http://www.bagchiblog.blogspot.com
|
Vidhan Sabha building (from internet) |
Chandigarh
was not new to me. I had spent a couple of days there in 1961 along with my
entire batch. We had been taken there from the National Academy on an
instructional tour to see the developments that were taking place in the
country. Bhakra Nangal Project and Chandigarh were more or less symbols of the
emerging new India. The then Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru used to be proud
of them and would call Bhakra Dam a new temple of India.
Chandigarh
was the first city built from the scratch in a planned manner. The government
had engaged the famous Swiss architect Le Corbusier for planning the city and
designing its public buildings. Chandigarh at that time had been designated as
the capital of Punjab
|
Another view of the Assebly building (from internet) |
– Haryana was yet to be born.
I
am still fascinated by Chandigarh. Over the last 40 years or so it has
developed into a very livable city.
Corbusier planned a low-rise city with lots of green, divided into
sectors. Each sector was made self-sufficient with shopping, schools, health centres,
etc. They were, as they say, also “introvert” having only four accesses into
them from the main roads. The city’s biggies were accommodated in first few
sectors close to the scene of official action whereas the foot soldiers were
kept at a distance. It was said Corbusier wanted decision makers to be cool and
hence were kept close to the Shiwaliks.
|
A sector that had only laburnums |
DR. MS Randhawa, an ICS officer who was a
trained botanist was appointed chairman of the committee to plan greening of
the city. He designed landscapes and extensive gardens along the arterial
roads. The famous Dr. Zakir Hussain Rose Garden was his gift to the city. He
also had got trees of different flowering species planted in each sector. It
used to be said he had ensured that right through the year one or the other
sector would be in bloom. In Sector 11, the sector next to the one where I used
to live, he had had jacarandas planted and in March-April the place used to be
awash with purple. No wonder Chandigarh soon came to be known as the “City
Beautiful”. Unfortunately, the extensions that were seen coming up were not as
green and beautiful as the original Corbusier’s city, though some of the houses
I had occasion to visit were indeed architecturally beautiful.
I
had gone on deputation to Chandigarh to the Post Graduate Institute
|
On our back lawn |
of Medical
Education & Research, PGIMER for short, in 1975. It was a beautifully built
up complex with a super-speciality hospital – a rarity in those days. It had an
energetic and dedicated Director in Late Dr. PN Chuttani. A perennial bachelor,
his life was devoted to the Institute. Because of his contacts his name was
something to reckon with in the northern states. Apart from being a well-known
Gastroenterologist, he had the sharpest of minds I have ever come across. His
capacity to catch even the most complicated problems of establishment, a
subject not many technical people are fond of, was remarkable. He had spread
himself around northern India and had developed personal relation with chief
ministers of all the northern states. It was in his office that I met YS
Parmar, the then chief minister of Himachal Pradesh and Farukh Abdullah. The
other two chief ministers, Bansi Lal of Haryana and Zail Singh of Punjab I
somehow missed and I have been none the worse for it
|
Tube roses in the garden |
I
had gone there as in-charge of the Administrative Wing with the designation as
Deputy Director, Administration. Although the Institute was raised in the same
manner as Delhi’s All India Institute of Medical Sciences, it somehow could
never capture the latter’s all-India character. Having been located in Punjab
it remained largely as a regional institute catering to the needs of the
northern states of Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh and Kashmir, but with some
outstanding faculty and medicine-men.
Initially
I was allotted a room in the sprawling guest house that the Institute had
behind the Administrative Block in Sector 12. It had three bedrooms in two
floors and a sprawling lawn in front. A British visitor was in another room. We
used to meet on the dinner table. Once he heard what he thought was a weird
kind of noise and asked me about it. It was nothing other than a few jackals
howling. The Institute had a sizeable forest which it had left undisturbed and
|
An arrangement in the house |
there were jackals as also other wild animals.
I
was later allotted a semi-detached bungalow very close to the Guest House which
was more than adequate for me. Dr. Chuttani offered me a bigger outfit in
Sector 24 but I didn’t need it. The one that was allotted to me had a front and
back lawn with a huge sapota (cheeku) tree that would routinely bear fruits. It
has somehow become part of the Chandigarh culture to plant and nurture
flowering and fruiting trees in the open space around the houses.
|
A section of the Rock Garden |
I
think that is precisely why the Institute had a fantastic man as its horticulturist.
Shyam Lal as he was known would tend to the Institute gardens pick out the rose
plants as soon as budding commenced for exhibitions in December at Delhi. The
institute won several prizes every year all because of the dedication and the
pride he had in his work. He was a constant presence on the Institute gardens
whether they were in its public or private spaces.
Once
he brought a very submissive looking man to me. Shyam Lal introduced him as Nek
Chand and said he was developing a remarkable garden using only broken pieces
of ceramic which he
|
A solitary poplar swaying in a squall (taken from my back verandah) |
seemed to have run out of. I asked the Chief Dietician who
was all for palming off all the broken crockery from his kitchens. I went to
see the garden with Shyam Lal, It was nothing like what it is today. Only a few
sections had been created, yet it was nothing of the kind I had seen before.
The piece of land that he used was of the Central PWD and he was being asked to
vacate it. He was a road inspector of the PWD and as the land was not being put
to any use he, using his latent talent and unusual imagination, started working
on the figures and put them up in what is now an internationally acknowledged
rock garden. The then Minister of Health, Dr. Karan Singh, visiting Chandigarh
for the 1975 Komagatamaru Congress
session in December, also visited Nek Chand’ garden. He was so impressed that
he not only leaned on the Central PWD to allot the plot of land to Nek Chand
and also to have the disciplinary proceedings against him withdrawn. Nek Chand
was later invited to create similar gardens in France and Germany. Thankfully
he received the very well deserved recognition before he passed away in 2015.
Incidentally,
the guest house that I made a mention of became an improvised jail when Jai
Praksh Narain was confined there. Those of the current generation who may not
know about him, he was the inspiration
|
An ethnic section of the Rock Garden |
behind a movement that was later
associated with his name and resulted in Mrs. Indira Gandhi clamping down on
the country that infamous “Emergency” of 1975. Under her directions he had been
arrested and was brought to Chandigarh. Overnight the height of the compound
walls were raised and the ordinary-looking decent gate acquired sinister
proportions with only a small opening for people to go in and out. Perhaps the entire
exercise was not necessary as Jai Prakash Narain, or JP as he was commonly
known as, could not have attempted a jail-break, frail and old as he was. I had
met him once at the prompting of the Chief Dietician of the hospital, a very
dear friend, at the hospital attached to the Institute when dysfunction in
his kidneys had commenced. I found him an exceedingly handsome old man and a
very decent politician – many cuts above all the politicians of that era.
JP
was being taken care of by Dr. Rajinder Kalra who was in-charge of the staff
clinic and was and continues to be a very good friend. If I
|
One more view of the Rock Garden |
recall, he didn’t
hold a post-graduate degree but had terrific clinical acumen. One night I
requested him to check my mother’s BP. He came with his newly-acquired
equipment and was alarmed by the reading. As it was above 300 he checked it
several times only to get the same readings. As it was late in the night it was
not possible to get any medicines. He used my mother’s medicines in small doses
at regular intervals of an hour or so and sat through the night checking the BP
every hour. He left only after he had brought the pressure down to 200 or so. I
am eternally grateful to him for what he did for my mother that night.
The
“City Beautiful” cannot be considered isolated from its beautiful water body.
The Sukhna Lake on its outskirts was also the idea of the planner and designer
of the town Le Corbusier. The 3 Kms2 Lake is at the foot of the
Shiwalik Hills and was created by damming the Sukhna
|
Early morning gold spilling on to Sukhna Lake |
stream (Choe in local
lingo). The top of the dam was converted into a beautiful promenade for the
health-conscious, something like what one has along the Dal Lake in Srinagar,
Kashmir, only the tall mountains are missing from its backdrop. Motorboats are
not allowed on the waters and so are food stalls anywhere near it – something
the Bhopal authorities would do well to emulate to keep the Upper Lake waters
unpolluted. In those days there wouldn’t be much of a crowd on the Promenade
but now, one understands, boating and the birds of various kinds, including the
migratory ones, attract a large number of visitors.
|
Symbolic of City Beautiful - a fantastic piece of sculpture |
Incidentally,
I met my current “Facebook” friend Vijay Kant Bakshi at the Institute who was
working at that time, if I remember, in Pathology Department. Looking for greener
pastures, he had applied and got a job in Dubai. That’s when he came and saw me
and requested for being accommodated back in the event of his coming back. He
had submitted his resignation. I could only assure him of my best efforts. Soon
I got a cablegram from him intimating that he was on his way back. He came back
and told me that he fainted at the very entry point - the airport in Dubai. The
section he was in was not air-conditioned and had a tin roof resulting in the
place boiling at the temperature of 510 C. That was Dubai then – far
cry from what it is today, having probably the plushiest of airports in the
world. He gave up the whole thing as a bad job and came back. Thankfully, the
Institute Chief agreed to his re-instatement purely because he had impeccable
credentials. After all, he was the topper of School of Art of Chandigarh.
Today, he is happily settled and producing, as is his wont, beautiful
water-colour landscapes and uploading them on Facebook.
Around
three years in a post that hardly posed any challenge was, I thought, too much.
In 1978 I opted for coming back to my parent department. But in those three
years I made some lifelong friends, association with whom was indeed enriching.
Some have passed on
but some are still around and contributing to the society
in any which way they possibly can.
No comments:
Post a Comment