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Besides
being called Big Apple New York has many other sobriquets. But, that is beside
the point. During our stay of more than two months in the US we somehow
happened to only transit through it. Having come to America and not visiting
New York would seem to be denying oneself something quintessentially American.
It is a great melting pot of various nationalities and sub-nationalities which
live and work together to create a community as diverse as it could be, yet
each exuding its unique cultural flavour.
On
our way back home we spent some time in New York and took in the sights that it
offers. Our booking was quite accidentally in Queens –
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The two World Trade Centre towers were standing then |
a borough where Asians
are reported to demographically dominate. Queens is one of the five boroughs of
New York, the others are Bronx, Brooklyn, Manhattan and Staten Island. Named
after the Portuguese princess Catherine of Braganza and English Queen Elizabeth
I the Borough of Queens is the largest in area of the five
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From The Battery |
boroughs and is also
supposed to be hosting most diverse communities. Around 50% of its people are
foreign born with the dominance of Asians. Our hotel was once again a branch of
Best Western where the receptionist was a Pakistani. Even the taxi drivers were
Pakistanis. Incidentally, the Arthur Ashe Stadium where US Open Tennis
tournaments are played in Flushing is within the borough of Queens.
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From The Battery again |
On
arrival back from Niagara we headed south for what is known as The Battery. It
is also known as Battery Park. What, however is more interesting is that the
place was known earlier as New Amsterdam because it was comprehensively overrun
by Dutch immigrants. As the name suggests this was the area
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Outside Guggenheim Museum |
where artillery
installations were erected to protect the settlement behind it from attacks
from the sea. It is at the southern-most tip of Manhattan. As we were
approaching it in New York Underground we got a bit frightened as the crowd
progressively thinned out and we were all by ourselves in the compartment for
quite some distance. The skyline on view from here was very interesting,
numerous skyscrapers trying to scrape the heavens, as it were. These included
the two towers of the World Trade Centre that were brought down in the 9/11
attacks. They are there in the picture taken from here.
We
took a ferry to visit the Statue of Liberty in Bedloe’s Island (now called
Liberty Island) – one of many islands around New York. It was
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On the Museum Mile-outside the Metropolitan Museum of Art |
evening and a
cloudy day, the light was not perfect yet the statue was very impressive.
Symbolising freedom and liberty for the oppressed it was fabricated In the
freshly liberated France of 19th Century and transported piece by
piece in crates to New York to be assembled there. The pedestal was made in
America. The sculptor
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Busy Times Square |
Bartholdi, living
in the oppressive French regime of Napoleon III was obsessed with freedom and
hence is reported to have worked for years on the statue. Ferdinand de Lesseps
of Suez Canal fame was also present at the dedication ceremony.
The
green statue of a robed woman taking a step forward, as it were,
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At Times Square |
holding a
glistening torch in a raised hand was a sight to behold. We didn’t have the
time to scramble on to the platform but whatever we saw was unforgettable. It
is a marvellous sculpture and the way the pieces add to the whole body is
highly ingenious. Since it was cloudy we didn’t quite get its grandeur.
Nonetheless, it must have been an inspiration for millions of immigrants who
passed by to start their lives anew and to build their new homes in the New
World. No wonder it symbolizes America – the land of liberty and freedom.
Curiously, its installation did not beget liberty for millions of African
Americans who continued to live and work as slaves.
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At Rockefeller Centre |
For
want of time we had no intention of diving into a museum and get lost for hours
yet we chose to walk down the tree-lined Museum Mile. This is a section of the
famed Fifth Avenue where the rich and famous play around. The Avenue is full of
expensive shops, high-end restaurants and hotels and starts from somewhere near
Greenwich Village and partially runs northwards alongside another famous site –
the Central Park of New York, ending
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Rockefeller Centre again |
near Harlem. The famous hotel Waldorf
Astoria and one of the country’s tallest buildings, the Empire State Building, are
located here as also the Rockefeller Centre. It is a major thoroughfare of New
York falling in the borough of Manhattan. It is popular location for Hollywood
movie-makers. I do not know how many movies I have seen in my younger days that
were shot in this area.
We
started off from that architectural marvel of Frank Lloyd Wright, the
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At the Battery |
Solomon R
Guggenheim Museum. I had first seen it in a spread in the Square magazine even when
I was in college, presumably when it was opened around late 1950s. It has
always been peddled as one of the outstanding museum buildings anywhere in the
world. Wright, it seems, had conceived the structure as early as 1943 but it
took more than 15 years to realise his
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From the observation deck of Empire State Building |
dream. Its spiral ramp climbing up to
its domed skylight has captured the imagination of its visitors. The spiral can
also be imagined as you stand before it and see a solid band of what looks like
concrete move up in a spiral. The Museum houses some of the most famous works
of art by iconic legends of the artistic world.
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Empire State Building outlined in neon on the groundfloor |
There
are a large number of museums in the vicinity. As we walked down we came across
the New York Metropolitan Museum – a huge, more than a hundred years old
building that houses every conceivable item from the world over. It is one of
the most visited museums. It is the largest art museum in the United States. It
contains works of art from ancient times to middle ages – of almost all the
European masters.
But
we couldn’t have gone into the Museum as we had to look at other
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Quintessential New York |
sites. Walking
southwards we turned right into an opening the huge green stretch of the
Central Park that looked far bigger than Hyde Park of London. While the latter
was somewhat crowded when we saw it with children playing and people lolling
around on the grass the former was more serene and quiet and perhaps much more
green. As we entered the Park we saw a push-cart selling snacks. The man behind
the pushcart looked Indian but when we talked to him
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At the UN Hqrs. |
he turned out to be a
Bangladeshi. Apparently a recent arrival, he was still waiting for a steady
job.
Exiting
from the Central Park we entered the V Avenue again and stood at a bus stop to
catch a ride to the Times Square. If one has to sample signage one has to go to
Times Square located in Mid-Town Manhattan. It is a glittering place with massive
illuminated billboards that frequently are animated. Awash with neon, the place
blazes its way right into your consciousness. Thankfully the place is pedestrianised
and one can take in the sights without the fear of being run over. Huge
wall-sized monitors alive with colourful ads make it one of the most touristy
sites of New York. Not one wall is seemingly devoid of a signage – still or
animated. Hundreds of thousands of
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At the UN Hqrs. |
people visit it everyday. It is supposed to
be Mecca for media companies. After all, it takes its name from New York Times
when it started publishing from here more than hundred years ago. Being close
to Broadway gives it an added advantage as Broadway is another place that has a
large number of visitors and also is a tourists’ haunt.
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In the UN complex |
We
also took a packaged tour and it took us to the Empire State Building – an
art-deco structure of 102 stories. Its height is more than 1400 ft. Built on
the original site of Waldorf Astoria Hotel, it was thrown open in 1931. Named
after the nickname of New York, Empire State, it was at one-time the tallest
building of the world and now is only one of the tallest buildings in the
United States. Its height went increasing during its construction as the
competition with Chrysler Building hotted up. Eventually the Empire State
Building came home with a few hundred feet to spare in height.
We
were lifted up to the observation deck in high speed elevators. There are reportedly
70-odd elevators in the building, only some of which are high-speed, rushing up
and down in the shafts at around 1000 ft. per minute. Once on the observation
deck we found things familiar.
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Times Square |
We had had recently the experience of going up
to the observation deck of Sears Tower in Chicago. This one in the Empire State was no different
– except that the skyscrapers in the surroundings appeared a little too
smaller, almost like midgets. One could not see very much in the distance
because of a haze but as one looked down below it was kind of surreal. All
structures of Manhattan that would appear tall from ground level looked like
midgets.
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At Broadway |
I
had a good look at the Brooklyn Bridge while being driven up and down. It may
not be as famous as the Golden Gate Bridge of San Francisco but it has a lot of
character, having been built in the 19th Century. Connecting
Manhattan with Brooklyn it spans the East River. One of the oldest cable-stayed
bridges, it was completed in 1883. The Tower Bridge of London was opened later
in 1893 but it is much better looking and is a whole lot more iconic than the
Brooklyn Bridge. It therefore does not stand for New York as the Golden Gate
Bridge does for San Francisco.
It
was time to leave for us. Regrettably, we had just a small slice of the Big
Apple. We were leaving a great metropolis with a tinge of sorrow as we probably
missed on many essentials of New York. But that is how it is
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One more shot of Statue of Liberty |
when one is out on
a shoe-string tour – you see some and miss out on much more.Worse, it was most distressing to remember the predictions that this along with other cities may go under water as a victim of global warming. Ruminating over over all that I failed to sleep in a flight that was all through the night. But for
me, looking out of the window towards the North daylight seemed to be accompanying me right through. Maybe, I thought, we were flying close to Greenland
in one of those flight paths known as Great Circle.
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