Recently Arvind Venkatadri, who heads our Library programme was in Leh to train around 100 Heads of Government Primary schools, where 17000 ft Foundation has set up school-based Libraries. Akshara is their knowledge partner in this initiative.
Read below Arvind's travelogue to know more about this exciting trip and working in Leh in sub zero temperatures.
" “Welcome to Kushok Bakula Rimpoche Airport, Leh. The temperature outside is -12 degrees Celsius”. I had arrived in Ladakh, but a Ladakhi welcome had already been bestowed on me the previous day at New Delhi airport, where I was met by a smiling Stanzin Norbu from the 17000ft Foundation. I was here at the invitation of Sujata and Sandeep Sahu, founders of 17K, to help them provide a training-orientation to Heads of some 100 Government Primary Schools, where they had set up their School Libraries as part of their programme with rural Ladakhi schools.
It seemed at first
sight that there were just two things in Ladakh: ice, and space. From
my bedroom window, on the ground floor, I could gaze upon the sunlit
spires of mountains on the far shore of the Indus. I
had been given a list of clothing material to buy and I got it all
from Decathlon here in Bangalore, the most important part being a
Goose-Down-Jacket-with-a-hood. I had thermals and skiing-gloves and
fleece sweaters and fleece caps and a balaclava and skiing clothing (
form-fit trousers and shirt ) and a baggy waterproof pair of
trousers. I had been asked to take Diamox
tablets for altitude sickness and I felt no ill effects whatsoever.
I spent the first day
getting used to all the clothing I was wearing and took a walk into
Leh. All that rustling of clothing made me turn around more than
once, but I was alone. Never have I seen snow-swept, sunlit streets
so desolate: there was not a person in sight, it could have been a
ghost town. I did trudge up into the market street to finally see
some cars and people. Breathing was not easy that first day, and it
was not just the cold. The words “thin air” took a new, precise
meaning for me once again.
The training began
the next day and I spent two days lecturing in Hindi to the Heads
from Govt Schools there; some of these schools are located at 15,000
feet ! Training began at 11.20 AM (after the first period; it is after
all a college for Teachers) and ended at 4 pm on both days. Most of
these HMs are were very young, the average age must have been 25-30
not more. Schools in Ladakh are shut from December to February; that
is when the Teachers complete most of their training for the new
academic session. The training was held at the DIET (District
Institute of Education Training). The training rooms had hot stoves
called Bukhari-s, three of them, with chimneys leading through the
roof. All the Staff members sat in groups around the bukhari-s and
every hour or so, a woman would come in and add firewood to the
stoves. Lunch was a strange tea-and-bun affair of 20 mins; on both
days we hit the town restaurant for lunch at 4.30 PM. I had some
interesting food, the best being a thukpa, a spaghetti laden soup
with veggies; very satisfying "winter" food.
The training was on
Libraries: how to set them up, how to grade books, match these to
children and their reading abilities, and how to measure that the
Libraries have impact. We also talked of the various creative
activities that we could conduct in Libraries. At the end of the two
days, the Principal of the Institute Angmo Phuksong gave me something
I was not prepared for: she honoured me with a long silk scarf,
called a Khatok, which she formally hung around my neck. It is a very
Ladakhi way and also a very big deal, I was told.
I was reading Pankaj Mishra's An End to Suffering: the Buddha in the World, an apt book for this place. The travels and thoughts of the author mingled with my impressions, as I saw Abbaley and Ammaley, our hosts, sit in the sunshine working the beads and reciting the Name four lakh times. There were shrines with large red and yellow prayer wheels at street corners; a steep hill in upper Leh seemed to have a monastery on top, but it seemed beyond me to attempt to get there. I contented myself with listening and humming Manasa Yetulortune in that lazy morning sunshine and talking to the two house cats in Tamil, who insisted that I part with some of my puri-s.
I was reading Pankaj Mishra's An End to Suffering: the Buddha in the World, an apt book for this place. The travels and thoughts of the author mingled with my impressions, as I saw Abbaley and Ammaley, our hosts, sit in the sunshine working the beads and reciting the Name four lakh times. There were shrines with large red and yellow prayer wheels at street corners; a steep hill in upper Leh seemed to have a monastery on top, but it seemed beyond me to attempt to get there. I contented myself with listening and humming Manasa Yetulortune in that lazy morning sunshine and talking to the two house cats in Tamil, who insisted that I part with some of my puri-s.
It snowed on two
days, both times in the morning and continuing through most of the
day. It was not snowing at 6 AM when I awoke, and the garden was
bare; by 6.30 AM, there was a carpet of white that grew 2 inches as I
watched. Across the Indus, the mountains turned completely white that
morning. On both days, when the sun went down, it very rapidly grew
really cold. Folks, the geese know what they have on. The goose-down
jacket kept me completely comfortable, as did the thermal leg-wear.
My shoes however, did not prevent my toes from freezing, despite the
double layer of woollen socks that I was wearing ! Blankets in the
room were two very heavy razai-s; plus a sweater, a head cap and the
room heater was on. After a while, I either lost my head completely
or I got “used to” the cold perhaps or the thukpa was working,
for I was walking around barefoot in the room and to the tiled loo
and even washing my feet each time with cold water. Water was
delivered to the room; two buckets of ice-cold water and a
half-bucket of hot. Brushing, shaving and laving myself with the cold
water was, well, fun. On the last day, the bucket had pieces of ice
floating in it too!
The day before I
left, we were free, so we drove 30 kms to Nimmu, west along the
Leh-Kargil highway. Stupendous scenery with vast open fields and
slopes and towering red-brown mountains covered generously with snow.
Nimmu has a Bihari-run shop that sells deadly samosas but sadly, the
joint was closed that day. While we waited for our friend Dawa to
catch up with his friends here, we wandered across the street, the
highway that leads to Kargil in the west. An Army truck with snow
chains over its wheels was parked there, the driver looking like a
Telugu man for all I could tell. Across the street, a tiny and
brilliantly coloured J & K Transport bus was parked and ready to
go, the driver insistently honking to coax the reluctant passengers
out of the tea-shop. Must have been just the thin air, but I thought
I saw Mithun Chakraborty drape a blanket over Anita Raj's shoulders
as they both climbed up and sat on the freezing roof-top. Koi shaque?
The bus disappeared in a flurry of snow and I hummed Zeehaale Muskin
mukon baranjhish, but my voice would just not come out in the cold.
My nose was also hurting with an insistent bleeding, a common
affliction for me when I visit cold places.
A short drive and
here we were at Sangam: the Indus, flowing from the South-East,
meeting the Zanskar, coming in from South-West. The already broad
Indus was almost completely frozen over but for two 20-feet wide
streams separated by icy islands; the Zanskar was laden with pieces
of ice, and even the water had a different colour! Paani da, rang
vekh ke, Akhiyan jo hanjhu rul de....certainly the sparkling
sunlight, the champagne air, the untouched snow and the immense
peaks around me had my eyes streaming. I walked as far out on the ice
as I could; I swept away the inches of snow to see the frozen
ice-glass water of the Indus. And took a GPS reading that put me dead
in the middle of the Indus (34.165305N, 77.332089E ). Lovely!
Ladakhi girls are
good-looking. Period. And the children are adorable! As I departed,
my host's little grand-daughter culled some “apples” from her
rosy Kashmiri cheeks and offered them to me as a parting gift.
Abbaley gave me a hug and Ammaley, a handshake.
I know that I will go
back there again, to be once again part of the Campaign on Ice." "
2 comments:
WOW! Hats off to the young headmasters for their challenging work conditions. And for you Arvind for "braving" the Ladakh winter. Thanks for the write-up and pics.
Kanchan
17000 ft is doing some great work.. good to see an association of KLP with these guys.. Ladakh needs our support for education and beyond..
Shweta Vats
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