in the past that an encore always seemed imminent.

Somnath, rather inevitably given its history, had acquired the air of a defiant bastion. A quality prized by any nation-state entity; the Government had wasted no opportunity in championing the place as a metaphor for the state itself. Stateliness pervaded the approach to the imposing Shikara. Just in case the scale and significance did not register, the mighty figure of Sardar Patel stood to the right of the pathway named after him with a gaze firmly affixed on what he’d commissioned. There was no trifling with this institution, everything seemed to be saying.

Spurned upon my first approach to Gir, I was obliged the second time. What I saw and heard hinted at considerable duress. The guides cited numbers of attrition - “Kaafi marte hain har saal trains ke vaje se” referring to the Junagadh-Delvada railway line that scythes across the forest. There was talk of imbalance in the fragile food chain. The Maldhari community that lived in the forest, historically amicable with the lions, had recently been reporting more than the odd skirmish. Among the success stories of Indian Wildlife Conservation, it seemed Gir still wasn’t immune to the maladies gripping other sanctuaries and national parks.

At Modhera, I saw timeless beauty both concealed and heightened by the commonplace around it. Like its more famous sister in the east, Konark, the Sun Temple here was also a victim of rapacious advance but to a lesser degree. Modhera, however, was not the beneficiary of a well-laid out introduction which meant that it just appeared at one juncture. As I lingered, the vision became more and more real. What gained lasting permanence though was an idea I’d been introduced to at Pattadakkal – stone has matchless eloquence.

Spurred on by what I’d found every time I’d journeyed with an open mind. I ventured Jamnagar itself. Despite the many industrial encroachments that have sprung up in its outskirts and lent it a name on the industrial world map, Jamnagar town itself remained quite untouched by this. The old had not made way for the new here. A walk through the town, its many alleyways and lanes was an exercise in piecing together the erstwhile Nawanagar through its many dilapidated edifices, arched darwazas, turrets, minarets, havelis and the Darbargarh Palace.

Jamnagar’s most recent evocation of the past, the statue of Maharaja Kumarsinghji Ranjitsinghji commanding centre stage of the panoramic sweep of Darbargarh Palace, had me longing for another statue elsewhere that froze him in the nonchalant audacity of his leg glance, for Ranji (as he was known in cricketing circles) was also the first Indian batsman extraordinaire. His shot-making may have had a long-lasting influence on the development of the batting aesthetic itself in cricket and thereby shaped the vocabulary that has been handed to us. From a tribute by that doyen of cricket writers, Neville Cardus, one may glean this and more: “Before him English cricket was English through and through … but when Ranji batted, a strange light from the East flickered in the English sunshine”.

With regard to Jamnagar’s cricketing legacy, Ranji was not all however. In his wake, came the nearly-as-brilliant Duleep, his nephew. Two decades after Duleep, Jamnagar produced an all-rounder matched since only by Kapil Dev. Mulvantrai Himmatlal Mankad or Vinoobhai as he was known in typical Gujarati fashion was India’s star for a decade after independence. Fittingly, he will always be seen poised in his delivery stride at Mankad Circle, Jamnagar. I was excited to find cricket in such healthy and unexpected doses in what had seemed like some outback of India. Furthering the analogy about pronunciation, I’d done away with Nagar first and was now relishing the upswing of Jaaaam. Curious points of trivia and amusement on this ascendant were things like India’s only extant Ayurvedic University with courses and programmes in learning the ancient healing system, and a Bala Hanuman Mandir which currently sits in the Guinness Book of Records for having featured non-stop chanting since 1967.

One evening, I visit the temple and find it tucked away in a corner on the avenue that retains a sense of quietude despite the chanting inside and the chatter outside. Around the sunset hour though, neither is a match for the twitter from the true inheritors of Jamnagar – the birds. The avenue and the lake transform into an avian spectacle as parakeets, egrets, pond herons, spoonbills, flamingos, pelicans, swallows and thrushes descend upon the setting. A quiet town suddenly seems abuzz with activity as hundreds of birds flit about from one tree to another. This seems to stir people out of their general torpor and infuses the scene with energy. The twilight lasts an hour after which the lake, the avenue and the surrounding areas settle into a dullness of Chaat outlets, sugarcane vendors and other hawkers. The birds have left and they appear to have taken back that which they bestowed upon the scene.

That Gujarat is a birder’s delight is in itself a well-kept secret. That Jamnagar should be the state’s representative in this regard is perhaps not known at all even to travel aficionados in India. In 2010, the town hosted the first Global Bird Watcher’s Conference (an initiative of the Gujarat Govt.) at Khijadiya, a part-marshland part-grassland ecosystem with freshwater lakes and saltwater marshes. It is a birding haven much on the lines of Bharatpur (near Agra) only without similar status from the Ramsar Convention (protects wetlands in the world). Khijadiya in winter provides a transit to rare migratory birds from Russia and Central Asia like the Demoiselle Crane, the Bar-Headed Goose, Eurasian Wigeon and many others. This year (2013), the GBWC is scheduled to be held at Dhordo (gateway to the Greater Rann of Kutch).

Much of this owes to Jamnagar’s unique location on the lower shore of the Gulf of Kutch. The placid waters adjoining the entire shoreline of the Jamnagar district and the islands that dot the coast are collectively designated as a Marine National Park. Some of these islands are accessible from Jamnagar, easiest among them being Narara Bet. A trip to Narara had proved elusive during my internship stint in Jamnagar.

On a later visit, it happens in fortuitous fashion through a random query directed at a cabbie about directions, information and the like. It turns out that he belongs to a family that had been staying at the entry point of Narara for over 30 years, in what I later find to be a middle-of-nowhere with not even a shack for miles. As awareness about the place grew, the powers that were had swooped in to take notice and soon recognition followed. The family had stuck to their place however and were now the unofficial caretakers of a vast and unique seascape. I say recognition with some reservations however, since Marine National Park is still not likely to feature in the average conversation about flora and fauna in Gujarat. Gir, Blackbuck and Rann of Kutch would be the dominant names.

Such relative anonymity serves someone looking for a quiet interaction with environs quite well as the place bears the air of an untouched paradise. One can wade through waters that graduate from ankle deep to thigh deep and observe marine life in the company of a naturalist. Crabs abound, holed up in the shelter of rocks. The spider crab with the many thorns on its skin is a prickly creature to hold in one’s palm. The withdrawal of the sea anemone into the soft seabed upon touch is a wondrous thing to behold. Corals, in addition to being such an important cog in the ecosystem, add glitter and pattern to the water surface. Wading proves immensely addictive and we zone in on an octopus the size of a hand after two hours of journeying further into the gulf. It seems to gain in colour once out of water. Its release of colour upon being released into the water again is a natural science lesson at close quarters. Only exhaustion after a four-hour excursion in these waters proves a detriment to further exploration. I return sated.

Today, I find it both appropriate and odd that I had to discover the delights of the town I was in after having wandered the rest of Gujarat. In travel, the truism that familiarity breeds contempt finds its most pressing reinforcement.