Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Stripped to the soul


A busy intersection
7 roads around one circle
I sit in the center
Cars managing to stay uncollided
Newspaper sellers, beggars,
balloon men,magazine men,flower girls
everything is for sale
a handcart weighing 10 times more than the man who pushes it
slowly crawls through the road
cars zoom by on either side
But he sits still
in his bubble
staring "into shining sun"
A race is on but he does not mind finishing last
gain one perspective
content,satisfied
new words in his dictionary
A simple goal
A simple ambition
Being satisfied with what you have
A slave of none
kill your wants
a vagabond at heart
travel without an aim





Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Few memories captured


Well just a glimpse at some images i have clicked over the past three - four years. So the ones you dont like have been shot long ago

http://picasaweb.google.com/harshsonawala/RandomCollection2

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Bhutan – “A Simple Life”






The sun, Foliaged by the clouds sliding under the mountains that loomed over Thimphu, The capital of Bhutan, the land of the thunder dragon. One corner a love struck couple walked along the pathway displaying affection through the eyes and, Few monks with betel stained teeth smiling at the photo clicking tourists. A Human Traffic signal (policeman) waving cars through on a so called busy intersection. One street, A theatre SUV’s, taxis, restaurants, hotels and shopping complexes, A simple maze of streets, and even simpler business philosophies. This would epitomize the true reflection of Bhutan.

The zone a pub opposite the bus stop serving great food and playing dire straits, the om bar a lounge filled with people enjoying a drink and the occasional smoke, A seasons cafeteria serving great Italian and continental food, the rice bowl a place with scrumptious momos and Thukpa. Thimphu best describes the current state in Bhutan. It captures the essence of a country that is attempting the impossible: to leap from the Medevial period to the 21st century without losing its balance. This task seems to be going quite successfully though. The television and exposure to international lifestyles does not seem to have affected the spiritually calm Bhutanese. Till date this tiny country, ‘a real dream’ has survived in impressive isolation, a population of 7 lacs wedged in between mountains owned by India and China. Bhutan had been closed out from the outside world by deliberation, in a race to keep and sustain its deep rooted culture. The country had no roads, no electricity, no motor vehicles, no telephones, and no postal service until the 1960s. Even these days, its mesmerizing landscape evokes a feeling of a science fiction time warp, ancient temples perched high on mist-shrouded cliffs; Dzonghs forts surrounded by unconquered peaks rising above deep blue rivers and lush green forests.

Bhutan’s population half of whom are under 22 years old are exuberant and want to explore the world outside. A large section of the people seemed to have studied abroad or are going to India (especially Delhi) to study. But the surprise being that an even larger proportion of them also wanted to return and live in their home land. A two faced coin which always seems to land on the same side. The cultural ties of the people of this country seem so deep rooted and strong it acts like a magnet attracting the opposite pole. This seems to be answering the worlds questions that how can a society maintain its identity in the face of the flattening forces of globalization? How can it embrace the good of the modern world without falling prey to the bad? And can there ever be a happy balance between tradition and development?. Bhutan seems to have answered the world for now. Since its advent of television in 1999 and with the democracy implemented 2006 by the monarch being contested by the citizens, Bhutan seems to have turned a blind eye to enticing sinful seeds of globalization and planted its own seeds of happiness in its world.
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Thursday, June 26, 2008

QUOTES FROM RED DUST (MA JIANG)

Nature is infinite but my life has boundaries

I have travelled for so long to so many strange places i have become a stranger to myself

From now on i will hold to no faith, i can only strive to save myself. Man is beyond salvation

i feel i have walked onto a stage The people around me absorbed in their parts putting on a great show. nothing seems real Every object a prop. Since i am have no part i am a mere spectator, with no where to sit. So i have to mingle with the actor on stage. It is a terrible feeling.

the more freedom you have to choose your path the harder the journey is

I knew it was futile to keep walking because when you are lost there is nowhere to go

EXISTENCE


The wizard of Oz

Does it exist,
Is the world real,
Does it just exist in our minds,
If so then it can never be destroyed,
Our world our lives,

A reflection of us is all that the world consists of,
Our thoughts shown to us,
We make things out to be the way we want them to be seen,
Vision,
Future, Introspection, Philosophy
Books,Music, Art, Work,
Everything reflects our thoughts.

We are to the world a mere reflection of our thoughts
what i write is real in my head,
and now it is real in YOURS!!!!

Friday, May 16, 2008

Nature Vs Nature

As I stood there perched in between the two towering hills. The vast sea below raged its war against the rocks below. Waves persisting vengefully like a wounded soldier. A rush of anger belted against the black stone, then came the moment of silence as the waves retreat back into the sea. The rock stands still but the sea does not tire. A simplified relationship with a harsh embrace.

The blue calm,
A white fury
Crashing,
The black defender,
Staying strong,
Persistence,
Defiance,
Nature Vs nature

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Concern For Mumbai




Mumbai the city of “structured chaos”. Words are not enough to describe this bustling hustling city. A melting pot, a amalgamation the true heart beat of India. A city where each day goes by in the blink of an eye. The sights of the sea, the magnificence of the sunlight, glistening on the blue water and the waves crashing across the rocks. The sky scrapers the jewels necklace the largest organized slum you can see. Hawkers, Dabbawalas, the stock exchange the underworld wars, Cricket, the night life, and the most important of them all the History and Heritage.

Mumbai was originally made up of seven small islands, composing mostly of mangrove forests and marshland dissected by rivers, streams and the sea. Fishing villages and settlements of the Koli and Aagris tribes developed on these islands, and the area became a centre for Hindu and Buddhist and Christian culture and religion under the Maurya Empire. in the 9th century the area came under the rule of the Silhara dynasty, before falling in 1343 to the Muzaffarid dynasty of Gujarat. The arrival of the Portuguese in India in 1498 resulted in them appropriating much of the west coast of India. In 1508, Francis Almeida sailed in the archipelago and named it Bom Bahia or "Good Bay." In 1661 the seven islands were ceded to Charles II of England as the dowry of Catherine de Braganza. The islands were leased to the British East India Company in 1668.

The British undertook land-filling and draining of the marshlands, developing a modern port and city, which attracted migrant workers from across India. In the 19th century, Mumbai emerged as an important centre of international commerce, industry and culture and in the 20th century, it became an important centre for politics and government, becoming a strong base of the Indian independence movement. Following India's independence in 1947, the city's population has expanded exponentially. Modern service, commerce and technology sectors have replaced the older, heavier industries and lead to the rapid expansion of city.

This history is embedded in a large number of structures and buildings spread across various parts of Mumbai. Unfortunately these structures are losing their importance and value in today’s modern world. Concern for Mumbai (www.concernformumbai.com) would like to change this view and resurrect these buildings keeping a large part of Mumbai spirit alive and not relinquishing the aesthetic beauty of our city MUMBAI