Meet the author – Bishwanath Ghosh , author of Chai Chai

Meet the author – Bishwanath Ghosh , author of Chai Chai

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The charm of the railways is unmistakable. But it was a nondescript railway junction that made journalist, Bishwanath Ghosh literally change tracks. The writer in Ghosh was inspired by life in these railway junctions as he went on to write about them in his maiden travel book – ” Chai Chai – Travels in Places where you stop but never get off.” CLAY spoke to the Chennai based author and here is his take on travel writing .
chai sketch 1
1.What got you to write a travel book ?
I decided to write the book about two years ago. I was travelling from Kanpur to Chennai, returning from my annual Diwali trip to home. The train had stopped at Itarsi station. Itarsi is a big junction. I was having tea at the platform and during the nearly 10 minutes that I spent at the platform, I heard names of stations from virtually every corner of India being mentioned. It suddenly struck me, “People all parts of the country pass through this place, so many cultures criss-cross this station, and yet I know nothing about Itarsi except that it is a railway junction. What lies outside the railway station? Who all live there? What do they do?” Subsequently, the publishers approached me to write a travel book. They wanted something different. So I chose seven junctions that people invariably pass through during train journeys but where they never get off. I made these junctions my destination and that’s how the book came about. I started with Mughal Sarai, came to Jhansi, then Itarsi. Moving down south, I covered Guntakal, Arakkonam, Jolarpettai and Shoranur.

2. It’s not often that people choose their first book to be about nondescript places which hardly features on any tourist maps…
Mine is a travel book and not a guidebook for tourists. It is a study of your own backyard, which you take for granted to the extent of ignoring it. But these are places, the small towns and the villages, where the real India lives. My book satisfies my own curiosity, and perhaps the curiosity of hundreds of others, about what lies outside the yard of these railway stations.

3. As a traveller, what catches your attention about a place?
Anonymity. Anonymity leads to curiosity, and curiosity makes you travel and discover.

4. The book is full of sights and sounds of a destination and anecdotes. Is there a specific sight or a sound that still remains with you.
The bustling markets in the evenings – people shopping for groceries, chaatwallahs doing brisk business, small-time bars full of people, men loitering around in paan shops or chaurahas. No one is ever in a hurry, they have all the time in the word. That’s the life we left behind 20 or 30 years ago.

5. What is your take on travel writing today?
Travel writing is yet to evolve, in the sense we still have a Paul Theroux giving us his take on India. But on the tourist-writing front, yes, Indians are discovering a lot of off-the-beaten-track places, which is heartening. Just about 10 years ago, no one was making such discoveries.

6. “Real India” today as it is portrayed seems to have become ironically a perspective of the foreigners only. Do you feel your book has broken that mould?
In a sense, yes. Because if you look up the internet, you will hardly find any information about a place like Mughal Sarai. But now you have a book that has an entire chapter devoted to Mughal Sarai. And the book has not been written by a foreigner, but an Indian.

7. What is your take on more opportunities to aspiring travel writers today?
The idea is not to be blind to your own backyard just because you live there. Questions need to be asked all the time: how did your backyard come into being, why is it the way it is today, what it means to other people, and so on. A traveller and a tourist are two different people. A tourist usually looks for a bed of grass to walk on, while for a traveller it can often be a bed of thorns.

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Singapore Calling

Singapore Calling

The very mention of Singapore brings memories of tall skyscrapers, clean roads, efficient administration and above all spectacular Mega malls with a glittering array of international brands for shopping plus of course tourist attractions. Today we see three different sites of Singapore – a reservoir park, a bird park and a museum.

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Interview with Ulrich Wolffram, Head – Operations

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Transcript of the Interview with Mr. Ramesh Ramanathan

Kiruba: Ramesh, welcome to the show.

Ramesh: Thank You.

Kiruba: 61000 members (figure at the time of the interview), and right now Club Mahindra is one of the most biggest and preferred holiday destination around. I’m sure it must have all started with a dream. So how and when did this dream of Club Mahindra start.

Ramesh: (smiling) Just a small correction – we are the biggest and we are the best, not one of the biggest and the best.The dream started actually in 1996. It was a dream indentified by the Mahindras. They saw an opportunity in this business, the business model was perfectly alright but it was being run differently by different people and didn’t earn itself a good name.

Infact one of the first thing I did after joining Mahindra was to do a survey about what the public thought of the Mahindras. And in the research that we did one of the imagery was that the Mahindras was compared with the Central Bank of the country and that is a big thing to start off with I suppose in any business and it had its positives in this business.We started out with those pluses but at the same time we needed to beat the path which is different. You had the oppurtunity – here you had a group with a lot of trust worthiness but you still had to make the business work and make an offering to the customer which is different.So this is where it all began and then we started out itself we said we will do something very very different.

We will not go the way everybody else, and when I said everybody else, it means few people within the country and and elsewhere in the world where this business had grown fairly large. We said we will do it differently and when I said differently not for the sake of being different but offering something which the Indian customer would want and appreciate. That is how we started off initially and I think we have managed, in this brief period of 10 years make a name for ourselves, build a brand and as you said have 61000 customers. Read the full story

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Interview with Ramesh Ramanathan, CEO of Club Mahindra

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Nisha Jha
Nisha Jha
One of the very few Indian solo women travellers. Passionate about travelling, Nothing excites her more than life's simple little pleasures about new places, people and cultures. She does and vouches for voluntourism as well. She has been travel blogging at "Le Monde - A Poetic Travail" giving insights & intricacies of a place and culture. See her photofeature, click here.