BangaloreWALKS
History.
Culture. Discovery. |
VIJAY's
MUSINGS
June
Musings
Thou didst create the
night,
but I made the lamp
Thou didst create clay,
but I made the cup
Thou didst create the deserts,
mountains and forests,
I produced the orchards,
gardens and groves
It is I who made the glass out
of stone, and it is I who
turn a poison into an antidote
.......................Sir
Mohammed Iqbal
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The
UN delegates pose, after their Walk,
under
LalBagh's venerable Silk Cotton Tree

.
In the Mahabharata,
PitaMaha, after creating the world, reposed under
a Shamali tree (Silk cotton tree).
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Last week, we had the privilege of hosting, at the
behest of the Tourism Department, a walk at Lalbagh
for the delegates of United Nations World
Tourism Organization. The delegates were
part of the World Committee on Tourism Ethics
that was having its first meeting in India, right
here in Bangalore. With us were also senior management
of the Horticulture Department and
Tourism Department of the Government of Karnataka
and some visitors from the Leela Palace where the
delegates were staying. The UN Walkers ranged from
Jordan, Turkey, Pakistan, Indonesia and
Tunisia to Austria, France, Italy,
Poland, Portugal, The Netherlands, Philippines and
South Africa.
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It was an invigorating morning after a night of light
rain. The sun was out, the air cool with a light breeze
and the leaves glistened in the sunlight. All the
Walkers were enlivened with the discovery of known
Trees as well as trees being seen for the first time.
It was appropriate that walkers from around the world
were seeing worldwide flora planted
in this garden. There would of course be trees in
Lalbagh which would be common to the trees from all
the countries from which the delegates came.
Iqbal
says “I produced the orchards, garden and
groves” – this surely is best represented
at Lalbagh which is built on a dry orchard and planted
with an astonishing variety of trees procured from
around the globe resulting in a botanical and horticultural
wonderland. Sir William Jones, founder
of the Asiatic Society, Calcutta, exhorted its members
to investigate “whatever is rare in the
stupendous fabric of nature”. In Lalbagh
we see trees representing the “stupendous fabric
of nature” drawn from God’s creation –
“thou didst create deserts mountains and forests”.
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| The Walk was exhilarating;
as always there wasn’t enough time. Carlos
Alberto Silva, a delegate from Madeira in Portugal
(which has 4 Gardens associated with Funchal) mentioned
to me the wide variety of plants they have in Madeira,
many brought in by the British - drawing parallels with
Lalbagh. He asked me whether we had Jacarandas in India.
Well yes, of course. |
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Dawid
de Villers, the Special Advisor to the UN Secretary
General, who hails from South Africa, let me
know how much he enjoyed the walk and whether I had
been to Kirstenbosch Gardens in Cape
Town, which I had. He further ventured that he should
have met me 20 years earlier. He wouldn’t have
gained much from meeting me 20 years ago which is what
a professional botanist might say about meeting me today
too. |
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