Ah Madurai.... According to the Rough Guide to India Madurai is one of the oldest cities in South Asia...one of the most important centers of worship and commerce for as long as there has been civilization in India...the “Athens of the East”. Sounds charming, no? “Dump of the East” is what the description should say.
Yes, there is a really awesome temple here. But, on the whole, Madurai is a stinky, dirty, hot mess. Mumbai was poor, full of slums and people living on the streets, but somehow Madurai just seems so much worse. Most of the roads aren't even paved. There are either dirt roads with puddles of festering water or roads full of rubble...like someone took a jack hammer to the road, tore it all up, and just never bothered to finish the job. There are throngs of people, dust, and the incessant beeping that envelopes us wherever we go. Our first hotel room (we switched hotels because it was super loud in the morning, a phone ringing right outside our door...what!?!...people yelling, and the bellboys were running beer scams) had a balcony that overlooked the tank which in ancient times was a communal bath but today is a dirty greenish-yellow pond, a nice little breeding ground for mosquitos.
The “touts” are also the worst we have encountered yet. As we exited the train station, we were swarmed by a crowd of rickshaw drivers. There literally was a crowd that ran right for us. Peter did a good job batting them away since we only had a few blocks to walk to our hotel. But, these guys follow us around constantly trying to get us to buy something, take a rickshaw, tour, etc. They are relentless and are always trying to “help” us by providing some convenience which inevitably is a front for their shop where they will try to sell you a carpet or shawl.
Last night all I wanted to do after a day of visiting was get the heck out of here! My head was spinning from all the beeping. This is not the kind of town where you can stroll around aimlessly taking in the pretty sights. Here you have to pay attention. There are traps in the streets, potholes or collapsing sidewalks not to mention feces, all sorts of vehicles coming at your, the sun beating you down, people trying to sell you things, beggars grabbing at you....it is just so much to take in. Crossing the street is pretty much the same as in most Indian cities...you have to make your way against heavy traffic and run for your life since there are no streetlights. This place is definitely outside our comfort zone.
We visited the main temple, the Meenakshi-Sundareshwarar Temple, which was really amazing. Its a huge complex containing a maze of shrines and scultpures enclosed within a tall wall marked by massive gopuras (towers) of multicolored mythological creatures at the four cardinal points. It is said to be to the South what the Taj Mahal is to the North. Non Hindus are not allowed inside the main shrines, but we were allowed into the complex itself and it was quite a hectic scene inside. Crowds of people lined up to enter the shrines, processions of pandas (priests) roamed the corridors with elephants, worshippers gave offerings at small shrines peppered throughout the complex. There was even a band playing which was quite good and sounded a bit like jazz. One strange ritual we noticed was at the shrine of Vishnu (elephant headed god) where people prayed to the god by holding their earlobes, squating a few times, and then knocking on their heads. The market outside the temple is also something to behold with its crammed stalls full of gold religious items....not sure what they are selling, but everyone is selling the same exact item in all different sizes. We will probably go back to this temple to see what happens in the evening, even though you have to remove your shoes to enter and it is really gross to walk around barefoot in there.
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Temple Worshippers. |
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Inside the Temple. |
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Peter enjoys the "Jazz Band" inside the Temple. |
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Museum inside the Temple. |
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Nice place for Pee Pee. |
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Magnificent view outside our hotel room. |
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Road to the Temple. |
The next two days we will seek out the internet which is very hard to come by in this town, walk the streets a bit, visit the palace and other temples, and maybe relax in our beautiful hotel room. Sarcasm. Its actually not too bad compared to the outside! But, everything here is a bit dirty. Filthy really according to US standards, but we are getting used to it. We suspect that we may be pretty stinky ourselves.