Monday, November 23, 2015

My Love Story With India (Part 6)


JAIPUR:


AMER PALACE

Spanning a period of about two centuries, with a classic fusion of Mughal and Hindu architecture built of red and yellow sandstones with white marble, the Amer Palace is a testament to man’s ability to create masterpieces. It took three generations of Jaipur kings beginning with Raja Man Singh I and completed by Mirza Raja Jai Singh and Sawai Jai Singh in the twentieth century.

The most exceptional Kings of Jaipur has the name “SAWAI” added to their names. It means 25% more intelligent than the usual.



Amer Palace is home to the Kesar Kyari Garden, Maota Lake, Palace of Winds (Hawa Mahal), Man Singh Palace, Baradari, and much more.



PALACE OF MIRRORS (Sheesh Mahal)
There are three entrances into the Amer Fort Palace: The Sun Gate (Suraj Pol – through elephants come through a very steep climb directly into the courtyard), Lion Gate (Singh Pol – takes you to the Hall of Public Audience; Diwan-i-Am with 27 colonnades), and Elephant Gate (Ganesh Pol – leads to the private apartments of the royal family).

To enter the inner palaces of the Amer, the main entrance portal known as the Ganesh Pol is the most magnificinet portal in Rajasthan. It is covered with elegant frescos and crowned with pavilions carrying fascinating jail screens. This place houses the Sheesh Mahal (Palace of Mirrors where the art with ornamentation with glass sits), Diwan-e-Khas, or ‘Hall of Private Audience”, Jai Mandir with millions of glass pieces on stucco, the Zenana palace and not too far from it, the courtyard with a Baradari (a 12-door building structure that allows free flow of air), which is surrounded by ladies apartments and fresco depicting Khrisna-lila scenes simply draws your attention to stand still, watch and marvel at the ancient lives and minds of those who once lived there.

Now imagine it is nighttime. Strike a match to a candle and that single flame of light can illuminate over 100,000 reflective mirrors, lighting up the entire Palace of Mirrors!

The architectural finishing of the Palace of Mirrors and some notable marble-built structures often left me in wonderment as to their true secret. Well, I got to find out that limestone powder, marble dust and sea shell powder to which is added olive oil and coconut oil for a thorough blend is what makes the beautiful walls smooth, sparkle and glimmer like that of the Taj Mahal. The gemstone powder is the source of reflected lights you see when the sun’s rays glaze over the walls of the Taj Mahal.

Our guide tells us a most fascinating story. During the 13th century the King of Jaipur fascinated with Persian carpets, wanted to decorate his palace with them. Of course there were carpet markers in Jaipur, but here’s the difference. In Jaipur the carpet weavers weave their carpets in a single layer carpets with double knot at the ends. But the Persians (modern day Iran) weaved their carpets knot by knot in a symmetrical double knot and double layers which keeps the carpet firmer compared to that of Jaipur. However, when it comes to bearing weight on it, say for example you place a heavy box on the Jaipur carpet and that of the Turkish carpet, the Jaipur carpet easily bounces back to its original form after the carpet is removed because of its loose style of weaving. This is not the case for the Turkish carpet which remains in the depressed state, thus losing its original form. The rule therefore is not to place heavy objects on a Persian carpet!

To show his subjects how beautiful the carpets made by the Persians for his palace were, he commissioned the Persians to once again weave a large-than-life equivalent for public view. This carpet sits atop the Maota lake like a beautiful garden of well groomed flower plants. Today, the double knot carpet technique of the Persians is has become part of the weaving technique of Jaipur’s carpet weavers. 

Our eager guide let us in another secret. I discovered the Flower with Many Elements. This flower sculpture becomes whatever your palm – placed over it to obscure a part of it – can turn into a crab, a snake, a flower, a tail, etc. And here’s another secret! When we got to the Turkish Bath we discovered there’s a wonderful architectural design calculated such that I can whisper to you through a particular wall and no one else will hear our conversation but us!


Gosh! India has an incredible way of telling stories through motifs, bass reliefs, fresco, wall paintings, and architecture.


THE ONE TRUE SMILE

The year was in the 1600s. Twelve women sit in the courtyard close to the Zenana Palace (Queen’s Palace) – each with a golden glowing smile. These are the 12 wives of the Warrior King, Maharaja Man Singh seated under the roof of the Baradari for their usual private meetings with the King, the curtain pulled off revealing to the guards and visitors those seated within. The Maharaja looks at his wives adoringly – he knew something that the other 11 Maharanis did not know. Yet each them share with him a distinctive esoteric smile; the smile that is suppose to betray she was the chosen one who got the king the night before. But only one of them on any particular one day actually has the One True Smile – a gift bequeathed her the night before when she and the king spent the night together in romantic and erotic karma sutra bliss.

The king visits each wife using this axis and a series of secret passage doors without the other wives being aware he was spending the night with the other. And since the Zenana (Queen Palace) has no window through which the wives can see the goings-on around them, the King easily has his way with the Chosen Queen of the Night in the courtyard with the curtains pulled down. From here it is easy for him to ‘sneak’ right back to his palace just as the Queen of the Night is guarded by back unseen to her chambers in the Zenana.

However, when the women sit in the courtyard, originally called the Harem, you’ll find all 12 wives smiling pretentiously, none wearing a frown, afraid of giving herself away as the one who knew the king did not spend the night with her. Yet, amongst them, only one wife can tell that the 11 other smiles wore plastered smiles, one meant to hide their disappointment or embarrassment. Ironically, the wife with the one true smile – the most radiant and authentic smile of all – keeps this as her special entitled secret; savouring it like a well-kept secret.


The king keeps a string of female guards or eunuchs to watch over his Queens and concubines. Maharaja Man Singh is reputed to have kept an additional 100 concubines and hundreds of female servants! These guards and eunuchs run every day tasks: massages, security, chores, errands (and sometimes getting an ‘accidental’ male visitor to sleep with the sex-and-attention-deprived wives for a quickie. Should the male visitor however be caught by the King – who keeps an ever vigilant eye on his harem and spies the ‘unknown man’, he is instantly castrated and turned into a eunuch who now becomes one of the security guards for the wives).

On the Zenana walls close to the lintel near the roof we see miniature 400-years-old painting of in their original depictions. In Hindu religion, the knowledge of Kama Sutra was never debased as porn but was used practically as sex education to children and pupils. But this perception suddenly changed with the Muslim invasion of Islam which considered knowledge of this as immoral and deserving of heavy fines, leading to the dearth of that knowledge for a very long time (up to 200 years); until more recently, a revival of its original spirit is now been championed, regaining a new momentum, which is now been taught as what it once was: proper sex education. Any wonder why India women are such dreamy romantics.

Our guide shows us a particular Teak Wood – over 400-years-old – which allows for stamp indentions, etc. These doors are specifically used to make the private doors leading to the chamber of each Queen.

As we head to the library, India tunes blare from flutes. We turn our heads and there they were! The snake charmers! Here’s another top secret: both real and plastic snakes are conjured when snake chamber blow their flutes and hit the wooden drums. Jaipur is a land of snakes and snake charmers belong to a particular caste.

PINK CITY
Pink City is the only planned city in Jaipur; 9 Sq.km long.  Originally built with 7 Gates, an 8th one was added in modern time. Pink is the compulsory colour since 1876 when the Maharaja welcomed the Prince of Wales as a tribute to him. However, the internal walls of a home are painted according to the varied taste of the occupants.

Inside the Pink City is the Wind Palace. It owes its name to the 970 small windows, built specially for the royal ladies who were not allowed to mix with the outside crowd. From these numerous windows, they are allowed to catch a glimpse or sit and watch the goings-on of the outer world in view whenever there’s a event, a ceremony and gathering for which they are permitted to look in.

Amber Fort was built before the City Palace. And the King moved from Amber Fort to the Palace. The Pink City is also known as the Sun Dynasty. The Moon palace is the highest building in the Walled City (another name for the Pink City). No other building is allowed to be taller than the Moon Palace which is also known as the Yellow Building.

The China Mirror (Snake Mirror) was an exchanged between the Chinese and Jaipur.

The Pink city is planned according to the caste system. And the natives lives inside here. The lower floors are used for businesses and the top floors are for accommodation purposes. There are 4 major castes: The Priests, The Soldiers, The Merchants and The Servants. Even your surname can betray the caste you belong to, so does the job you do, even the colour and style of the turban a man wears is a giveaway of sub-castes. For women, the style of costumes and jewelries she’s adorned with reveals her caste.

Caste is the equivalent of class in some other societies. The difference is that you are born into one; while in class you can choose to rise out of it. The former you really have no say, no control, no hope of even getting or climbing out of it. You either choose to love it, accept it, or live with it. That choice is up to you. However, one of the quickest, not too common, but often sought after is to marry into a different or more superior caste, like the Queen of Jaipur did when she married a local fisherman when she was widowed. That act forever lifted the man’s generation to an enviable caste.

Visiting the Royal Artists centre, we see how squirrel furs makes fantastic single-hair brushes for royal art painters in Jaipur. The art of painting is passed on from one generation to another. Sitting down on a soft padded stool, I watch in fascination as the artist, using a single brush, dipped in natural colour palate, painted me an elephant in less than 5 minutes! 

My current artist is a 5th Generation artist. And so will is progeny (unless say 500 years from now, the caste distinction has been demystified to the point where people wonder how their ancestors could have lived that long that way [wink!]). I see an ancient original seal and stamp can be seen bearing the inscriptions: JEYPOOR. It means Jaipur as we know it today.

BLOCK PAINTING FABRIC DESIGNING

Colours of paints are taken naturally from vegetable plants and their particular flowers, e.g. the colour BLUE is taken from Indigo flowers. Natural vegetable colours do not wash when the process is complete, says the block painting expert. To begin the process, the cloth is laid stretched on a flat board, and block after block – up to five or seven colours – each with a particular colour, is placed one after the other in succession. After that, the cloth is placed in salt water which heightens the colour, and is in turn dipped into rain water to make it permanent. Block painting is used to make fabrics like table cloths, bed sheets, etc.

Jaipur like everywhere else in India believes in luck too, especially the fortune attached to that which the Elephant symbolizes: Good luck, good fortune, Happiness and Prosperity. Peacock means: integrity and beauty. Camel symbolizes tenacious mental and physical strength, Horses: velocity, vitality and beauty. Sometimes it could mean loyalty, industriousness and swiftness. Click the link below for stories on, India Ghost Town, Taj Mahal and more.




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