1000 Awesome Things About India

Much to Know,Lots to Explore

H1 N1 Influenza | Swine Flu

Indian Initiatives Updates

Books and Books

Books and Books

Blog Stats

Google Ads

Recent Awesome Things

Ads By Google

Add Me

AddThis Feed Button

Add to Technorati Favorites

Movies

  • A Beautiful Mind
  • August Rush
  • Basketball Diaries
  • Blood Diamond
  • Cast Away
  • Catch Me If You Can
  • Do Aakhen Barah Haath
  • Edward Scissorhand
  • If Only
  • Little Manhattan
  • Lord Of The Ring Trilogy
  • Love Actually
  • October Sky
  • P.S. I Love You
  • Taare Zameen Par
  • The Motorcycle Diaries
  • The Shawshank Redemption
  • The Sixth Sense
  • The Ultimate Gift

Link Unit By Google

My Book Shelf

  • A beautiful Mind
  • A short History of nearly everything
  • Alchemist
  • Animal Farm
  • Autobiography of a Yogi
  • Illusions
  • Interpreter of Maladies
  • Jonathan Livingston Seagull
  • Life Of Pie
  • Lights from many Lamps
  • Like a Flowing river
  • Mohandas
  • Surely,You're jokin Mr.Feynman
  • The Art Of Intrusion
  • The Devil and Miss Prym: A Novel of Temptation
  • The Double
  • The fifth Mountain
  • The Fountainhead
  • The HitchHiker's Guide to the Galaxy Trilogy
  • The Last Moghul
  • The Search
  • The story of my experiments with truth
  • The Wonder that was India
  • The World is Flat
  • The Zahir
  • To Kill a Mocking Bird
  • To Sir,With Love
  • Train to Pakistan

Google Search

A serene, idyllic spot with only nature for company and that too in the middle of a bustling city. Sounds too good to be true? Not if you have been to the Osho Teerth also called the Nallah park set in the lush environs between lane number two and three of Koregaon Park. An inviting tranquillity envelopes the park spread over 12 acres of greenery and is divided into two inter-connected section by a bridge.

The gravelly garden path in one section leads one on to a finely chiselled statue of Osho, the inspiration behind the project, with the words Osho Teerth written alongside. An undulating greenscape dotted with a variety of plants on both sides unfolds before the eyes of the visitor.

It may seem a little difficult to believe that this park was once a mosquito-infested wasteland
or that the gurgling brook that runs through the park was a nallah into which the effluents of the Pulgate sewerage were emptied. The park, which seems to have risen Phoenix-like from the dirt, owes its creation to the Shunyo Foundation, friends of the Osho Commune International who in 1990 took up the greening of the nallah. Members of the Shunyo Foundation approached the collector of Pune to seek permission to acquire land around the nallah for a public park.
Any place that can inspire you to meditate when it is not a part of your daily routine has to be truly special.And So is the Zen Garden In Pune.

Ratha Jatra, the Festival of Chariots of Lord Jagannatha is celebrated every year at Puri, the temple town in Orissa, on the east coast of India. The presiding deities of the main temple, Sri Mandira, Lord Jagannatha, Lord Balabhadra and Goddess Subhadra, with the celestial wheel Sudarshana are taken out from the temple precincts in an elaborate ritual procession to their respective chariots. The huge, colourfully decorated chariots, are drawn by hundreds and thousands of devotees on the bada danda, the grand avenue to the Gundicha temple, some two miles away to the North. After a stay for seven days, the deities return to their abode in Srimandira. Ratha Jatra is perhaps the grandest festival on earth. Everything is on a scale befitting the great Lord. Full of spectacle, drama and colour, the festival is a typical Indian fair of huge proportions. It is also the living embodiment of the synthesis of the tribal, the folk, and the autochthonous with the classical, the elaborately formal and the sophisticated elements of the socio-cultural-religious ethos of the Indian civilization.
The main journey of the "Chariot Festival" involves the large Deities of Lord Jagannath, Baladev and Subhadra to be transported from the temple, each on their own chariot, every year, where:
  1. Jagannath`s chariot, Nandighosha is a 35 feet square, rising to a height of 45 feet, with 16 wheels, 7 feet in diameter and is yellow in colour.
  2. Balabhadra`s chariot is called Taladhvaja, is blue in color and has 14 wheels.
  3. Subhadra`s chariot is the smallest, with 12 wheels and is called Devadalan.

A glimpse of Lord Jagannatha on the chariot is considered to be very auspicious and saints, poets and scriptures have repeatedly glorified the sanctity of this special festival.
The sanctity of the festival is such that even a touch of the chariot or even the ropes with which these are pulled is considered enough to confer the results of several pious deeds or penance for ages. In fact, there is a famous Oriya song which says that on this occasion, the chariot, the wheels, the grand avenue all become one with Lord Jagannatha himself.
The concept of the chariot has been explained in the Kathopanishada in the following words-

Atmanam rathinam viddhi sareeram rathamevatu 
Buddhim tu saarathim viddhi marah pragrahameva cha.
The body is the Chariot and the soul is the deity installed in the chariot. The wisdom acts as the charioteer to control the mind and thoughts.

The Skanda Purana glorifies the sanctity of the Rath Jatra in the following words-

Gundicha mandapam namam yatrahamajanam pura
Ashwamedha sahasrasya mahabedi tadadvabat.
Those who are fortunate to see the deities of the Srimandira in the Gundicha Temple, the final destination of the procession of the chariots, derive the benefits of a thousand horse sacrifices, an immensely pious deed. Kabi Samrat Upendra Bhanja in his famous Vaidehisa Vilasa mentions that the Lord comes out from his sanctum for participating in the Gundicha Jatra, another name of the Festival of Chariots, only for redeeming the fallen, the patita jana who get the opportunity to behold their dearest god at close quarters on this occasion. Similarly, saint poet Salabega waxes eloquent in praise of his dearest dark darling and says that the Lord swaying and moving like a wild elephant arrives at the Grand Avenue and rides his chariot and destroys in a flash all the sins of his devotees, even if these may be grave or unpardonable.
If you are in India and not afraid of crowd , then Puri Rath Yatra fulfills both spiritual and religious needs. Rath Yatra will give you a glimpse of India - An India that is known for its vedic culture and religious beliefs.

Go barefoot to the Andamans. This is a place of pilgrimage. You need to have the faith, you need to believe: there are no deities, no shrines, no monuments. But yes, if you are pagan and would genuflect to a spiny thorny woody leafy decades old tree, if you would stop to hear birdsong, if you would pray that there always be a sea and a forest, if you would revere the place enough to collect all your plastic and take it back with you, and promise never to return, and never to tell anyone about this place, so that it remains there, suspended on its latitude and longitude, alone, unspoilt, self absorbed and ever growing, then and only then must you go to the Andamans.
Havelock Island is largely untouched by humankind too—visited by a mere 10,000 tourists a year (compared with the millions swarming Phuket across the water). That means plenty of room on the beach for everyone. Beach No. 7 is the prettiest (sand flies aside), but there's Ayurvedic massage and the island's best restaurant on No. 5. Either way, with a coconut-shell sundowner in hand, you'll realize that nondescript names don't mean a thing. Because Beaches No. 5 and No. 7, like the perfumes by Chanel, are heady, lingering and utterly timeless.  
The Andaman Islands, in the Bay of Bengal, are really India's secret paradise.Stunning beaches, pristine coral reefs, tropical jungle, a rich wildlife, active volcanoes, the possibility to meet swimming elephants and colourful big fishes- all in one place!
I don't need to say more as the images are self-explaining. With this project of listing '1000 Awesome Things About India' , I am discovering many places/food/cultures/people in India that seem unimaginable.. However,Not all make it to this list but they all are worth a try.

Search

Subscribe via email

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Recent Awesome Comments

Ads By Google

Follow Me on Twitter

    follow me on Twitter

    Awesome Subscribers

    A Note About Comments.

    Your response is greatly valued so go ahead and say it! I read all comments and also try to answer each one. Your views are always welcome and every comment is a kind of update so don't hesitate.

    Best Things In Life

    • A good conversation.
    • A Link to your Blog
    • A special glance.
    • Accidentally overhearing someone say something nice about you.
    • Falling in love
    • Falling in love for the first time.
    • First Salary
    • Friday Evenings
    • Friends.
    • Getting butterflies in your stomach every time you see that one person.
    • Getting mail.
    • Giggling.
    • Having friends you know you can cry on or talk to about your deepest problems
    • Having someone play with your hair.
    • Hearing your favorite song on the radio
    • Hugging the person you love.
    • Laughing at an inside joke.
    • Laughing at yourself.
    • Laughing for absolutely no reason at all.
    • Laughing so hard your face hurts
    • Lying in bed listening to the rain outside
    • Making eye contact with a cute stranger.
    • Midnight phone calls that last for hours.
    • Spending holidays with parents
    • Spending time with close friends!
    • Sweet dreams.
    • Waking up and realizing you still have a few hours left to sleep.
    • Your first kiss

    T.V. Shows

    • Discovery Of India
    • Download : True Story Of Internet
    • Lost
    • Prison Break
    • Supernatural
    • Surbhi
    • Two and a Half Men
    • X Files

    Register for Free

    Tarun Reflex | Personal,Political and Technical

    Ads By Google