http://bagchiblog.blogspot.com
|
The green of Suzhou |
We took a train
from Nanking for Suzhou (earlier Souchhow) which was only around 200 kilometres
away. It was not like the current Chinese trains, high-speed and streamlined.
It was more or less like ours, a chair car. The car was built in East Germany
(in those days Germany was divided between East and West, East Germany being a
satellite of the now-dead Soviet Union and West Germany was a flourishing
democracy).
While the cars
were not much different but what appeared to be different was the attitude of the
workers. I happened to observe
|
A picnic spot |
from the time the train rolled in until we got
off it in Suzhou the lone woman who was, in our terminology, the coach
attendant. As soon as the train came to a halt she unfolded the steps for
passengers to get off the train on to the platform which was at a lower level.
Then she wiped with a cloth the handle bars of all the accumulated dust and
stood by the side of the entrance. When we had all got in with only our hand
baggage (they did not allow heavy baggage in the coach) she folded back the
steps, closed the door and locked it. Then she helped stowing away our bags on overhead
racks, swept the floor of the bogey and eventually served us hot coffee that
she made for us. Her job included the ones across several lower level
|
A beautiful pavillion |
hierarchies
of Indian Railways and she seemed to be pretty happy about whatever she was
supposed to do.
Suzhou is
another ancient city of China with around 2500 years of history but, no, it
never seemed to have had the privilege of being the capital in recent times.
However, it was founded as the capital of Wu Kingdom in the 6th
Century BCE. Its antiqueness is seen in the waterways and roads that run
together forming, as they say, a “double chess board”. Being located in the
|
Pathway alongside a canal |
delta region of the Yangtze it is a watery place with lots of ponds, canals,
streams and lakes. No wonder it is considered the “Venice of China”. Being wet
with lots of water around it is one of the greenest cities I have ever seen.
|
A beautifully crafted boat |
And, there are
gardens and gardens – there are scores of them, beautifully laid out with paths
and typically Chinese pavilions. According to an old saying, the gardens
located south of Yangtze are the best. Some date back to the 6th
Century BCE and attempt to, as UNESCO said, recreate natural landscape in
miniature and depict the “profound metaphysical importance of natural beauty in
Chinese culture”. Several of them have since been declared by the UNESCO as
World Heritage Sites. I recall having seen a huge garden of numerous bonsais
beautifully tended and displayed. There cannot be two opinions about Chinese
aesthetics; it seems to be embedded in their genes.
|
Yunyan Temple Pagoda |
A landmark of
the city, the Yunyan Temple Pagoda is more than a thousand years old. It is
reckoned as the most exquisite pagoda built by the Song Dynasty rulers. At a
height of around 50 metres the Pagoda is of 7 storeys octagonal in construct
with balconies on each floor with eaves above them. Along the inner walls there
is a winding corridor but one has to use a movable ladder to go up the storeys.
From inside, the Pagoda is like a tube and the absence of stairs was ascribed
to the much older method of construction of pagodas
Suzhou is also
known for amazingly intricate and beautiful embroidery. The embroidered items
that we came across in our hotel and elsewhere were mind-blowing. The effort
and patience
|
Intricate embroidery in progress |
that had gone into them was indeed unimaginable. And then, every
item was a thing of beauty and are noe exported.
Suzhou is now an
industrial city with industrial parks and export processing zones. I understand
it is now a glittering city at night with bustling night life. China has moved
on far ahead from its not too distant past and almost every region seems to
have prospered. Its swanky new super-super fast trains clocking 300 kilometres
an hour make several trips to its modernised railway station from Shanghai
_______________
All photos were taken by self
No comments:
Post a Comment