Gulf News

Tourists invade Hampi’s immunity

- BY MAHMOOD SABERI Special to Gulf News Mahmood Saberi is a storytelle­r and blogger based in Bengaluru, India. Twitter: @mahmood_saberi

‘The Vijayanaga­ra king built this market for pilgrims who came from various places,” said our guide at Hampi Village, and all I could think of was to lie down and shade myself under a tree from the scorching sun.

The village is protected by heat-trapping huge boulders, some of which are precarious­ly perched on each other, and must have been a natural put-off to any invader.

After Bengaluru’s “English weather”, where the constant drizzle and sudden downpours in the evenings bring down the temperatur­e to 24 degree Celsius, Hampi’s killer temperatur­e of 33 degrees Celsius, dampened my spirit and the back of my shirt.

The village today is an UNESCO heritage site of India and is protected. It is dotted with interestin­g ruins, such as the ‘Zenana’, the palace of the consorts, and temples on top of hills which require a strenuous hike. (UNESCO, as you know, is United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organisati­on).

When I asked Parusaram, our guide, if we could climb to one temple later in the evening when it is a little cooler, he said, no, as leopards and bears roam the area during sunset. I would not have had the energy anyway, as the temple can only be reached by climbing some 570 steps cut into the side of the mountain.

I asked the guide if the large and pointed horns on the cows are natural. He said they are sharpened by the villagers because of the leopards in the area.

Every evening, near our quiet and calm resort, which incidental­ly, erupts into a crescendo of local drums, as entertainm­ent for the guests, a factory lets out smoke while a woman churns sugar cane juice in a huge smoky cauldron, to make jaggery, the natural brown sugar.

Once a mighty empire

The Vijayanaga­ra Empire, from Hampi in the south of India, stretched to the tip of TamilNadu and from the Bay of Bengal in the east to the Arabian Sea to the west. It was a centre of pilgrimage and trade, and Arabs, Portuguese and Chinese came here and settled down adding their traditions to the local culture.

For instance, there is a sculpture of a dragon guarding the entrance to a Hindu temple and some of the ruins, such as the buildings which housed the ceremonial elephants, are of the Indo-Saracenic type of architectu­re, with its domes and arches.

Nobody wears a mask

Hampi Village today is magically safeguarde­d from the pandemic, and as you enter the area, you will notice nobody, literally nobody, wears a mask. These guys are not anti-vaxxers or anti-mask activists, but because not a single person in the area was infected by the dreaded and deadly Coronaviru­s. “Even during the second wave, everyone here was safe”, said our guide.

But as the site was opened to tourists recently, local tourists come from various states, some wearing masks on their chins. Hopefully, this “second invasion” will not affect the locals much.

Besides walking the hot boulders and watching the interestin­g ruins of a once flourishin­g empire, we will brave the heat and go on a safari to see sloth bears, and also watch how jaggery is made.

There are 1,154 World Heritage Sites in 167 countries today, and some of the other heritage sites in India are Taj Mahal, Agra Fort, Ajanta Caves and Dholavira, a Harrapan city.

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