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  • On Memory Road

    ON MEMORY ROAD
    Shamik Bag

    Kolkata Newsline, India
    April 29 2007

    India from the Cold War days, of Muslim and Buddhist traditions, and
    of Shahrukh Khan and Hrithik Roshan - India survives in the foreign
    mind, finds a team that retraced the route taken to the country five
    centuries back by Russian trader, Afanasy Nikitin

    When Afanasy Nikitin, the Russian trader of the 15th century, set off
    from his hometown for India in 1469, he did not have to travel too
    far to be confronted by human strife. Twice during his trip he was
    plundered, the Tartars were a real problem and borders were neither
    porous nor conflict-free.

    "I'm afraid, well over five centuries later, ethnic conflicts continue
    to prevail . The political confusion is still there and regions and
    countries are frequently at war between themselves," admits Professor
    Hari Vasudevan of Calcutta University's history department.

    Vasudevan, along with Phalguni Matilal, president of the Delhi-based
    Adventurers and Explorers Society, recently returned to India
    after leading a 14-member Indian expedition team that retraced the
    route taken by Nikitin during his two year long journey to India. By
    re-examining the route of the famous Russian explorer, whose journey
    to India preceded that of Vasco da Gama and whose 30-page chronicle of
    Indian mores and morals of that era is often eclipsed by the stature
    of Chinese scholar Hiuen Tsang or the Portuguese trader, "we were going
    back to the old trading routes that exist even today," says Vasudevan.

    The boats, camels and horses that Nikitin - travelling alone, unlike
    Vasco da Gama who enjoyed royal support - took to reach India while
    travelling over Russia, Persia, the Caspian Sea, Iran, Oman and the
    Arabian Sea, had, in the case of the Indian team, got replaced by
    sponsored Scorpios and airlines. "The world of rivers and seas have
    made way for highways, with their roadside motels and highways. But
    Nikitin travelled alone in an era when one could lose oneself in the
    forests or flat countries with 360-degree horizon. For us, Nikitin
    came as the symbol of the ordinary citizen," Vasudevan says.

    But like Nikitin, whose short but meticulously detailed account
    of medieval India was published by historian Nikolas Karamzin as
    the Journey Beyond the Three Seas, the Indian adventurers too have
    returned with newer inferences and perspectives.

    "We had decided that we would undertake the expedition to understand
    the reasons why India has always interested and attracted people
    down the ages. It is true even now in these times of greater trade
    interactions. It is a question of the present as well as the past,
    and using Nikitin's journey, we ask the question of India's pulling
    power over time," says the history professor whose interactions with
    Matilal and the Adventurers and Explorers Society led to the idea
    behind the expedition.

    In trying to unravel the truth behind India's appeal over the
    foreign psyche, the country had introduced itself to the team through
    diverse ways. After the formal flag-off at Tver, Nikitin's hometown
    in Russia, on November 12, 2006, while the Indian team comprising
    academics, adventurers and journalists, travelled through the Russian
    countryside, the impression of India was borne out of the legacy
    of the Soviet Union, feels Vasudevan. "Then in the Musilm majority
    republic of Tatarstan, India is known as a country with a huge Muslim
    population. In the Buddhist Kalmyk republic, the main temple in the
    capital city of Elista has been designed under instructions from the
    Dalai Lama, and the Bodh Gaya-trained monks there can speak in Hindi."

    While Bollywood veteran, Raj Kapoor, has his following in Russia, the
    likes of Shahrukh Khan and Hrithik Roshan dominate popular culturescape
    from Iran onwards, the team witnessed. "Hindi films are very popular
    and we say film posters at provincial towns. Each time we mentioned
    India, locals would start singing Hindi film songs." In the small town
    of New Djulfa, the team discovered the place from where the Armenian
    community migrated to India, with Vasudevan adding that some of the
    old epitaphs at the Armenian graveyard in Kolkata mention New Djulfa
    as the place of origin of the deceased.

    The Indian leg of the expedition, which explored Nikitin's entry
    through the Malabar coast and his visits to the Vijaynagar and
    Bahamani kingdoms, began on March 23, 2007 and ended on April 2 in
    Mumbai. People in Bidar in northern Karnataka, knows about the old
    Russian who had visited their ancient town, and the Jindal steel
    plant in Karnataka's Bellary has Russia as an important client. The
    connections between people in places as distant as Tver and Vijaynagar,
    and often hidden behind fading memories or thick shrubbery, continue
    to survive. By retracing Nikitin's route, Vasudevan and the Indian
    expedition team, "only wanted to revive memories of the man who laid
    the first milestone".
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