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Approaching the Taj Mahal, you pass the great Fort
Agra, built by three Mogul emperors, and an extraordinary structure in its
own right. We drove by it,
marveling at its massive double walls, towering gateways, palaces, courts,
mosques and gardens. Impressive
as it was, even more so perhaps than Fahtepur Sicri, we
wouldn’t be stopped. We
were on our own pilgrimage to a monument called the most beautiful in the
world.
The Taj Mahal is rightly called a monument to love.
We were delivered to its gate by crowding into a small electric
shuttle bus that carried us to the entrance.
Once inside, this white marble mausoleum stands serene and perfect
in a garden of cypresses, with reflecting pools shimmering silvery white,
fiery red, or pale pink depending on the time of day and the elements.
It has been the subject of countless artists and poets, but what
makes it so unique is its fairy tale love story.
In 1612 a young woman of royalty, Arjuman Banu,
captured the heart of the Mogul Shah Jahan.
At the age of 21 she married him and became his favorite wife. Many
stories of her wisdom and generosity are told.
She was an advisor to her husband and bore Shah Jahan 14 children.
She died in childbirth in 1630, accompanying her husband on a
military mission. Before she
died, she begged the Shah to build a monument so beautiful the world would
never forget their love.
The broken-hearted Shah Jahan locked himself in his
private chambers for a month, and when he emerged, his hair was white.
Six months later he began the process of honoring her request. An
army of 20,000 laborers worked for 17 years creating the vast tomb of
white marble and inlaid precious marble and gemstones. The Taj Mahal was
completed on the anniversary of her death.
The Shah it is said, spent his last years locked in a room gazing
at his wife’s burial site. He
is buried next to her in the Taj.
Our first view of the Taj Mahal was awe inspiring.
The white marble domed structure contrasted with a brilliant blue
sky; the two slender towering minarets perfectly balanced on each corner
added drama and beauty and two red sandstone
buildings—a mosque on the left and its mirror image (built purely
for symmetry) on the right, are perfectly placed.
We added our shoes to the pile of a thousand or so
decorating the front lower walk and entered the darkened cool interior
walking slowly around the inside of the mausoleum.
It is cool but with the crowds, not quiet. A constantly
changing light filters through marble screens chiseled like filagree and
decorated with tiny individual patterns of flowers designed in
semi-precious stone. The
perfectly smooth surface of each uniquely designed flower of a variety of
semi precious gemstone is incredibly intricate and you marvel at the
creativity and artistry it took to create each flower.
And the Taj Mahal is all that it is described to be.
We understood that once the sun goes down sunset
turns the Taj marble into lemon yellow, then pumpkin orange or pure white
against a moonlit sky.
It is indeed the most incredible monument to love
that one can imagine.
But, never mind love.
I was more concerned about my shoes as I exited the Taj.
We had been requested to remove our shoes before
entering the marble interior. I
was wearing my brand new walking shoes, purchased just a day before the
trip began. I loved them. I want to wear them forever.
I almost didn’t find them as we walked along the piles and piles
and piles of hundreds of shoes stacked outside the Taj. Finally, I came to our guide and he pointed to the two-foot
pile of shoes owned by our Bus 17. I
examined the pile. No shoes
belonging to me.
He pointed to the second pile.
Again, no shoes.
I was beginning to panic.
I envisioned myself walking barefoot around Delhi, into the
railroad station and for the rest of this tour! The piles of trash came to
mind immediately. Just
as my thoughts became totally negative, he pointed to a pair of black
shoes, for some reason standing along high on a shelf in the back.
My shoes had been separated from all the other thousands of shoes
in front of the Taj.
Somebody surely wanted my shoes, I thought, gathering
them quickly to my feet.
We walked leisurely in the late afternoon sun around
the Taj, viewing the river to the rear, talking photo after photo to our
hearts content.
We had received ample time to create a irreplaceable
image of the Taj Mahal in our
minds—as for me, I will see it vividly reconstructed in my memory for
the rest of my life.
But other images of India, not so pristine, will also
remain etched in my memory.
We returned at 7:30 p.m. to the Agra Railroad Station
where we were to catch the return express train to Delhi. We were warned to stick close together, don’t get
separated, ignore the beggars, stand on the platform. We were handed a
heavy box dinner to eat on the train ride back.
It was now dark, and the noise of the platform was deafening. Beggars besieged us and we huddled close in order to avoid
them. Then a swarming group
of little ragged dirty children surrounded us.
Perhaps only five or six years old,
the troup was dirty, barefooted, with torn clothes and matted hair.
One child was a hunchback, obvious because he had on no shirt.
Another child held a baby perhaps three months old, hanging on to
the baby even as he begged, played, jumped up and down from the platform
to the train tracks below and, along with the other children, narrowly
avoiding the oncoming train as it whizzed by. But he was tender and
careful always with the baby, perhaps his brother.
This gang of homeless children was alone; they
swirled around the tracks, jumped up and down from the platform, hopped
into the plastic garbage bags empty from our box dinner, using them as
houses to sleep in on the tracks for the night.
Then they would approach us with pitying faces, begging for food or
rupees. There were other pitiful homeless beggars who approached us too,
but for each and every one of us, these children presented a tragic,
unforgettable image of poverty in India.
The train was late. We didn’t board it for another
hour and a half. We saw the
children the entire wait.
Finally, an eternity later for us tired folk,
the late train arrived and took three hours to return to Delhi. None of us touched the food in the boxes. We were worried
about spoiled food. There
were sixty wasted boxes of food gathered up as we left the train in Delhi.
It was almost midnight.
This was almost the end of an unforgettable day. But
returning, the walk through the Delhi train station in the middle
of the night reinforced our better understanding of the incredible poverty
and homelessness in India. We snaked through the darkness of the station
and out into the parking area, again
surrounded by hordes of homeless people, lying on plastic tarps, sitting
in the gutter, sleeping in chairs and on the ground, sitting motionless
near small bonfires that lit up the darkness.
It was like walking through a nightmare.
By contrast, our hotel had rose petals welcoming us
as we walked through the latticed entrance.
We were back in our own world.
But what an unforgettable world of the poor we had
experienced that long long day.
I’ll never forget my 21-hour visit to the Taj Mahal—and
beyond.
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