On Friday the
21st I had a rather new experience. The class eleven History
students of our school were taken to the iLEAD auditorium to watch a documentary
film on the Silk Route by director Goutam Ghosh, which was followed by an
interactive session with the director and others. Such things are quite common
in the schools of metropolitan cities, but since my previous school has always
been a very determined frog in the well, we were never taken to such events in
our entire school lives.
Students from
at least ten schools in Kolkata had come together to watch the screening of the
first two episodes of Goutam Ghosh’s five episode documentary movie ‘Beyond the
Himalayas’. In 1994, the director along with a number of other people had made
an expedition following the Silk Route through Central Asia all the way to
China. The movie traces their journey and their findings in five successive
episodes. Theirs was the first Indian expedition through China. Other than the
director himself, two other team members of the expedition, writer-director-actor
Mr. Jagannath Guha, and historian Mr. Phalguni Matilal were present for the
interactive session that followed the screening of the movie.
I have not
watched many documentary films, so I was a little skeptical about how the
movies were going to turn out. But I was pleasantly surprised, and enjoyed
myself over the next few hours. The first episode sketches the route taken by the
explorers, starting from Delhi, from where they were airlifted to Samarkand in
Uzbekistan. From there started their car ride, tracing the entire Silk Route.
Samarkand and Bukhara are two of the oldest inhabited cities of the world, and
are known for the important positions that they occupy on the trade route to
China. The movie has successfully captured the dusty grandeur of these two
ancient cities, alive as they are with the history of millennia. Both cities
throng with historical monuments, which portray predominantly Islamic
architectural styles.
From Bukhara
they travelled on to Fergana, which is the old capital of Babur’s kingdom in
present-day Uzbekistan. Fergana is also claimed
to be the Zoroastrian homeland by Zoroastrian literature. It was from Fergana
that the travellers left Uzbekistan behind and crossed Kyrgyzstan to enter the
Xinjiang region of China through Kashgar, where the oldest Indian handwritten
manuscripts have been retrieved, and Hotan, which is famous for its jades. This
is where the first episode ended.
The second episode deviated a little from
the main theme, and followed the route taken by Hiuen Tsang to and from India.
The episode was called On the Search for the Buddha, and it spoke of Hiuen
Tsang’s journey to the birth land of the Buddha, his studies in the great
Nalanda University, and his return to China to develop his own school of
Buddhism there. It was shown as a journey to India by London-based producer Mr.
Michael Haggiag, who was member of the original expedition, and his wife, after
the expedition itself had ended. Mr. Haggiag and his wife visited Bodh Gaya and
Nalanda, and it was through their eyes that the episode has mainly been depicted.
The movies as a whole were enlightening.
There were so many new things that I came to know from them. For example, Hiuen
Tsang is actually pronounced as ‘Xuanzang’ in Chinese. Also, the best among
jades are not the ones which are a lush green, but those which are the palest
and nearly white. The monks in a certain Buddhist temple in Xinjiang chant the
original Sanskrit verses brought back by Hiuen Tsang as a tribute to the great
traveler scholar. It was from the Chan school of Mahayana Buddhism that Zen
Buddhism of Japan has been derived. The Taklamakan desert, through which the
expedition journeyed, is a Persian saying that means “He who comes in does not
get out”. That now, is a really ominous
name for you!
The movies were no doubt interesting, but
it was the interactive session with Mr. Jagannath Guha that I enjoyed the most.
Mr. Ghosh arrived late and was too stiff, and Mr. Matilal was a reticent sort,
so it was Mr. Guha who did most of the talking. He shared with us many small
anecdotes that had made the expedition so memorable for him. Someone from the
audience asked him about how he got over the language barrier during their
travels. He just shook his head and said, “But I didn’t!” He went on to tell us
how body language was often the only means of communication between the natives
and the travelers, and how they had at times had to resort to base tricks like
bribing the policemen with cigarettes to get themselves out of fixes! While
answering the queries of another member of the audience, he talked to us about how
little awareness there was about India among the population of China, her
largest neighbour. Of course, here he spoke of their experience of 1994, before
the era of the internet. I suppose the conditions are much better now. According
to him, the travelers were gaped at like extra terrestrial creatures. Some of
the children on the road used to pull the hair on his arms in wonder, as they
had never seen such a hirsute person before. Some old ladies rubbed his skin to
see if his dark skin was painted. The ‘smarter’ ones asked the travelers whether
they were from Africa!
While I was enjoying myself hugely during
the event, it was highly evident that most people were not. The girls sitting
behind me continued to chat and giggle among themselves throughout the entire
program. After the short lunch break, I changed my seat in the hope of finding a
little quieter seat somewhere. But soon, the girls sitting in the row a little
way apart started fiddling with their mobiles and talking loudly. In fact, at
one point a teacher of their school came up and took away their cell phones
after reminding them none too gently that they had come to watch the movie, not
play around with their phones. Some of my own classmates, as soon as the second
episode got over, started sighing deeply and loudly expressing their thankfulness
at the ‘boring’ show being finally over. I wonder why these people had opted
for History in the first place when they are so fundamentally apathetic to anything outside the syllabus.
I returned from the show feeling satisfied,
but I know many of them were just glad that the show had come to an end. In
this context, I would like to mention a very common complaint among students about
the bland and mechanized manner in which classroom teaching is done. I
completely agree, newer and more interesting methods should be employed to
enrich the learning experience. Having said that, I must also say that the
students themselves have to be more receptive to new experiments in order to
make the innovative ideas work. The primarily uninterested attitude that I saw
among most of the students in the show explains why teachers and school
authorities often show no interest in providing such educative and entertaining
experiences for the students. Our school is trying, and so are so many others.
It now rests on us students to make the best of the opportunities that we are being
provided with.
4 comments:
It's nice to know about your experience Urbi. I wish I had been there.I have been always interested in History and so anything related to it fascinates me. And thanks for describing the film in your blog. Can you please tell me tell the name of the documentary film? I am keen to watch it.
And I fully agree with your view in the first paragraph. I didn't have any good experiences either in my previous schools because , as you have pointed out, they chose to be "determined frog in the well". I have been studying in Kolkata for the past one year and my experiences have been similar to yours. Seminars , film fests are quite common in our college and they add a lot apart from the knowledge gained from our existing curriculum.Living in a big city certainly has its own advantages.
We come across a lot more people and find ourselves with more opportunities than before. Enjoy your school!
Dear Pupu,
It is wonderful to see that you are enjoying life and learning in Kolkata. And I really am jealous of you. I'd really love to get my hands on that documentary. But even that would not be as good as the session with Mr Ghosh and Mr Matilal.
Years ago, in 1999, I had asked Sir if I should stay back in Durgapur or go to St. Xavier's Calcutta. He replied me that it was not really much of a choice, and I knew the answer as well as he did. I have not regretted that decision. It was for the first time in many years that I was allowed to be me in all aspects of life.
I hope your new school and new city does the same and more for you. And I think you will enjoy Dalrymple and Hopkirk (with reservations; his version of history is Anglo-centric)even more.
All the best!
Best wishes,
Aakash-da
Dear Urbi,
Hope you are well, and everything's proceeding smoothly. This is a very nicely written post indeed- I must congratulate for that. This is truly one of the best advantages of going off to study in a major city- one gets to know, learn about so much new. Novel experiences, and such ones like you have described go a long way in shaping a person. I missed out on that chance indeed, staying back at Durgapur. I truly wish you make the best of your time over at Calcutta, and enjoy a lot. Documentaries, as the noted film-maker, Steven Spielberg observed, "I think documentaries are the greatest way to educate an entire generation that doesn't often look back to learn anything about the history that provided a safe haven for so many of us today...". I agree with him indeed, and wish you many more such trips.
Best wishes,
Debarshi.
Soham da, Aakash da, Debarshi da, thank you for your comments.
Soham da, the filming has been done in five episodes, and the entire series may or may not be known as "Beyond the Himalayas". I am not sure. It might also be called Tracing the Silk Route, but Goutam Ghosh has made only one series in this subject, so hopefully you will find it easily enough.
Aakash da, I have read Dalrymple's Nine Lives and enjoyed it immensely. And I will start The Return of a King as soon as I finish my current bunch of books. Another friend has recommended In Xanadu, so I hope to read that one too sometime. Hopkirk I haven't read, so thanks for suggesting it.
Pupu
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