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INDIA - a land of dreams and romance. A land
blessed by the Sun, Shimmering Waters, Landscapes Painted golden with
its rays, Silhouetted mountained, And a warm glowing welcome. A land of
enormous Contrasts from North to South, East to West. India unfolds for
you, a Series of diversities. The People, The Culture, The Languages,
The Costumes, The Religions, Their art, architecture, forms of dances
and music all amazingly different from another. The land of remarkable
assemblage of the traditional hospitality. An irresistible magnet for
visitors through the ages.
Every year millions of people visit India from all over the world and
discover more than a culture as old as time. So make your travel plans
now and have a memorable experience of a lifetime with Recreation.
NORTH INDIA
North India has an amazingly varied topography. In the far north, the
Himalayan mountains, snow covered sentinels, separate India from the
rest of Asia. Nestling in their lower ranges are the Picturesque hills
and valleys of Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Uttranchal,
Punjab/Haryana.
Rajasthan is the desert state of India. It is also a land which
successfully combines burning sands with shimmering lake palaces.
SOUTH INDIA
The states of South India have much in common. Located in Peninsular
India, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Kerala. All four
southern states have extensive coast lines and remain mainly tropical
areas, except for the day scrub of the Deccan Plateau.
Start from Hyderabad, the city of Nizams, in Andhra Pradesh or Chennai
in Tamil Nadu. Visit the vibrant city of Bangalore in Karnataka, an
exciting mixture of the traditional, colonial and modern. Move on to the
gracious ambience of Mysore with its air of still living in a royal
past. Bandipur National Park, Belur, Halebid, Hampi & Badami are other
worth-seeing places. Visit historic port town of Kochi and explore
Kerala's warm beaches and magical Backwaters/House Boat for a perfect
holiday experience of South India.
EAST INDIA
The entire eastern region is one of the great natural beauty and
variety. The snow clad mountains of Sikkim give way to lush, green hills
where bamboos and orchids flower in great profusion. Towards the south
the forests and lakes of Orissa teem with an abundance of wildlife. The
state is full of temples. Still further, scattered in the Bay of Bengal,
lie the tropical Andaman and Nicobar Islands. With rain forest,
beautiful beaches of clean lagoons edged by The North East is composed
of seven states whose natural beauty has earned them the sobriquet
'seven sisters'.
Assam, Nagaland, Arunachal Pradesh, Maipur, Tripura, Mizoram and
Meghalaya have been generously blessed by nature.
Bihar is another state in North East where one can visit Patna, Gaya,
Bodhgaya, Nalanda and Rajgir - Buddhist places.
WEST INDIA
Mumbai - India's Western gateway and capital Maharashtra, with a major
international airport and harbour. Aurangabad, 400 kms. from Mumbai is
famous for spectacular rock cut caves - Ajanta & Ellora of 2nd/3rd
century B.C.
Goa - the most comprehensive beach resort in the country.
Bhopal, the capital of the state of Madhya Pradesh is famous for
Udaygiri, Sanchi for Buddhist art and architecture. One can also visit
Mandu, Gwalior with excursion to Orchha, Shivpuri and Khajuraho.
SHOPPING IN INDIA :-
India's vast cultural diversity has resulted in a treasure trove of
handicrafts for the discerning shopper, in a truly remarkable variety of
styles and prices. Below are some of the best buys, either for the
souvenir hunter or the connoisseur.
SILKS :- ( Varanasi, Mysore, Kanchipuram,
Assam, Kashmir)
Every part of India offers its own variety of rich silk and its own
individual colours and weaves. Indian silks are in great demand with
foreign designers who use them extensively in fashion garments. Today
silk is not just restricted to saris. It is also sold by the yard. A
wide range of ladies' and men's wear like dupattas, garments, fabrics,
caps, handkerchiefs, scarves, dhotis, turbans, shawls, ghagras or
lehengas, and even quilts, bedcovers, cushions, table-clothes, curtains
are made of silk.
COTTON :- (West Bengal, Madhya Pradesh)
Jamdanis are amongst the most exclusive of muslins. These muslins have
lyrical names like Shabnam (evening dew), Malmal Khas(muslin reserved
for kings) and Abrawan(flowing water). The base fabric for Jamdanis is
unbleached cotton yarn and the design is woven using bleached cotton
yarns so that a shadow effect is created.
CARPETS :- (Kashmir, Mirzapur,
Bardoi, Warangal, Eluru)
India has one of the World's largest Carpet Industries. Carpets of silk
and cotton have been popular exports dating back centuries. Even today,
plush silk carpets, perfected under Mughal design sensibilities, are
great take-aways. Fine knotted cotton durries as well as sturdy rugs and
Islamic prayer rugs or kilims are good value for money. Also
light-weight durries(floor coverings) are available in numerous styles.
POTTERY :- (Rajasthan, Bihar,
Vrindavan, Hamirpur, Agra)
The popularity of ceramics can be seen from the numerous categories and
types one finds all over India. Functional, unsophisticated, simple but
attractive pottery shapes lay an emphasis on the dignity of form. The
most common clay object is the all-purpose kullar(cup-like container)
used for serving water or tea, sometimes decorated with geometrical and
floral designs.
LEATHER GOODS :- (Maharashtra,
Jaipur, Bikaner, Chennai, Kolkata, Pondicherry)
Leather products are a popular buy amongst foreign visitors to India.
The most popular leather products are footwear and handbags. In major
cities, there are shops specialising in leather wear from jackets and
gloves to luggage and office accessories.
FURNITURE :- (Mumbai, Jodhpur,
Udaipur)
Indian furniture is regarded as prized because of its ethnic flavour.
Traditional Indian woodcarvers continue to follow the style of their
ancestors keeping traditional crafts alive. Carved and decorated chests,
chairs, cradles, low tables and stools are hard to resist. Each object
is pleasing, whether inlaid with brass sheet work, painted with dancing
figures, or embellished with hunting scenes.
JEWELLERY :- (Rajasthan, Varanasi,
Hyderabad, Ferozabad)
Different regions of India have jewellery traditions and styles unique
to them. Popular styles that have passed on for centuries include fine
filigree work in silver, the art of enamelling or Meenakarai, temple
jewellery and kundan or the setting of semi-precious or precious stones
in gold.
MARBLE :- (Agra)
There is a wide variety of marble items, inlaid with precious and
semi-precious stones, such as table tops, coasters, plates, boxes, and
elephants.
CUISINE :-
The unforgettable aroma of India is not just the heavy scent of jasmine
and roses, it is also the fragrance of spices so important to Indian
cooking especially to preparing curry. Broadly speaking, meat dishes are
more common in the North. Mughlai cuisine is rich creamly, deliciously
spiced and liberally sprinkled with nuts and saffron.
The essence of good Indian cooking revolves around the appropriate use
of mixed aromatic spices. Base ingredients of such mixed spices are
elements such as coriander, cumin, turmeric, red pepper, nutmeg,
mustered, saffron, cinnamon, card0amon, ginger powder etc. the skill
lies in the subtle blending of these spices to enhance rather than
overwhelm the basic flavour of a particular dish. These spices act as
appetizers and digestives.
The Indian cuisine boasts of an immense variety not restricted to only
curry. An authentic Indian curry is an intricate combination of a
stir-fried Masala - a mixture of onion, garlic, ginger, and tomatoes;
various spices and seasonings with which meat; poultry, vegetables or
fish is prepared to produce a stew-type dish. Note: the word Masala also
means spice.
Food in India is wide ranging in variety, taste and flavour. Being so
diverse geographically, each region has its own cuisine and style of
preparation. Indian cuisine, renowned for its exotic gravies seems
complicated for any newcomer. The Mughlai cuisine of North differs
sharply from the preparations of the south. The Wazwan style of Kashmir
is luxurious but the same can be said about Bengal's Macher Jhol,
Rajasthan's Dal Bati, Uttar Pradesh's Kebabs and Punjab's Sarson Ka Saag
and Makki di Roti. In India, recipes are handed down from generation to
generation.
The unique and strong flavours in Indian cuisine are derived from
spices, seasonings and nutritious ingredients such as leafy vegetables,
grains, fruits, and legumes. Most of the spices used in Indian cooking
were originally chosen thousands of years ago for their medicinal
qualities and not for flavour. Many of them such as turmeric, cloves and
cardamoms are very antiseptic, others like ginger, are carminative and
good for the digestion. All curries are made using a wide variety of
spices.
In Indian cuisine, food is categorized into six tastes - sweet, sour,
salty, spicy, bitter and astringent. A well-balanced Indian meal
contains all six tastes, not always can this be accomplished. This
principle explains the use of numerous spice combinations and depth of
flavour in Indian recipes. Side dishes and condiments like chutneys,
curries, daals and Indian pickles contribute to and add to the overall
flavour and texture of a meal and provide balance needed.
Although a number of religions exist in India, the two that have
influenced Indian cooking and food habits the most are the Hindu &
Muslim Traditions. Each new wave of settlers brought with them their own
culinary practices. How ever, over time they adopted a lot of
specialties and cooking methods from the Indian Cuisine and blended the
two perfections. The Portuguese, the Parsians and the British made
important contributions to the Indian culinary scene. It was the British
made important contributions to the Indian
No meal is complete without a Paan (betel leaf). The green leaf is
rolled with an assortment of digestive spices like aniseed, cloves,
arecanut, and cardamom. To make it more palatable sometimes it is
stuffed with sweetened rose petals locally known as Gulkand. Paan is
considred to be an ideal round off for any Indian meal.
The food in all over South India is dominated by rice and curries.
Tamarind, coconut and spices are important ingredients. As the sea and
rivers are an integral part, sea food is the most common preparation.
Specialities to look out for are Dosa, Sambar, fish curry etc. On the
west coast there is a wide choice of fish and shellfish; Mumbai duck and
pomfret are just two. Fish is also a feature of Bengali cooking in East.
The variety of Indian cooking is immense, it is colourful and aromatic
Indian cuisine is the most popular cuisine in the world.
ART
Fine Arts
Contemporary Indian Art
Early Paintings
As an Art form, painting has been a part of India since very early
times. The earliest example of painted pots was found in 3rd century BC
as part of the Indus valley civilization. The cave paintings of Ajanta
and Ellora are among the earliest paintings using coloured dyes, and the
paintings in our ancient temples of Thanjavur and Vidarbha show a
tremendous improvement in technique and processes.
Forms of Indian Art
Contemporary Indian Art is available in the standard forms, of oil on
canvas, acrylic, paper or wood, water colour
paintings on paper and a large range of lithographs, oleographs, and
screen prints, as well as mixed media works that could include
indigenous materials like natural dyes, clay, metal chips and a variety
of items. The traditional craft forms such as Miniatures, Tanjores and
Madhubanis are also being adapted to modern techniques and to the
requirements of the discerning buyers.
Contemporary Indian painting can trace its roots to the beginning of the
20th century and to art schools in Calcutta and other centres of India.
The fight for independence also saw the emergence of a very highly
individualized style of Indian painting. Raja Ravi Verma is considered
to be the father of modern Indian painting. His visual representation of
Indian women, their clothes and jewellery have become masterpieces and
are valued collectors items. Abindranath Tagore played a major role in
bringing the Bengal School of painting to the forefront. Among the other
renowned painters of this series were Jamini Roy, A.K.Haldar, Sarada
Charan and Nandlal Bose. Rabindranath Tagore developed his own style of
painting and was among the first modern Indian painter to hold an
exhibition in Paris.
Folk Art
Folk art everywhere in the world is real and catches the steady thud of
the earth's heartbeat. At its purest it is true, uninfluenced, and
expressing the rawest concerns of its people and forging the closest
links to a people's environment and its underlying economy. There is no
dressing up, no false note.
An unabashed paean to color
The most vibrant and festal wall paintings are found in Rajasthan. The
interior and exterior walls of palaces as well as ordinary dwellings are
an unabashed paean to color. They are made over completely with huge
frescoes of elephants, horses, and camels, scenes of royal processions
and exciting hunts as well as depictions of mythological characters and
stories. Painted wet on lime plaster in mineral colors the paintings
slowly became embedded in the wall giving the effect of inlay work of
colorful stone on white marble, another specialty of the region.
The temple and monastery paintings in Tamil Nadu and Andhra as well as
the murals at the Padmanabhapuram Palace in Kerala reflect their
regional skills. The Rathva tribals of Gujarat and the Bhilala tribals
of Madhya Pradesh in central India paint on the mud walls of their
houses the myth of creation. Sometimes airplanes and clocks also make
their appearance in this essentially tribal worldview.
DANCE & MUSIC
DANCE - If dance is
the spirit made visible, then
the first swaying of the spirit blossomed in an infinite variety of
dances in ancient India. The expression of joy was sanctified by the
submission of this happiness at the altar of the Creator. After all
Indians do believe that it is creation itself that is the dance of the
creator. All Indian dances - folk, gypsy, classical or simply ritual -
have a mad riot of color and an internal geometry of forces that is
entirely beguiling. All of them have elaborate costumes and jewelry that
are unique and visually alluring.
Dance evolved in India both as sheer exuberance and orgiastic
self-expression and later as a structured offering to the Gods of the
best in the human spirit. Folk dances, like the Bhangra or the
Maharashtrian Lavani, embody wild happiness, whereas classical dances,
like Bharatnatyam and Odissi, have a stylized form that needs a certain
amount of familiarity to pick out its nuanced eloquence. The gypsy and
tribal dances of India are repetitious movements that lull you by their
sheer beat.
MUSIC - Indian music
has developed within a complex interaction between people of different
races and cultures. Today, Indian classical music can be classified into
two broad traditions, North Indian and South Indian. The North Indian
tradition is known as Hindustani Sangeet. The different forms of
Hindustani Music are Dhrupad, Dhamar, Khayal, Tappa and Thumri. The
South Indian tradition of music is called Carnatic Sangeet. Both
traditions are fundamentally similar but differ in nomenclature and the
way they are performed.
WEDDINGS IN INDIA
The religious, regional, and cultural diversity of India is reflected in
its wedding ceremonies. No matter where you go, an Indian wedding is an
unforgettable experience.
Indian Weddings
Indian weddings characterize the exuberant enthusiastic approach to life
that most Indians have. The ceremonies begin shagun, an engagement
ceremony where rings are exchanged and gifts are given by the bride's
parents to members of the groom's family.
There are many similarities in the initial stages of an Indian wedding.
It is only during the actual wedding ceremony that their respective
traditions and beliefs are highlighted.
On the day of the wedding an important ritual connected with the bride
is the bangles ceremony, where the maternal uncle and aunt of the bride
put white and red bangles on the bride's wrists. Light ornaments of
beaten silver and gold, called kalira, are tied to the bangles.
The bridegroom's entourage, the barat, has its own customs to observe -
more singing and dancing, decking up the bridegroom, tying the sehra (a
sort of ornamental veil) over his face, leading him in procession, often
on ghodi (horseback), to the marriage venue to the accompaniment of a
brass band. The actual ceremony is conducted in front of the ceremonial
fire with both parents seated on either side of the bride and groom.
They are deemed to be married only after they have gone around the
sacred fire seven times - called the lawan phere.
The concluding ceremony is the doli where an emotional farewell is given
to the bride as she is taken to her new home in an elaborately decorated
car.
Wedding Arrangements:
In order to make the wedding even more memorable, here are some of the
options that we offer: The most important factors is the venue, . It has
to be unique, spacious enough to cater to the number of guests expected
and managed by wedding party. Other arrangements such as Accommodation,
Welcome Ceremony, Decoration , Dinner & Transportation etc.
Travel in India Welcome Ceremony
An auspicious and ceremonial welcome in Indian Traditional style at the
Hotel with Shehnai & Nagada wadan (music) at the entrance, with
caparisoned camels / elephants at the gate with men & women showering
flower petals. The 'Barat' (bridegroom's entourage) are greeted by with
a ritual called ' aarti' followed by ' tikka'.
Accomodation:
A suit in Haveli for one night for newly Weds on complimentary basis. A
special discount on Room rent to accommodate other guests.
Bridal Make Up & Costume:
Bridal make up at Salon & Costume can be arranged.
Bridegroom:
Leading him in procession, often-on horseback or caparisoned elephants
for the Bridegroom to the marriage venue accompanied by the brass band.
Bride:
A silver chariot for the Bride & Bride maids to ride to the Jaimala
site.
Vidaai (Concluding ceremony):
Vidaai, the ceremony of seeing off the bride after the wedding, is a
emotional moment for her family. We can make it all the more poignant
with the lilt of the shehnai and transporting her in a tastefully
decorated 'palki'.
Decoration:
* Decoration of lights on trees. Decorated lights on Haveli & Hotels &
Swimming pool.
* Floral Decoration of Mandap.
* Rangoli & Flower decoration, special Floral decoration & Diyas along
the pathways.
* Decorative lights on the main entrance gates.
The Art of Mehndi
The wedding season is on! It's May already, which means the wedding
season's in full swing! Indian weddings are noisy colorful family
get-togethers, which wouldn't be complete without certain things - the
religious ceremonies, the feast for the guests, and of course, the
beautiful mehndi designs adorning the hands and feet of the bride and
her friends. Read about mehndi, the ancient Indian body art that's
reinvented itself as a modern fashion accessory.
It's safe and painless since it does not require the skin to be pierced.
It's completely natural and non-toxic. It's fun, exotic, beautiful, and
as simple or complicated as you want it to be. It can last for a couple
of days or as long as a month. It's a 5000 year old tradition and a
modern craze. It was used by our grandmothers and their grandmothers and
their grandmothers ... but our daughters and granddaughters also think
it's " cool ". It goes by the name of mehndi, and it's the ancient
Indian art of adorning the hands and feet with intricate designs and
patterns, using a paste made from the finely ground leaves of the henna
plant.
The term refers to the powder and paste, the design on the skin, as well
as the party or ceremony. It originated in Egypt and in Middle Eastern
countries during ancient times and it slowly spread to India and other
hot climates like Malaysia, Persia, Syria, Morocco, Sudan and North
Africa.
LANGUAGES
India's official language is Hindi in the Devanagri script. It is the
primary tongue of 30% of the people.
The States are free to decide their own regional languages for internal
administration and education, so there are 18 official languages spoken
throughout the country. Bengali, Telugu, Marathi, Tamil, Urdu, Gujarati,
Malayalam, Kannada, Oriya, Punjabi, Assamese, Kashmiri and Sindhi, are
among the official languages which are also widely spoken. Sanskrit
though an official language is hardly ever used except in rituals and
ceremonies.
While English enjoys associate status, it is widely spoken and is one of
the most important languages for national, political, and commercial
communication.
In all there are 24 different languages, each spoken by a million or
more persons; as well as millions of other languages and
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