fredag 21. april 2017

गरम गरम - Warm


Our time in Benares is almost over, next week we head up north to Mussoorie, which should be almost half as warm as it is here. Here it is so warm that walking very much is not good, at least not for me who can’t take the heat. We spend the days going to school and eating, or talking about school and food, and especially talking about Norwegian food. There has not been much in the way of excercise recently, which hopefully will change in Mussoorie, a hill station with apparently lots of opportunities for walking. Can’t wait!












tirsdag 4. april 2017

Summer is starting


Weeks fly by in Varanasi! The temperature is now over 40 degrees in the daytime, so going out and doing much is not really possible. However getting up earlier in the morning is more tempting here, going out at around 6-7 am it's only around 25-27 degrees which seems nice and cool compared to daytime!

On Saturday we went on a trip to Allahabad which is 3 hours away by car. There we got to see the Nehrus' home, Anand Bhavan! Amazing feeling to walk in the same house where India's first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru and his daughter Indira Gandhi lived and worked, and where Mahatma Gandhi used to visit. We also went to a place just outside called Sangam, where the holy rivers Yamuna and Ganga meet. On the sangam (river confluence, junction) itself is a very auspicious place to dip, so fellow student Ramu was there to do puja with a priest and to dip in the river. Despite all the thousands of pilgrims who were there it was quiet and had an air of importance, even for a non-religious person!








mandag 6. mars 2017

Pondicherry


Last week I got to see Pondicherry and southern India for the first time. As Varanasi is the only place I've seen so far I couldn't believe how different everything is in the south! Pondicherry is an incredibly beautiful place, in fact so beautiful that I didn't manage to get much photos! I think it needs to be seen to be believed. And the ocean! The ocean is there! For someone who has lived by the sea most of their life, being without it for a long time is almost painful, so it was like magic seeing this great mass of water. It felt sort of awesome that it was actually the Bay of Bengal, something I've seen on maps but now I've actually seen it in real life!













lørdag 4. februar 2017

Doctors and hospitals


Last couple of weeks I've had very little internet, so have basically given up posting photos for now. Hopefully it will get better, because I have lots of nice photos! I ended up in hospital with gastritis last week, and as a student of anthropology and Hindi I found the whole experience fascinating. Awful, but fascinating.

Being sick, properly sick, in India, is something I wouldn’t really recommend. The last two weeks or so I’ve been to three different doctors and each time come home with a small mountain of pills (some from a drawer in the doctor’s office), each time totally different medicines, none of which seem to work. I got two or three different kinds of antibiotics - they don’t tell you what pills the give you, as you don’t get the whole box, just trays with specific amount of pills - and no one thought that was important to tell me, or check if I had problems with that. In Norway doctors don’t give out antibiotics unless you’re basically on your deathbed, here they give them out willy nilly. And the pasient examination is a chapter in itself, although a very short one, as there basically isn’t an examination. They ask about some symptoms (one or two is plenty), and for how long you’ve had them - period. Then proceed to writing a long prescription list just like that. And obviously paid in cash. Another thing is privacy, like everywhere else in India, it is completely non-existing. The first doc just had his door open and an assistant going in and out; the second had paper thin, slightly matte glass walls, so the whole waiting room when I came out knew everything about me; and the third had two other doctors or assistants staying in the room, and two other doctors coming in and out to ask about medical matters, each time opening the door to the hall where a group of people stood impatiently staring in. Not to speak of the blood test! I had heard about the «safety» of needles in India, and was a little bit concerned. I guess with good reason. The nurse came in seemingly directly from the street outside (ok that’s a little bit harsh but that was honestly my first thought), reeking of aftershave, spent ages putting on rubber gloves, then proceeded to fill out a form, which he dropped and picked up from the dirty floor (with the same gloves remaining), got some antiseptic out from an old can (the cleanest thing I have ever seen. Ha!) and swept across my arm before finding a random needle in a messy drawer and drawing blood.


Hospital stays on the other hand, is something completely different. Or maybe it was just me who was lucky. I was admitted in the morning and was seen immediately, although there were several people in line and although I was near fainting at least I wasn’t dying or having a broken bone hanging out somewhere, but having health insurance got me in quick as anything. I even had a «Deluxe room», presumably because it had a separate bathroom and only one bed, otherwise I think «Deluxe» was maybe taking it a little far, with a broken window that didn’t shut properly (yes it’s India, but it’s winter and at night it gets cold) (not to mention the mosquitos); no soap by the sink and pretty recent blood and other stains in the bathroom. But I am not complaining: I had two woolen blankets, wifi, wonderful care by the nurses and last but not least a never ending flow of visitors, as apparently when one is alone in hospital (in India) you should never be alone. I was in the hospital for two full days and I was literally not alone for more than approximately one hour in total during my stay. Friends, school staff, my host family and hospital staff were there constantly, ultimately to my pleasure as hours can pass extremely slowly once one starts feeling better. There was no end to the housekeeping that had to be done in my room, sweeping and washing the floor twice a day, changing bed sheets (or rather sheet, the woolen blanket and pillow stayed the same, as it probably had done for the last few patients in the room!) and some half-hearted attempt to wash the bathroom (blood stains remained and soap was obviously not a priority), also nurses came to check about every half hour. Never had so much company in my own house in my whole life, it was surprisingly nice! After the doctor and nurses realized I spoke a little bit Hindi they were thrilled, and despite all my mistakes in speaking they understood most of it and at any rate appreciated the effort. When they spoke too fast for me, they immediately slowed down to toddler-level at my request («dheere boliye, ji»). As I have never been admitted to hospital in Norway more than a few hours as a child (at least not as far as I can remember), I don’t know what conditions really are like there, but I have never experienced such nice people anywhere as the nurses at the Apollo clinic here in Varanasi. In the short time when I was alone there, they went out and got me juice, biscuits and water (have to buy bottled water of course), as there is no cafeteria or such in the hospital. I somehow can’t imagine any staff at a Norwegian hospital doing that (not necessarily because they don’t want to, but probably heavy regulations), although of course I might be wrong, I hope I am! In the morning before I was going home I complained to the doctor that I was fine, but feeling dizzy (a word I don’t know in hindi so even tried pointing to the fan and miming how it spins), which he totally did not understand, and simply smiled and patted me on the shoulder and said: «sab theek ho jaega» - everything will be fine. After four weeks here in Varanasi this was the first time I really got a chance to have conversations in Hindi with real people (ie not teachers or fellow students), despite being extremely fatigued after four days of no food, it felt intensely motivating to be able, and even be forced, to use the language I’ve been studying for over a year. So at the end of the day: try avoid getting sick in India, but if you do, don’t hesitate before going to a good hospital, you will be fine - sab theek ho jaega.

mandag 16. januar 2017

End of first week in India


Yesterday we were lucky enough to be invited to the roof top of one of our fellow students. As yesterday was also makar sankranti, we could see all the kites being flown from roof tops all across Varanasi, with the sunset making magic light as a backdrop. A spectacular view! 





Different places, different challenges: At school we are reminded to close the windows due to monkeys!








lørdag 14. januar 2017

Motorcycles and funeral pyres


Today for the first time I got to see the funeral pyres by the Ganges. I had expected it to be scary, nauseating and gloomy. However, it was none of those. It was a shock to come there and see four or five pyres at once, and all the people, cows and dogs around them, but it was quite peaceful, and as everyday as anything else. As today is makar sankranti, people all over the place fly kites, even around the fires. I saw one kite fall on a pyre and burn within a second or two. 

Wood piled for sale for funeral pyres