Exploring International Business with Illinois Wesleyan's Fred Hoyt
Don’t you wish you could have a day like this one for YOUR birthday?
Don’t you wish You could have a 21st Birthday like this?
May 6 in Delhi
I had always wondered why I seemed to know more about Muslim or British India than Hindu India, and today provided a good answer based on my trips to India, two of which had been exclusively to New Delhi; the answer was provided by the Qutub Minar, a major symbol of the city. This 180+ foot stone tower was built in 1193, by the Mamaluk King who put an end to Hindu rule, celebrating his victory. That battle essentially marked the end of Hindu domination in the Delhi area, and began the 600 or so rule by Muslims. It seemed ironic to me that the tower was chosen as a symbol of a predominantly (now) Hindu dominated country, when the complex, which was the palace and tomb of the Muslim conqueror not only celebrates his victory, but does so using stones extracted from a previous Hindu temple on the site. It also includes the so called Iron Pillar, which commemorates a previous Hindu chieftain’s victory, centuries earlier.
To answer my own question, I can only point to the fact that Delhi, in particular, and much of India in general, especially northern India, has not been Hindu for the past millennium—until, that is, the emergence of an independent India in 1947. Ironically (and I do love irony), I read somewhere that the British created a Muslim-dominant Pakistan (which then was East and West) surrounding India in the belief that the Muslims would be helpful in minimizing Hindu nationalism and keep the Hindus in check, culminating a very typical British imperial policy of divide and rule that allowed a handful of Englishmen to rule the country for most of 200 plus years.
Most of the memorable tourist spots, as a consequence, are either British or Muslim, and we saw several of them today. The British laid out New Delhi, which may account for the broad streets, tree lined, roundabouts, and bungalows that once housed colonial officials, and today house government agencies. Two British architects designed the parliament buildings (one was a House of Lords in the old days; today it contains a number of very famous Indians, not necessarily politicians), They also built the India Gate to commemorate the move of the capital to New Delhi from Calcutta in 1931, though today it is a memorial to the 90,000 Indian soldiers who died defending the Empire (the Japanese did recruit an Indian National Army to fight for independence from Britain, but that’s a story left to a wonderful book on Churchill and Gandhi), and so on.
The other major stamp of the city, is from the Mamaluk through the Moghuls, a series of Muslim rulers from 1193 until the Last Mughal in 1857, when Britain finally became, especially for foreign policy, the ruler of India. I had a real treat this morning when I woke up early. I had heard Lodi Garden, about half a mile from here, was worth a visit, but I had no idea why. Turns out, it was the tomb (and I suspect the palace also) of the Lodi dynasty, which ruled the area briefly in the 15th century. In addition to Sikandar Lodi’s mausoleum, there were two or three other magnificent buildings, including mosques, and, as promised, a garden. Not just a garden with parakeets—a butterfly garden, a herbal garden, and, best of all, real people doing real things—in other words, it was tourist free.
That was not true of Old Delhi, started by Shah Jahan, he of the Taj fame, who moved the capital from Agra to Delhi, and built two landmarks. One
was the Red Fort, a twin more or less to the Red Fort in Agra. The other was the Jama Masjid, the Friday Mosque that is one of the largest in India. Built in the familiar red sandstone characteristic of the period and the place, it still encompasses the bazaar between it and the Red Fort that was a characteristic of the Moghul city. It was mobbed with people shopping for clothing and shoes, which we were able to observe from a safe distance in our cyclos, a bicycle driven rickshaw that I am sure we will see again (in Beijing for sure). I think during the week it may be a more general market. I remember when I was there a section of Tibetan refugees, selling the goods more appropriate to Tibet (or as the British called it in the last century, Thibet). The one thing I learned this time (and it surprised me), is that the British closed the mosque in 1857, following a rather brutal suppression of the Sepoys; it reopened after Independence.
We also visited a Hindu temple, the largest mandir in the world (I think that means temple). It opened in the last few years, the project of one of the sects of Hinduism. It is certainly an impressive building and one of our students said that it attracts a million guests on Sunday. It seemed like they were all there this Sunday, since it took us ½ hour to clear security. I was reminiscing with our students about my trip to the Vatican last summer, where the lines were as long, and the movement as slow. When we finally got into the temple, it seemed the analogy was even better; it was as big and as decorated as St. Peter’s. It was white marble, and enough gold to qualify (in my mind anyway), as baroque.
I just got back from a memorable birthday party for one of our students, Katie Bauer. It is her 21st, and I’m certain she’ll remember it! Don’t you wish you could have a day like this one for YOUR birthday?