Tuesday, February 26, 2019

The Konark temple

 On 26 th  February, 2019 visited the Konark Temple. The Konark temple is a 13th century Sun God temple built by Ganga Dev in 1250 on the shores of the sea. It has been ravaged by time, the sea and invaders and yet has a lot of the beauty intact in its sculptures. I went around admiring the various sculptures that depict women in various realms. It had scenes from day to day life besides erotica sculptures too. What is interesting is that some of these sculptures and the way they depict scenes are found even  today. Notable among them a woman taking out water from her hair, woman getting herbal smoke for her body after child birth, a woman going about her daily life with a child, a mother in law talking to her daughter in law and she turning away her head. I am not sure about this but am told so by the Guide. Yet one can see the   narrative and the  tendency of observation and  keenness of the artists. Photography is not allowed in many other temples but here and in Mukteswar one could freely use the camera. The twenty four wheels still point to the hour of the day through their shadows. There are thousands of women, instruments and dance poses and yet no two figures are same. Amazing work in stone and my salutation to those artists. Such an insight into Women's World in 13th century with the dress, hair styles, jewelry and going about their day to day work. It has been rightly said that if the Greeks excelled in the portrayal of physical charm of the human body, the Egyptians in the grandeur of the pyramids, the Chinese in the beauty of their landscape, then the Indians surpassed in their spiritual content and the day to day activities of life. Odhisa still has a lot of beautiful sculptures made of different kinds of stones  sold around the place with delicate and intricate carvings.














Monday, February 25, 2019

Jagganath temple

 A trip to Odhisa cannot be complete with out a visit to Jagganath temple. We went to this temple on 25th February 2022. A spiritual experience no doubt but now it is imbued with nationalism for I could see groups of people moving with national flags and remembering our martyrs. The large number of foreigners in the Hare Krishna procession moving to the Jagganath temple singing the krishna bhajans was a moving site. The beach was beautiful and the unending waves remind me of the continuities of the past to the present and even the future. These waves must have been there from the beginning and will continue even after us. It is an amazing feeling to be so connected with that story of an  endless time of which history is just a part.