Showing posts with label Nizamuddin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nizamuddin. Show all posts

Friday, March 26, 2010

Nizamuddin basti - the best little neighborhood in Delhi!

One really great thing, among all the things that can make you seriously crazy, about Delhi is the amazing variety of events going on every day - and they're almost all free!   

One such event was the recent Jashn e Kushrau festival in honor of the kalaam (poetry) of Amir Khusrau a 13th Century Sufi. This 2-week long festival featured live qawwals, lectures, readings, and heritage walks through Nizamuddin.

I followed one of the walks led by young men from the neighborhood who have volunteered to guide people through the place they've grown up in. There is a lot of work going on to revitalize the neighborhood, restore ancient sites while creating opportunities for those who live there and instauring a sense of pride in their home. It's really great to see, especially in Delhi where one can easily get the impression that nobody cares about anything!

I've been through Nizamuddin a couple of times, but it was great to discover more hidden lanes and alleys. It's amazing what's tucked in this place, Medieval tombs are scattered all over the place, shrines and even a surprisingly huge, old baoli or step well!

The crowded lanes are filled with shops where craftsmen sell everything from attar (perfume oils) to mosquito net tents and tooth cleaning sticks. The smells of jasmine perfume, grilling kebabs, garbage and incense mingle to create an undescribable, often overpowering, aroma.  

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Qawwal and Karachi halwa

My street food encounters have been few and far between lately. Not that I haven't been eating, au contraire, it's just been at home or in a restaurant. Been so busy working on the apartment or stuck in traffic and now with the expat group I've joined I just haven't had time to wander.

Rajiv and I did make it out to Nizamuddin this past Sunday evening for a Qawwal concert but to be honest, after seeing the meat hanging in the butcher shops I rather lost my appetite and there's no way he could try that stuff with his delicate stomach. The grilled meat sure smelled good though. I'm going there again tomorrow so maybe I'll grab a kebab for lunch!

I have been curious about Karachi Halwa for a while (mainly because of the name) so I stopped at a sweets shop after my yoga class this morning to pick some up. It was OK, nothing special. Tasted rather neutral with the chewy texture of the inside of a gumdrop. I've seen some recipes that include more almonds or cashews which would be an improvement on the one I tasted today.

So, what's the connection between Qawwals and halwa? None really...

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Qawwals in Nizamuddin for Basant

Things have been so hectic I haven't been able to write anything lately. Who would have thought that selecting sinks, taps, tubs and toilets could take so much time? Who would have thought there is a market for $1000+ (yes, that's 48,000 Rs) toilet flush systems (that's not even counting the toilet itself)? India is nothing if not a land of extremes!
I wanted to follow up my last posts with the pictures from the shrine of Hazrat Nizamuddin Auliya. You'll have to go back in time to January 19, 2010 where I last left us trudging down Lodhi Road avoiding construction ditches, traffic and random piles of dirt. We made quite a spectacle, a ragtag band of folks all dressed in yellow straggling down the street and across the massive intersection on foot to get to the Nizamuddin neighborhood. Once we got into the narrow streets of this old neighborhood the group was quickly bunched back together.

The lanes got narrower and narrower as we approached the shrine. Vendors crowded the incense-smoke-filled space, from their little closet-like stalls they sold offering cloths, flowers (we picked up a basket of rose petals and rose garlands for the tourist price of 20 Rs), incense, jewelry and prayer beads among other things. The air was a mixture of incense and grilling meat (I'm sure it's much more fragrant when the temperature climbs to 100+) We offed our shoes (where we paid 5 Rs to a shoe minder) and donned our scarves before entering the outer shrine area. While several tombs were scattered around, this obviously wasn't the main scene. We did visit a small shrine where we women had to content ourselves with walking around the outside, peering through beautifully carved marble screens at the tomb inside and tying red string on to make a wish.

We stepped through the entry to the main shrine of Hazrat Nizamuddin Auliya, Delhi's 14th centure Sufi saint.  As it was the eve of Basant Panchmi, the day that marks the arrival of spring, the qawwal singers and other men were all wearing yellow scarves on their heads. Here once again we women weren't allowed inside so we gingerly stepped around the girls and women praying around the perimeter and made another wish with a red string tied to the carved marble screen.

There was a procession through the narrow lanes which ended up in front of the shrine where the head sufi accepted offerings of yellow mustard flowers (and money of course). We were seated to the side of the qawwal singers and had a front row seat for the singing that accompanied the offerings. They sang the Hindi qawwalis of the Persian poet Amir Khusro who was a great disciple of Hazrat Nizamuddin. It was pretty intense sitting there seeing these men chanting, I can see how it could induce a trance after a while. I met the "head priest & Naib Sajjada Nashin" and his #2 after the ceremony, and this being the 21st century they gave me their business cards and got my email to keep me informed of other events and to invite me to other qawwal. I'd love to come to their regular Friday night ceremony!

Sunday, January 24, 2010