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Culture chasing

With a variety of art, literary and music festivals, India is now an exciting destination for an intellectual adventure. Isha Manchanda reports.

Updated on: Jan 14, 2012 10:36 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By
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On finishing her stint in the Israeli army last year. 25-year-old Shirley Hashoah set her sights on accomplishing two things — getting a masters degree in Psychology, and travelling to Shantiniketan for Rabindranath Tagore’s 150th birth-year celebrations. “When I was researching if there were any events for that, I came across all these other literary festivals like the ones in Kolkata and Jaipur,” says Hashoah, “I didn’t even know India had so many book festivals!”

HT Image
HT Image

When we caught up with Hashoah at the Hornbill Festival in Nagaland, she was already two months and two festivals into her journey, with close friend Isa Sakal. “We landed in Delhi in October and immediately left for Jodhpur for the Rajasthan International Folk Festival,” points out Sakal. Travelling eastward from there, the duo followed the road all the way to Sikkim where they met fellow Israeli national and amateur photographer Yasim Peled. When Peled mentioned his plans to visit Hornbill, Hashoah and Sakal were fascinated enough to follow him to Kohima. “I had my reservations about Nagaland because of the restricted area status, but the Naga people have been so generous,” points out Sakal. Hashoah and Sakal travelled to Kolkata to spend time at Shantiniketan, and for the Apeejay Lit fest in January before they head back to Rajasthan for the Jaipur Lit Fest, while Peled — who reached Hornbill after attending NH7 Weekender in Pune — is heading down to Goa for Sunburn and finally to Delhi for a week before heading back home.

“A lot of travellers plan their long vacations around festivals across the globe,” says Beatrice Ranch, a French tourist we caught up with at the NH7 Weekender in Pune. “I came down to Bombay to visit friends who work there with an intention to spend New Years in Goa, but my plans have drastically changed since I landed there,” she says, with only a hint of disbelief in her voice. “When I heard about NH7, I was quite surprised. I had to visit to check out the music scene,” Ranch adds. Ranch caught up with friends she’s made on the road at the India International Film Fest in Goa before travelling further down the Konkan coast, till she heads to the Jaipur Literary fest and back to Bombay just in time for Kala Ghoda in February.

Having worked extensively with record labels and artists in the US, Tej Brar, who has recently moved to Delhi to work in the independent music circuit, is keen to help develop a music festival circuit for tourists in India. Travelling with the dubstep crew to NH7 and managing the dubstation stage, he’s thoroughly impressed by the way independent music festivals have evolved here. “The Indian cultural festival circuit has been very different till now. Music, especially the non-traditional kind, isn’t really a big attraction on the tourism map yet, but it has the potential to be,” says Brar.

Much like Hashoah, a lot of tourists are unaware of India’s rapidly growing cultural festival circuit. There are still some who choose to follow the rabbit down the hole, and chase a cultural thrill through unfamiliar territories, and even go the extra mile for a restricted area permit, or brave travel sharks and uncharted waters.

 
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