OPINION 4A THE DAILY ASTORIAN • FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 2015 What is the name of this movie we’re in? T he Mumbai Airport has the longest baggage carrel I’ve seen. Cowboys rope calves in a shorter distance at rodeos. Positioned in the midst of Europe, the Middle East, Russia and the Paci¿c Rim, the airport is bustling in the middle of the night. 2n our ¿rst descent into Mumbai, Steve we could not see the Forrester slums that border its runway. The sharp juxtaposition of prosperity, world commerce and poverty is a common sight in India. Armed soldiers with M16s were positioned through the vast terminal. Our small taxi stopped at the gate of our airport hotel while sentries put mirrors underneath the vehicle to check for bombs. Certain Indian hotels are special targets, said our son-in-law, because of their American guests. I f you have seen movies such as Monsoon Wedding or Slumdog Millionaire you are familiar with the Bollywood genre. After a few days in India, you realize why it is such fertile cinematic material. The nation’s vast panoply of people is photogenic and magnetic. +aving Àown across 1 time zones, we dressed for a party for our daughter and son-in-law to which our hosts, Noordin and Zarine Rana, had invited 150 friends, business associates and school friends of their son. I was pretty plain in a gray sports coat next to my wife, who was wearing a sari loaned by Zarine Rana. At a beauty salon a Brenda Penner for The Daily Astorian The Palace of the Winds contained spaces where women of the maharajah’s retinue could view festivals through latticework, without being seen. dresser had draped her in the sari, which involved strategic placement of safety pins. Waiting for our transport to the party, I realized my body clock was Àoating somewhere over the Atlantic. Looking at my wife in a sari, I asked my cousin’s husband, “I’m wondering: What is the name of this movie we’re in?” cricket bat. It was much heavier than a baseball bat. When the salesman offered to show me other models, I was flattered. O ur travels in India formed a scalene triangle, with Jaipur and Agra in the north, Goa at the south point and Nagpur in the east. After two days in Nagpur, the Ranas ndia presents life on a took us in three vehicles to grand scale. One sees a One sees the Pench nature preserve, Hindu temple adjacent to a national park. My son and a mosque and a Buddhist a Hindu son-in-law brieÀy observed temple. Unlike America temple two juvenile tigers chasing where farm animals are a wild boar. We saw a adjacent to far away from urban prehistoric looking creature sensibilities, cows, goats, a mosque called a nilgai, the largest oxen and even camels and a Asian antelope, known are in the midst of urban colloquially as a blue bull. Buddhist neighborhoods and traffic. By a waterhole we watched Walking down alleys temple. a colony of monkeys noisily behind our Nagpur hotel, drop from a grove of trees as my son and I watched a pick-up cricket they coexisted with spotted deer with game in a park with players using huge antlers. a tennis ball. The young men were That night prior to dinner, our two amused at the Americans watching families enjoyed a humorous discussion them through the fence. of the difference between driving In other places we would see men in India and America. Traf¿c lanes playing cricket on deep green lawns, are frequently occupied by bicycles, wearing whites. I counted four cricket motor scooters carrying two to four channels on Indian television. In a Goa passengers, auto rickshaws, trucks, sporting good store, I asked to hold a cattle and people. Navigating this traf¿c I involves lots of honking. Everyone miraculously passes without injury. As Zarine Rana drove the wrong way up a one-way street she told my wife that India is all about breaking rules. L eaving the Ranas, we flew to Delhi and motored to Agra to see You-Know-What. Speechless is what I was following my ¿rst glimpse of the Taj Mahal. It is a much larger compound than I had realized. Our guide warned us about all of the freelance hustlers we would encounter between the parking lot and the park’s entrance. If the Taj Mahal is a gem of architecture, the city of Agra which surrounds it presents a very rough and ugly outer skin. O ur most exotic adventure was seeing Jaipur, the heart of the Rajasthan era. We saw the walled city with the multiturreted Amber Fort, which housed the maharajah, his family including 1 wives and 100 concubines, his retinue and his army. The visitor rides atop an elephant up a steep path and through the gates into the palace’s parade ground. It is an architectural marvel of tiles, mosaics and arcades of arches. Within the walls of the Pink City we saw the Jantar Mantar observatory that was built in 1 and resembles a collection of bizarre sculptures that serve as sun dials giving the time of day, or day of the year. The most fantastical sight is the Palace of the Winds — a seven- story structure that only holds spaces where women of the maharajah’s domain could watch festivals through latticework, remaining unobserved. They reached this palace through a tunnel from the main palace. A n American may travel in India relatively inexpensively. A boon to our travel was an Indian travel agent — a boyhood chum of our son-in-law – who worked through various logistical arrangements. In Astoria, Roxanne Fick of Sundial Travel helped my wife arrange transcontinental air travel. Security at Indian airports was heavy and redundant. We would typically show our passports three or four times before boarding. On one in-country Àight, there were two other Americans. They were from Portland. The man said to me he had been to India in the 1990s. “It got into my blood,” he said. I understand what he meant. Brenda Penner for The Daily Astorian Elephants carry visitors up a steep path to the Amber Fort, where the maharajah lived with his family, retainers, wives and concubines. T HE D AILY A STORIAN Founded in 1873 — S.A.F. STEPHEN A. FORRESTER, Editor & Publisher • LAURA SELLERS, Managing Editor BETTY SMITH, Advertising Manager • CARL EARL, Systems Manager JOHN D. BRUIJN, Production Manager • DEBRA BLOOM, Business Manager SAMANTHA MCLAREN, Circulation Manager