We made it to the Top 100.
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Our earlier posts (The Concept of the Trail, What is Freedom?) have presented that we will embark on a 'Freedom Trail' on The Great Driving Challenge. The drive is taking place in August and culminates a day after Independence Day. The natural thing to do was to base our travel plan theme around Indian Independence. However, we wanted the theme to be broad and inclusive. Hence, we decided to focus on ‘Freedom’ – in it’s various forms as we experience it, and aspire for.
Selecting the cities / towns we would visit was the next big thing. The organizers have set a parameter with respect of minimum distance and maximum distance per day, and start and end point to be Mumbai. So, the outer limits were defined. We had a choice of going down South along the Konkan and visiting hometown Bangalore and our present home, Hyderabad before heading back to Mumbai, via Nagpur. Having evaluated quite a few options, we converged on one thing – we should follow the route of the Salt Dandi March from Sabarmati to Dandi, the beginning of the Civil Disobedience Movement lead by Gandhiji which took the Indian Freedom Struggle to a climax. In fact, we wanted to end this drive tracing the path of Dandi which has made freedom of many kinds possible. We started working backwards - Ahmedabad, Indore, Nagpur, Hyderabad, Sholapur, Pune, Mumbai.
Each of these places on The Cedia Freedom Trail represents a different facet of freedom we would like to focus on. Baramati – providing a ray of hope to sugarcane farmers; Basavakalyana – a place named after the revolutionary social reformer Basavanna who propogated social equality in the 12th century; Hyderabad – a city that was known for its laidback attitude till very recently but today represents the progressive India that we all are part of; Basara – a temple town dedicated to the Hindu goddess of learning Saraswati the only in the South; Nanded – the city that became the permanent abode of Guru Gobind Singh; Tadoba – part of Project Tiger Reserve and is a relatively less popular tiger reserve; Nagpur – the central city of the country housing the Zero mile marker; Betul – experience the richness of central India’s tribal culture; Mhow – synonymous with the Indian Army and housing some of the Army’s finest training establishments; Godhra – look at the healing process in this infamous town; Ahmedabad – Sabarmati and everything else to do with Gandhiji; Daman and Diu – the only union territory on our itinerary; Nashik – the vineyards capital of the country.
Each of the cities that we are passing though has something unique to offer. It also represents a different facet of the concept of Freedom that may not be mainstream, but significant none the less. We present to you The Cedia Freedom Trail at The Great Driving Challenge on a canvas that is wide, vibrant and fresh.
Enjoy the ride with us! We look forward to your company as we seek to understand ‘Freedom’!
PS: We are yet to agree whether this post should have been so philosophical in nature or not. Sowmya feels that we should let you guys know of all the fun elements right away while Guru feels that it should be saved for the drive! Like with any couple, the argument continues :)
My work with the Jain Group of Institutions in Bangalore has taken me across the country and abroad - either to conduct road shows, setting up new projects or taking students educational trips. From Vapi in Gujarat to Silchar in Assam; from Kanpur in UP to Port Blair in Andaman these trips were enjoyable since it gave me an opportunity to interact with a wide cross section
of society and also savour the local delicacies. When you travel with a group of 70 teenagers on international tours, you have to be on your toes, always! I have had my share of thrills – a student detained in Singapore on suspicion of carrying a banned weapon, spending four nights in a hospital in Pukhet with two students with broken leg and an arm each, making sure that our guide wasn’t kidding when he broke the news of the 9/11 attacks while we were blissfully posing with panthers in South Africa. More enjoyable and fulfilling were the numerous day trips to the villages in Kanakapura Taluk as we went about in a missionary zeal implementing the Kanakapura Cataract Free Project.
My stay in Jamshedpur as a student at XLRI gave me a rare opportunity to experience firsthand the vision of Jamshedji and the concept of labour welfare, Tata style. Probably the only town in India with tap water being potable and practically 24 hours power supply, Jamshedpur is truly a model industrial town.
TATA Steel plant view from XLRI hostel roof top
Sunset at Kumarakom So, what does travel really mean to me? I am no thinker. However, I think the great poet T S Eliott sums it up best – “The journey not the arrival matters”.
Party workers cheering after achieving the 1000 vote land mark. Thanks to real time counting the party knows the exact position of the candidates. Lessons for Election Commission!
As a pan India party, our workers are spread across the country. Seen here are party workers mustering at the regional campaign head quarters in Bangalore for another day of hard work.
Thank you all and keep voting!!
Both of us were actively supporting couple of such campaigns (Let’s Vote, National Election Watch) at our work places and within the community. As someone who has moved to Hyderabad about 4 years ago, we were amongst those whose names did not figure in the electoral rolls in Hyderabad.
When our efforts to get our names in the list failed, we decided that our
votes must not go wasted. Our names were still figuring in the electoral rolls in Bangalore. We planned our travel and undertook consecutive overnight train journeys just so that we could cast our votes in Bangalore on April 23. We were on the road (tracks?) for more than 24 hours in a span of 36 hours.
This picture makes all our efforts worth it! A sense of pride and fulfillment is far too valuable as compared to any hardships this journey may have entailed!
Hail democracy!
By Sowmya
As Aditi mentioned, treks organized by Youth Hostels are affordable and safe. In fact they are an easy way of beginning trekking…
Youth Hostelling
The Youth Hostel movement was begun in 1909 by Richard Schirrmann, a German schoolteacher, and Wilhelm Münker, a conservationist, who saw the need for overnight accommodation for school groups so that they could experience the countryside. This started with schools being used during the holidays. Therefore, Youth Hostelling provides overnight stay facility in hostels to youth all over the world to promote travel, tourism and sense of adventure.
Youth Hostel Associate of India (YHAI) is an associate member of Hostelling International and is a Non Government, Not for Profit organization. Apart from adventure sports YHAI also organises national level Seminars and Integration Camps, Cycle Rallies and Camp Leaders Training Courses, Tribal Youth Folk Festivals and Republic Day Camps for the border area youth, Yuva Milap Camps and Workshops for Wardens and Assistant Wardens of Youth Hostels.
Trekking
The YHAI treks are organized throughout the year. They typically last for 10 days excluding the reporting and debriefing days. Trekkers have to report at the base camp and undergo acclimatization. Trekkers are given then given back packs to pack for the trek (please cross check this).
The trekkers are not required to carry tenting and cooking items on the trek. YHAI sets up camps along the trek path for the night halts and the trekkers are given packed lunch. However you will be required to carry water and fill them along the trek path.
The trekkers will have to follow marked path. Typically you will be required to trek anywhere from 10 to 20 km a day.
What to pack?
On the trek please remember to wear comfortable fitting cotton pants and shirt (tees are fine). In case you are trekking in cold weather wear inners and pack monkey cap, woolen gloves. Light raincoats - compulsory. You don’t want to get drenched….
Remember to pack minimal clothes. Every ounce will weigh you down. Remember you want to enjoy the trek. Enough socks in case your feet get wet, a first aid kit and medicine which you normally use at home. Other things you will have to pack include Sleeping Bag, Inner Garments, Trekking shoe and chappal, Sun cap, Towel, Sun Glass, Torch, Water Bottle and water purifier, Plate, Mug and Spoon, Packed Lunch Box, Needle and thread with spare Buttons, Toilet papers, Vaseline (especially for cold weather), Soap, Pen and Note Book to make notes for your travelogue JDo take a camera to capture the scenery and musical instruments for the camp fire. This is optional, though.
How to book?
To go on a YHAI treak you have to be a member. In case you are not, don’t worry you can take a membership when you sign up for a trek. Please look out and book your trek on their website http://www.yhaindia.org/
So, if you have always wanted to trek and have never had an opportunity, YHAI is definitely a good option. Believe me, I am a convert!
Sources: Wikipedia, yhaindia.org
As many young people do when they are young, Sowmya and I, about 12 years back solemnly pledged to travel together every year with each other. For a few years we did keep it up. We thoroughly enjoyed planning and executing long adventurous getaways in different parts of the country. Youth gave us optimism, vigor, vitality and a feeling of invincibility.
From carving our names on stone on top of the Chandrakhani pass with the hope of returning to it someday and seeing it still there (ah the idealism of youth) to midnight escapades to celebrate new year at the rim of the Dudh Sagar falls in Goa, we reveled in it all. Seeking experience and a huge variety at that, gave us a heady sense of life. As students barely out of school, we were constantly short of money. From what we earned of part time jobs and of what we scraped out of (I must be honest here) relatively modest allowances, we were constantly on the lookout; to travel/trek in the most economically viable but safe ways. One of our favorite organizations was the YHAI which continues to organize interesting but affordable adventure alternatives for young people.
And now I shall digress briefly to dwell for a few moments on one particular experience that left a deep impression on me, on one of my many travels with Sowmya. On the above mentioned YHAI trek to Chandrakani, on our way back down to the Kulu valley, we had to pass the completely cut off and isolated village of Malana. What was particularly striking about it was their strong belief of being the direct descendants of Alexander the Great’s army. Many of them had shocking red hair and light eyes to match. Their Gods and goddesses however resembled the local deities and clearly cultural demarcations had merged over time.
Yet these people believed in their own superiority of sharing kinship with so exalted a historical figure (how they knew this we did not investigate at the time). This we were told by our local guide. As we reached the village we saw the special path made for ‘outsiders’ that ran bang through the middle of the tiny hamlet. We were told that we were to only walk on that path. Even if we dropped a handkerchief we were warned, we would be fined a 1000 Rs which at that time seemed like a gigantic amount.
With our hearts thudding in our ears, careful not to step outside the narrow path we gingerly made our way through the village. It was the only way down, we had to cross it to get to the other side of the valley as it lay directly in our path. Surprisingly we saw a lot of ‘white’ backpackers outside the path in the houses of the locals. It was very obvious that they had received a warm welcome. Immediately we grew indignant, we questioned the guide. He patiently explained to us that the village survived more than anything on opium trade. Foreigners were their source of income and therefore given a leeway. The guide a little given to hyperbole talked of the locals having stashes of money amounting to lakhs hidden under their mattresses. Another interesting tidbit he revealed was that the only other exception to the path rule was if a traveler having lost his way stumbled into the village in darkness. Only on that pretext would they exercise a show of magnanimity. The traveler was then given a sumptuous meal and shelter for the night.
All this seemed to us most impressive and even thrilling to our teenager eyes and ears. I could almost imagine myself as an anthropologist studying the 'natives' (at the risk of sounding orientalist which perhaps in my younger days I unconsciously did .This approach of mine has now been rapidly remedied).Notions of purity, in group-out groups, clans we observed first hand. Though we were too young to academically in any way soundly analyze sub-altern significances then, the very introduction to life through these myriad exotic alleys taught us better than any class room text could. Though we thrilled then in witnessing these strange cultures, it also taught us to be not only curious but to question normative behavior and believe evermore strongly in notions of freedom.
It has allowed us to grow and mature into responsible human beings. I’m sure we’ve learned a lot from each other. Being Sowmya’s friend for me is an honor, as time and again I learnt through her brutally honest but generous and selfless behavior, the importance of being earnest (no pun intended). Freedom in every way physical, mental, spiritual, emotional is what I and am sure Sowmya too have strived for instinctively (which was perhaps why we became such good friends) all our lives, in all walks of life. Freedom therefore I am positive is an apt concept for Sowmya and Guru to explore on the The Great Driving Challenge.
Photo credits: Malana map famous-treksblogspot.com, Malana women flickr.comphotos35008161@N002454099008