India

Of McCluskieganj's Old Bungalows & Jampot's Cosmopolitan Thrills

Quaint-colonial to the up and coming urbane, Jharkhand has many faces

Several old bungalows in the Anglo-Indian settlement of McCluskieganj are now hostels for school kids. Here children play on the grounds of St Jones Bungalow after school hours
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An hour before Jamshedpur, the landscape is still gentle, helping to distract us from the autorickshaw ride. The vehicle is thrown about so savagely on the pitted road, its insistence on forward movement seems comic. The idyll of paddy fields, low lying hills and buffaloes dreaming in ponds is dwarfed by huge pylons through which electricity races to feed the smokestack industries that shimmer in the distance.

We're in Jharkhand, heart of North India's industrial belt and also home to 32 tribal communities, as a very punctilious officer will later inform me at the Tribal Research Institute in Ranchi. Belying the city skyline ahead, we pass adivasi houses with their curvilinear backs to the road, mud walls lined with delicate motifs in turquoise and rust, windows facing inner courtyards. A few minutes later, the natural world and the invented merge in the timeless image of a dusty red goods train rolling atop a viaduct against a background of clean blue sky and rocky hill.

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