The child was crying. Two
children were sitting below the shed of a tractor which was in the process of
loading the mineral stones from a pile of stones. His elder sister who will not be more than 3 years is not able to calm him down and had a wound on her face. The boy child has white powder like thing around his mouth. I opened his mouth. There was a chunk of soil inside it. I
called the mother and told her that the child is eating soil. Her mother came
near seeing his mouth said "ye to bacho ka
kaam ji" (child do like this only). She held the small child up into her chest. Within seconds the child stopped crying child calmed down. I saw a rare smile on his innocent face in the mid of the deserted land in the under a harsh scorching sun. I requested the mother can I take a photograph
of both of you. It was a shot of a lifetime...
The place was one of the white clay mining area near Bikaner, Rajasthan. 10 odd women and few men were
working in the pile of stones searching something. I asked a man what they are
searching in that pile of stones. He said they are segregating the useful
mineral stones to be taken by the transporter to distance places like Gujarat and Maharashtra, that makes the things like china clay pot and bath fittings to be used by the metropolitans.
Rajasthan it was! My first time to this biggest state of India. It was a small stint of 4 days in the totally different part of India. I fell in love with long stretched horizons, the laborious people, thousand door palaces, straight roads, the Indira Gandhi canal in the mid of the desert, the camel tangas... Every part of it like picturesque. You do not have to be a great photographer to take a good photo in Rajasthan. I was roving on the sand after my work when i saw these children also watching my colleagues with amusement.
The rag and torn clothes, barefooted, dusty hair, tanned skin, innocent smiles on their faces... The whole desert was like their playground. It made me remember my childhood. How we peep like a giraffe when a new vehicle comes to the village.
The disparity of rural and urban divide came across me when I was moving like a tourist inside the heritage city of Bikaner. 2 children asked me to take their photograph while their school bus was coming from a distance.
So these are the things that attracts me travel more and more. So I renamed my blog as “A-Traction of Travelling”. There some inherent force about India that attracts me to travel gives my feet a traction to go a miles ahead just to meet more and more people in my life. The farmers, the noise of the smoking silencer of a tractor, the long wheat field swinging with the evening wind, the dusty roads, small children... makes it a worthwhile. So I call it, It is not just another day at office.
Chandan
Chandan
A-traction, thoughtful name... and I guess you are right, Rajasthan is so beautiful that all photos from there are worth a long gaze... did you share some of the earthy treats the kid was relishing :) wonder what it would taste like...
ReplyDeleteha ha. No I just showed them their photograph in my camera
DeleteThank you Indresh
Dear Chandan,
ReplyDeleteLet me start out by saying you are on the top 5 list of the coolest people I know. I read blogs like these a lot- by "like these" I mean those talking about people's realisations about the world as they travel. And I'm very tired of reading these because all their perspectives are the same- it's a hard real world out there, so sad, etc. But I don't know any other blogger who's seen beauty in all this. All these other bloggers go back to their happy comfortable lives and forget about their travels. But I have hope that you will be someone who will one day do something spectaclar to make this world a better place, more beautiful.
Lots of love to you
Trina
Thank you Trina
Delete"You do not have to be a great photographer to take a good photo...". But you have to be a good humanist. And this shines through in your blog and your photographs.
ReplyDeletevery nice images...u should participate in "mission cover shot"...
ReplyDeleteNice Photography...
ReplyDeleteI think u were not tourist u were traveller
ReplyDeleteachha hai....
ReplyDeleteamazing...
ReplyDelete