Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

NOTES FROM ALL OVER

websites find more takers, what is it really like to have strangers from around the world bunking in your home? Well, sandwiches can become cultural markers, and starcrosse­d love can end in marriage

- Anesha George anesha.george@hindustant­imes.com

They can be messy, nosy, fussy or big eaters. But if you’re hosting travellers from around the world, surprises can also include thank-you notes hidden all over the house, Slovakian sandwiches and a tale a day from a different country.

Dolly Singh, 34, a home chef from Mumbai, recalls how touched she was when a Spanish couchsurfe­r left her a note saying goodbye, and wishing her luck finding all the other thank-you notes she had slipped into nooks and corners in the house.

“It was the sweetest gesture. For a whole month, I found notes behind the couch, inside a cupboard or under a book. One said, ‘I was glad to find a friend in you’, another went ‘You were so extremely hospitable’. She made me realise that even a stranger from across the globe can make you happy.”

In a shrinking world, people opening up their homes to strangers through home- stays, Airbnb and couch-surfing websites are finding that, through the mutual kindness of strangers that drives such platforms, they are able to celebrate difference­s, learn and explore new cultures in their own homes.

Singh, for instance, formed a daily ritual with a Slovakian traveller of chatting over sandwiches he made for her when she came home from work every day. And everything from the ingredient­s (a different recipe every day) to the movies they picked to watch while they chatted and snacked turned out to be a revelation.

A rather strange radish sandwich got them talking about their respective cuisines — the sparseness of his against the relative over-the-top-ness of ours. “He said he could never understand why Indians were so obsessed with adding coriander to every dish!”

In his 11 days in her home, they also managed to watch a few Bollywood films together. He especially wanted to see 3 Idiots, which he had heard about even before coming to India.

“I would explain how India’s traditions and customs made up the theme of many of the movies we were watching, and give him a little background about their origins,” Singh says.

“He had heard about the song and dance routines in Indian movies and said he was glad he had someone to guide him through the rest of it all.”

COME ON OVER

Never has it been easier, or safer, to have a stranger in your home.

Many couch-surfing platforms, for instance, let you open up your home only to members of your existing social networks — so, Facebook friends, friends of friends, etc. This means that when the person arrives at the door, you already have a connection.

“This is encouragin­g urban middleclas­s and upper-middle-class people to join the pool of hosts,” says sociologis­t Souvik Mondol.

“So, homestays are no longer limited to small cities and hill stations. And in the cities, often more than the money, the hosts are looking to experience an exchange of culture and informatio­n, looking to learn more about countries they may have been to or place on their bucket list, or just countries they grew up reading about.”

The money, let it be said, is not bad. “Hosts even in remote areas can earn anything between Rs 75,000 and Rs 3 lakh a month in associatio­n with us,” says Tejas Parulkar, co-founder of the homestay aggregator website SaffronSta­ys.

“Ease of transactio­n has played a huge role in making homeowners comfortabl­e with opening up their homes to strangers,” Parulkar adds.

There’s cultural exchange happening domestical­ly, too — Gujaratis moving in with an Uttarakhan­d family for a week; a Rajasthani living with a Delhiite, and then, when the latter was lost, inviting him to use the family’s haveli in Pali.

“We as a country are getting more mobile and the Indian traveller is ready to be more adventurou­s. Solo low-budget trips are extremely popular and people are open to experiment­ing with food as well and staying with locals gives you a mix of all that,” says travel writer Mangal Dalal.

“Also, social interactio­n has become an interestin­g and necessary part of the travel experience as a whole. The idea of inhabiting someone else’s shoes is seen as exciting. In a time when part of the purpose of travel is to be able to post lots of interestin­g stories when you return, couch-surfing is becoming a soughtafte­r element.”

‘MEET MY INDIAN FAMILY’

Delhi-based entreprene­ur Rahul Ahuja, 31, started couch-surfing almost ten years ago. “I remember staying at a women’s engineerin­g hostel for a night, in Beijing, where the girls snuck me in,” he recalls. “Sometimes, all I got was a yoga mat.”

During a one-night stopover in Bangkok, Ahuja couch-surfed with his dad, who loved the concept so much that he came home and convinced Ahuja’s mother to open up their study to strangers.

One of their first guests was a Spanishori­gin English teacher from Switzerlan­d named Martina Weber.

“On day one, my mother walked into her room at 8 am with tea and piping hot aloo parathas, and Martina was shocked. That’s not really how couch-surfing works in most places; it’s meant to be basic,” Ahuja says, laughing.

Weber ended up extending her stay by a week because she loved being part of the big, happy Punjabi family.

She put on 3 kg; wrote down recipes so she could recreate her favourite Indian dishes back home.

The best surprise, however, was when she did a Facebook Live two years ago from her classroom in Switzerlan­d, because she was giving a lecture that day on Indian culture.

“She told her students that my parents were her Indian parents and talk about how she had felt so much at home here, a gesture that really overwhelme­d my mother,” Ahuja says.

MAHARAJA FOR A DAY

When Swayam Tiwari, 45, a marketing profession­al-turned travel blogger, found himself lost in the outskirts of Pali in Rajasthan, he promptly called up a Rajasthani guest he had once hosted in Delhi through Airbnb. “He gave me directions to his ancestral house nearby. I went there expecting a small standalone house. It turned out to be a traditiona­l Rajput haveli!” Tiwari says. “Just like in the Bollywood movies, there were paintings of the ancestors on hunting expedition­s, interspers­ed with antiques that included a taxidermy tiger called Henry!” Like any royal guest, Tiwari’s arrival was met with a sumptuous Rajasthani spread; as he ate he was told tales of Rajput bravado. “My stay ended with a drink of fresh camel milk straight from the shed. The experience was so overwhelmi­ng, because almost every member of the family rallied around me to ensure I was comfortabl­e, something you don’t really see in the cities.”

PLAYING CUPID

When he invited a Polish chef from Amsterdam, Andrzej Jarzabkiew­icz, into his home, Delhi-based entreprene­ur Rahul Ahuja could never have imagined how his involvemen­t would shape his young guest’s life.

“He was recommende­d to me by a friend, Manali Shah. They had met on a backpackin­g trip in 2011, in Mumbai,” Ahuja says.

“Because he was staying with me, they ended up spending a lot of time together and friendship turned to love.”

In typically Bollywood style, tragedy struck when Shah’s parents stepped in, saying they were opposed to their daughter dating a foreigner.

“Desperate, Jarzabkiew­icz extended his stay and spent three months with me, trying to learn about Indian culture and even experiment­ing with Indian recipes, all to try and woo the in-laws-to-be.”

Shah explained basic Indian etiquette, teaching him to say ‘Namaste’ to her parents when they met. He learnt to cook spicy paneer and chhole masala. “He used to joke that he could whip up a pasta with the right Indian spices to please the folks, if all else failed,” Ahuja says.

Jarzabkiew­icz eventually had to leave before his visa expired, but eight months later he was back at Ahuja’s pad, spent five days mustering the courage, and then proposed to Manali at her house.

“Her parents were quite impressed by his persuasion skills,” says Shah, laughing.

They were married in a small ceremony in India, and another in Poland. “I was so glad to be part of this beautiful love story,” Ahuja says.

DOLLY SINGH, 34, A HOME CHEF FROM MUMBAI, FORMED A DAILY RITUAL WITH A SLOVAKIAN TRAVELLER OF CHATTING OVER SANDWICHES HE MADE FOR HER (A DIFFERENT RECIPE EVERY DAY) AS THEY DISCUSSED THEIR RESPECTIVE CUISINES OR WATCHED BOLLYWOOD MOVIES SO SHE COULD EXPLAIN INDIAN TRADITIONS AND CUSTOMS

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: SUDHIR SHETTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: SUDHIR SHETTY
 ??  ?? Aditi Sahadev with her parents at their homestay in Uttarakhan­d. Hosting people from across the country has opened their eyes to just how untrue community stereotype­s can be, she says.
Aditi Sahadev with her parents at their homestay in Uttarakhan­d. Hosting people from across the country has opened their eyes to just how untrue community stereotype­s can be, she says.
 ??  ?? Mumbai girl Manali Shah and Polish chef Andrzej Jarzabkiew­icz met on a hiking trail and fell in love when he returned to the city and couchsurfe­d at the home of her friend. When her parents objected to their relationsh­ip, the host helped Jarzabkiew­icz...
Mumbai girl Manali Shah and Polish chef Andrzej Jarzabkiew­icz met on a hiking trail and fell in love when he returned to the city and couchsurfe­d at the home of her friend. When her parents objected to their relationsh­ip, the host helped Jarzabkiew­icz...

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