Tuesday, May 24, 2011

The watery place 1

An ancient text declares ' he who knows the home of the waters will never lack a home." The mind is the home of the waters. In the upanishad, the mind is likened to the moon because of its transient, changing nature. On the other hand it also influenced the rise and fall of the tides, the watery places on our earth. The water though singularly known, is not one, it is flavoured, diverse and it differs in the presence of the moon.  Called Rasa, the flavours add to the water.These ancient narratives about the waters, refers to the experiences of an individual, a collective and the whole cosmic self. Waters are experiences that flow from being to being. Capturing the essences, fueling the life force, and finding a home in the mind as phenomenon, memory and tastes. Pure water is like the Ganga, pure experiencing without the taste, uninfluenced by the mind or the tastes. Every time the water is poured over the stone like divine image in abhisheka, we are to remember to be untouched by the waters that fall on us, staying still, untasting.  When very young, I took the sacred thirtha from a temple in my chubby fingers and slurped it myself and then put my tongue out in distaste. My grandpa who stood by me said one should not taste ( like or dislike) the holy water. This very popular injunction is an upanishadic secret. The waters are flavoured in the mind. experiences by themselves have no meaning, its the mind that adds to them.  Today I reflavour some of the mountain waters and savour them as a witness and hand them over.

 The juice of the blackberries growing wild in the Himalayas is very very sweet. It must have something to do with the soil because even the local karela are sweet. When we went to gather leaves for the cow bedding or gather firewood in berry season it was normal to try and stuff as much of it as possible into your mouth , foraging and foraging more, without losing sense of time. Naren  and even Vivek, the stronger than me at that time would have to gather the loads of leaves, I would in typical big-sister style boss over them.  When autumn hits the mountains, the leaves are plentiful. So are the wild akrots or walnuts. While we waited to peel off the dried green covering and then crack the nut and pull out the bits with a pin or sticks or suction power of the lips. The natural walnut was very hard-shelled and yield the most delicious kernels stingily. The mountain folk used to collect the green fruit, shell them and store them in piles outside their homes. These green walnut 'fruits' were a natural dye for wool, giving the raw and rough fiber a deep brown-red colour.
 After blackberries, taste-wise it was the chullus, or the local Indian apricots. The trees were the easiest to grow, a seed flung in the right place would grow into a tree fast. In less than four to five years, the branches would be filled with the prettiest pink blossoms and soon in autumn, luscious chullus filled the tree. There was always enough for fulfilling anybody's Enid- Blyton dreams.

We set up a small veggie farm ( non-winter farm). Rather it set itself up from any seed we discarded. The best were the cucumber seeds.  Mimru, our little friend got us few of the local seeds and told us to plant them upright in the soil like little flat soldiers in the holes. They grew like Jack's proverbial bean stalks, their tendrils reaching and grasping every hold in reach like the mind grasps the objects through its senses.   We made enormous bamboo huts  and fences and structures to hold up the creepers and finally let it grow wild. There was too much of growing to catch up with. And as the rains drew close,  they flowered.

The flowers yellow and profuse on every twiggy green stem were visited by many tiny sun birds ( we thought they were humming birds then). A bird would hover in front of the large yellow flower, its wings humming, and then duck into the flower and fly out. First we thought they were some sort of large bees. One sunny day, a pool of water lay glistening in the sun on our uneven stone court yard and one of these flight experts was taking dips in it. then we noticed it was the tiniest bird we had ever seen. I think it was something like this: http://www.arthurgrosset.com/asiabirds/mrsgould'ssunbird.html. The yellow was very visible and some were very green-grey ( females?). Well the pollination done the first cucumbers began to grow. They grew and grew. We had cucumber salad, raw cucumber, cucumber raitha and plain cucumber juice. And because in our enthusiasm for home grown veggies we had many creepers, we even gave them away to every passer by. The abundance might have had something to do with an adorable and dangerous looking Bruno, our GS, who had the run of the fields and the garden. We were seldom raided by kids or goats. Well the ones we didn't pluck at regular size grew and grew and grew in the rains. They looked like elongated pumpkins and must have weighed a few Kilos. It was great fun to find these fellows hidden in the profusion of thick green foliage and dark and twiney stems.Filled with the waters of the mountain rain, they were reminiscent of life. It says so in the maha mriyunjay mantra. "Urvaarukamiva Bandhanaath" it says, - like a cucumber release me from bondage. And we got that. In real experience. One autumn frosty morning, we found all creepers dried and drying while here and there, now revealed amidst the dying plant lay these huge cucumbers glowing yellow green, their stalks gone dry. These enlightened waters whose attachment to the world had gone. For enlightenment we don't need to get " out of the world," we need to get the " world out of us."
 The next blog is about the milk. Of human kindness, of the cows, of gujar buffaloes, milk gone bad, of curd and butter and the perpetual quests for jericans of milk in winter .

Monday, May 02, 2011

Death of a terrorist


The murderer died that day. In the forest, in front of the wise one, the wickedness shrivelled and died. He had plundered,  murdered and mercilessly hunted down every unwary traveller that crossed his road. He wore their fingers around his neck as a trophy and the compassionate one killed him with no weapons at all.  As the wicked one chased the Buddha on that fateful day, he found even at the fastest speed he could not catch up.
" Stop." he said to the wise one!"
 I am still." said the buddha." You stop."
"What ?"
 "Stop your killing and violence."
And then the wickedness in the being of Angulimala died. The wickedness that was left over from his lifetimes as a demon or a cruel animal. A gentle soul was left behind. Ahimsaka, the disciple of Buddha.

 In the east we believe that dispositions cannot be erased with the death of a body, they have to be transformed and sublimated. In fact in Hinduism, it is explained beautifully about why why God has to come down personally to kill these people. When god is your enemy, you will think of him as much as if you were her devotee. This sublimates the evil. As god kills you even as you die you are in her presense, thinking of her. So when you die you are absolved of all the evil. You may be reborn  but your evil has died, never to resurface.
 Today morning as the news trickled in, I thought. Has justice been done? What is justice? Revenge?
One body for three thousand? In fact didn't Jesus give up his one body for millions?

 How can we pretend to celebrate the end of evil ? It was never dissipated, sublimated. The core disposition is let free, to be reborn, to join others and spread. 

I am foolish if I say Osama  Bin Laden should not have been killed. I am saying his death is not justice, his death is not the answer we should celebrate. It should make us thoughtful for that which was evil in Osama did not die. It may just be floating free around you and me.
 The Buddha way is better. Way better!

Thursday, February 17, 2011

The feminist writes

Every scar that you have rips within my womb
a pregnant cause that can only whimper
For we birth these banal monsters
who see but cannot see within,
every scar you bear within your mind
Sister.





 Increasingly with yoga and my embodied practices I am now seeing the falsity of the word 'heart' to express my feelings. I wonder if we women first started to write our own emotions would we still be talking about the heart. Women began writing late and even as I blog  I know that it has taken a PhD for me to practice writing. Writing myself, my emotions rather than parroting emotions and information sharing. I wonder now if this heart thing is all a big social learning thing. all the dil, pyaar, heart to heart all of it words I borrowed to say what I wanted to say from others even other women.


When I am suffering, in love, in hurt, in disappointment, my throat chokes and my chest feels heavy but nothing happens to my 'heart.' I can hear it beating steadily, perhaps a bit faster but my emotions are in my gut. In my womb, the center of my being. Whether birthed or unbirthed, used or not, my womb centers me as I grasp my tummy and hug myself. Are not our deepest connections of sisterhood in this womb? That's where we feel most violated, most vulnerable, many biological evolutions have made us womb beings. That's why attachment to children tears us like nothing else will. We survive heart breaks but never womb-breaks.
 I intend to continue to blog, deconstructing the borrowed language I have writing me, my body-self and my womb, a world where Pre-Menstural is not a syndrome but a normality and ability to be rational and calm in the face of stimulus is abnormal. The emtying of a womb is not MIS - carriage and wearing make-up is a choice.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Clarity and crying

Angst is finding out that you are really one of a kind. That the world is really not clear. You look at a really old dirty stained glass window where the colours only reflect back the grime. the more you wipe the dirtier it gets. deeper it sinks...
 It is the tears that wash out the grime. light the way ahead and create a field for breakthrough. So if it's a long time you sat and activated those lacrimal glands, go have a good cry and an existential break through!

Sensing sorrow

First a twinge, a catch at the throat,
a memory that stings,
burning
like a red hot pepper
dipped in brine.

Then a twitch, eyelids trying to contain,
the mind dips into the heart
 whispering
like a promise
 sliced into silences.

A trail of wetness, tears stroking the cheeks,
emptiness that will not be filled
searching
like a vacant stare,
frozen in time.

Shaking shoulders,the lungs gasp,
the mind seeking location
resisting
like a floating fragrance
woven into the wind.

finally the head bows, hands reach out
to the will of the heart
caressing
like the touch of tender lips
to the wounds of love.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Ethics of Sharing


Throughout my life as student I have seen this phenomenon of people holding back information that may be useful to others and have also been warned again and again about being too open. Don't get me wrong, being a counselor, I hold many close secrets to my heart and never break confidences about personal information . I am not going to post my password on the facebook status. Nor will I share my friend's love escapades in a blog. 

Sitting in your own shell is actually letting go of an opportunity to make a difference in someone's life.
I am committed to sharing things that help other people. I share things like an interesting article on the web or a chance to meet a famous person or the name of a cheap hotel in coorg. Information that is available and will benefit someone. The sharing of which benefits someone. ( That does not include chain letters) True some times this may create competition like those rare post doc oppurtunities ) but why run a race alone?

I share here a story that inspired me and continues to inspire me today. A young aspirant (Ii think it was Ramanujacharya) approached his guru for a mantra that will give moksha easily. The teacher taught him the name of Ram and told him," This mantra is surely the greatest and will give moksha to the user, it will work only if you keep it to yourself." The young aspirant thanked his teacher and then ran to the market place and shouted the mantra to everyone! The Guru was astonished and asked him why he did that? Replied the great saint to be- " Well, if I kept it to myself only I would have got Moksha, at my cost of not getting moksha, now so many people will get liberated."

As teachers, professionals, activists and good people, share information. Responsibly bring the RTI ( right to Information) into your own life. And you know what people whose lives are transparent need to live a life of integrity and inspiration, so it helps you decide and make a choice about your life. Finally as earth angels remember, people are more important than information, money or things.

Poetry of surviving words

When Reason, completed rests.
The many voices in me silenced,
poetry struggles up through many layers
of words, sounds to letters, words and then to paper.

Each word tasted for expression,
having satiated the writing tip of my pen tongue, sometimes
unfit, spat out with scratches, again reinstated.
Perceived as misfit in the rhythm
of the life of the poem, myself.

Meaning given by thought to the
cheering of an internal audience.
Criticizing, fighting, nodding, passing selection,
not a single word escapes the stage.

Unbidden thoughts, silenced voices
jostle and push in the futile struggle to the surface of paper,
but in the democracy of my self,
only the exact right word,
is displayed, revealed to you.
This is my poetry of surviving words...

Friday, December 04, 2009

The Rupees Syndrome

Most time I am thinking in euroes now but when I buy something I am doing an X 70 in my head. I know the seven times table so well now. As I was trying to buy a ticket in Amsterdam, I paid with my international debit card for a normal 7 euro day ticket and then later next night as I checked my Indian account, a figure of 508rs. caught my eye. BAM . I was hit by the rupee syndrome! 500rs for Public transport? aaaaa.
 Beware of this syndrome in your travels abroad. Many a good thing I walked away from becoz I would multiply it by 70 and decide that it's not worth paying so much. We are getting paid in euroes here ( Thank God and S's exchange fellowship !) but then every now and then I do a X71 and gasp at what I am paying for stuff. ( all are today's exchange rate of 71euroes to a rupee!)
 these are  from cents in euroes to rupees:
 46rs for a flavoured milk of 250ml
35rs for a packet of bread
35-40rs for garbage bags
106rs to wash my clothes in the washing machine and if I use the drier, another 106!
Rice is relatively cheap at 70rs for a kg!
All the economics really confused me so till now I kept euro accounts. As the days to go home come closer, I am busy picking up small gifts for my friends and family. Small light and cheap, but also to their liking. Choosing gifts is fun and  I feel quite the santa claus. And again,
I am back to the ruppee syndrome and voila, I discover, everything is cheaper at home!
Purses, clothes, pens , pencils, even notebooks are cheaper rupee to euro! For the same kind stuff I pay more here. Certainly don't come to shop in europe. Just get your cheese olives and chocolates, they are good and we don't get them back in India. Instead pack your head with sights, sounds, smells and the memories of this place. They are priceless! Here a few more from inside my head captured in the camera.

Thursday, December 03, 2009

DIJK in Holland

I went out in car with my  friends family on a road trip to visit the longest dike in holland. A marvel of engineering this separates freshwater from the saltwater.

"The Afsluitdijk  (Ofslútdyk) is a major causeway in the Netherlands, constructed between 1927 and 1933 and running from in North Holland province, to the village of Zurich , over a length of 32 km (20 miles) and a width of 90 m, at an initial height of 7.25 m above sea-level.




It is a fundamental part of the larger Zuiderzee Works, damming off the Zuiderzee, a salt water inlet of the North Sea and turning it into the fresh water lake of the IJsselmeer." ( verfied from Wikki)

this is the lake!




It doesn't seem like its possible for a little boy of ten to hold back the floods with a thumb or hand if this dyke is breached.


The wind was amazing, almost blew me off the small metal bridge that I clung to desperately, trying to click a photo while the wind snapped at my camera, pulling at its strap and tried to hit the lens cap on my nose! That's the sea and the wall of the dike.

 Here are the photos thanks also to my gorrilla pod that helped me click some shots with both my friends...
that's the saltwater behind us!

Some historical maps and photos of the construction, in the cafe of the monument built to symbolize the completion of the dyjk

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Older Potsdam and a bit of Hearsay History

 The older half history of potsdam is about wars ,potatoes and royal eccentricities.  At the center of all this is the Prussian crown first worn by the "King in Prussia" Fedrick I and then consequently Fedrick II then The Nephew and so on...

You can buy this replica for 80 euroes at the shop!!! I thought that if I wore it it would be too heavy considering the Phd feather on cap is too long and heavy in its creation to be replaced by gold imitation!



Suum cuique ("to each, his own"), the motto of the Order of the Black Eagle created by King Frederick I in 1701, was often associated with the whole of Prussia.  I like the motto, Its sounds like a NIAS doctoral program motto to me! ( specially in our 'Multi-disciplinary' fields) And hey notice the eagle similarities to our logo at NIAS? Heh Heh.
 Here are two nice examples of the eagle.


The Hohenzollern state was then known as Brandenburg-Prussia, belonging to  family called Electors.The Margraviate of Brandenburg within the Holy Roman Empire and the Duchy of Prussia outside of the Empire.(This was not a Kingdom as  kingdoms within the holy roman empire were not allowed.) It was Frederick I who convinced the then Leopold I, Archduke of Austria and Holy Roman Emperor, was  to allow Prussia to be ruled as a kingdom. He called himself "KING IN PRUSSIA," so as not to threaten territories of the hohenzollern that were not in Prussia. Berlin was called Königsberg!


 The Blue ladies in the background holding the crown on the New palace are the three graces.They ordinarily numbered three, from youngest to oldest: Aglaea ("Beauty"), Euphrosyne ("Mirth"), and Thalia ("Good Cheer"). In Roman mythology they were known as  the "Graces." Sometimes a joke was that in this palace they were the three queens around Frederick , including Empress Elizabeth. ( wait For this Story later in the blog)

His son called Frederick II (the great)  had a traumatic childhood and youth. At age 16, Frederick II had formed an attachment to the king's 13-year-old page, Peter Karl Christoph Keith. Wilhelmina  ( his older sister) recorded that the two "soon became inseparable.  In a strange turn of political events the young prince tried to run away from his autocratic father to England, was caught and punished. The saddest part is that the king forced Frederick to watch the decapitation of his confidant Katte at Küstrin on 6 November, leaving the crown prince to faint away and suffer hallucinations for the following two days.


Taking on the Kingdom after his father's death,Frederick managed to transform Prussia from a European backwater to an economically strong and politically reformed state. His acquisition of Silesia  during the silesian war provided economic benefits. Canals were built, including between the Vistula and the Oder, swamps were drained for agricultural cultivation, and new crops, such as the potato and the turnip, were introduced.  The potato story is worth retelling.

So the people hate eating things that grow below the ground. "Food For hogs! ( pigs)" they insisted. Food shortage was affecting the people of Prussia who had to learn to eat this nice round kartoffels. Despite education and awareness people tried to eat the green shoots of the potato and fell ill. So Fredrick devised a strategy. He had potatoes planted in the royal gardens and had it heavily guarded as special food for the royal kitchens. The curious citizens raided the gardens for the "special veggie." The guards (as planned by the king) looked the other way as the smuggled potatoes made their way into people's kitchens and cuisines.
 The Flip side is that potatoes became so much important in europe that when the crop failed, it caused the potato famine that also affected germany. Apparently turnips saved the day reported my guide.

Frederick also aspired to be a philosopher-king like the Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius. The king joined the Freemasons in 1738 and stood close to the French Enlightenment, admiring above all its greatest thinker, Voltaire, with whom he corresponded frequently. The personal friendship of Frederick and Voltaire came to an unpleasant end after Voltaire's visit to Berlin and Potsdam in 1750–1753, although they reconciled from afar in later years. ( Wikki Source)

Forced in to marriage  for political reasons, he never spent time with his wife who lived in a different palace.  ( He called her a fat cow!!)  He is often suspected to be homosexual, or struck with some ailment that made him stay away from women but the pages of history are blurred even about kings.
Frederick took no pleasure from his popularity with the common folk, preferring instead the company of his pet Italian greyhounds, whom he referred to as his 'marquises de Pompadour' as a jibe at Madame de Pompadour. His final resting place marker is near his beloved dogs as he had requested. ( not next to his wife) People put potatoes on his grave as a mark of respect which is in the beloved summer palace in south side facing the gardens at Potsdam.



The actual entombed body in its tomb was transported, protected in bunkers and then finally after WWII was laid to rest in in the Kaiser Friedrich Mausoleum in Sanssouci's Church of Peace on the grounds of the park for a while. The King 's body was then shifted again after reunification.



On 17 August 1991, Frederick's casket lay in state in the court of honor of Sanssouci, covered by a Prussian flag and escorted by a Bundeswehr guard of honour. After nightfall, Frederick's body was finally laid to rest on the terrace of the vineyard of Sanssouci, according to his last will without pomp and at night near his Italian Greyhounds.
It was befitting tribute to  der alte Fritz ("Old Fritz"), he was fondly called , as both the nazis and the autocratic rule of  had done much damage by using him for their propaganda.

The king preferred spending his time in his summer residence Potsdam, where he built the palace of Sanssouci, the most important work of Northern German rococo. Sanssouci, which translates from French as "carefree" or "without worry", was a refuge for Frederick.The most beautiful facade overlooks the beautiful gardens on the south side. You walk down the steps from this and you are in a steps like garden that is delightfully coloured. ( I am not sure but either all women were not allowed here or the queen was not allowed)

On a personal aside, the guide did have a very thick accent and for some time I kept thinking the king loved ducks  ( "Doocks" he said) and he was buried next to his lovely ducks. ( there are ducks in the fountains). Kept wondering how in those days those ducks did not end up on his table? Then realized it was dogs when he said in reply to a question by some one that the Doocks were  italian greyhounds!!!

 
Entrance.


Front reception


A windmill near the gate.

Next to the palace

 View from the top:
 
and what a surprise at the view from the lower tier. From the lower gardens the whole view  of the grape vines is beautiful, even when the leaves are turning brown.

 
  Rococo is a style of architecture and art that developed in France . If you want to know more about it, Click HERE for a wikki-link. You can see the  German rococo style in these details (the white is sadly discolored)."Architects often draped their interiors in clouds of fluffy white stucco."

















Situated on the western side of the Sanssouci royal park  ( am Luste garten) The building was begun in 1763, after the end of the Seven Years' War, under Frederick the Great and was completed in 1769. It is considered to be the last great Prussian baroque palace.

The New palace is on the same grounds, you can walk up.



The Seven years war : On 29 August 1756 his well-prepared army crossed the frontier and  invaded Saxony, thus beginning the Seven Years' War (1756–1763). Facing a coalition which included Austria, France, Russia, Saxony, and Sweden, and having only Great Britain and Hanover as his allies, Frederick narrowly kept Prussia in the war despite having his territories frequently invaded.He was almost at the losing end  of the war, the Prussian army was greatly weakened and had just lost the vital Baltic Sea port of Kolberg to the Russians when Emperess Elizabeth of Russia ( who was behind the Russian's assault) suddenly died ( at the beginning of 1762). It is called "Miracle of the House of Brandenburg," becoz it turned Frederick's defeat into a victory of sorts. Elizabeth's nephew came to the throne as Peter III. Peter was notoriously pro-Prussian; on his accession, he withdrew his troops and ended the war. In celebration getting into lots of debt Frederick the great built his new palace.

 Ostentatiously, this is the Kitchen with Fortuna shining on a top!



Next door is the servant's quarters ( being Restored) with Victoria.

 

 We need fortune and Victory!


In an architectural form, Frederick the Great sought to demonstrate the power and glories of Prussia attributing it as fanfaronade, an excess of splendor in marble, stone and gilt. Alas he ran out of money and so his bed chamber has original brick and stone while the main palace is painted brickwork!
 Prussia on the World?


look carefully at the wall above and the picture below . Can you see which is original brick?








For the King, the New Palace was not a principal residence, but a display for the reception of important royals and dignitaries. Of the over 200 rooms, four principal gathering rooms and a theater were available for royal functions, balls and state occasions. I did not go IN! Maybe for another visit some other time!

During his occasional stays at the palace, Frederick occupied a suite of rooms at the southern end of the building, composed of two antechambers, a study, a concert room, a dining salon and a bedroom, among others.
 Skipping a few other kings and their stories...  Read your own history.



From King to emperor:

Just fast forwarding to another Era in German history, now.

Wilhelm I, also known as Wilhelm the Great[1] (William Frederick Louis, German: Wilhelm Friedrich Ludwig) (22 March 1797–9 March 1888) of the House of Hohenzollern was the King of Prussia (2 January 1861–9 March 1888) and the first German Emperor (18 January 1871–9 March 1888).During the Franco-Prussian War, on 18 January 1871 in Versailles Palace, Wilhelm was proclaimed German Emperor. The title "German Emperor" was carefully chosen by Bismarck after discussion until (and after) the day of the proclamation. Wilhelm accepted this title grudgingly as he would have preferred "Emperor of Germany."
Under the leadership of Wilhelm and his Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, Prussia achieved the unification of Germany and the establishment of the German Empire. Bismarck looks a bit like one of our friends.. Just try a guess game till I get back and tell you.


The Iron Chancellor", Bismarck held an important role in the German government and greatly influenced German and international politics both during and after his time of service.Bismarck's most important legacy is the unification of Germany. Germany had existed as a collection of hundreds of separate principalities and Free Cities since the formation of the Holy Roman Empire. Over the next thousand years various kings and rulers had tried to unify the German states without success until Bismarck. Largely as a result of Bismarck's efforts, the various German kingdoms were united into a single country. Following unification, Germany became one of the most powerful nations in Europe. Bismarck's astute, cautious, and pragmatic foreign policies allowed Germany to retain peacefully the powerful position into which he had brought it; maintaining amiable diplomacy with almost all European nations.
 Unfortunately, is diplomatic feats were undone, however, by Kaiser Wilhelm II, whose policies unified other European powers against Germany in time for World War I.

 THE ONLY MAN IN GERMANY:
She was a woman, whom Napoleon called the only man in Germany. Luise Auguste Wilhelmine Amalie (Luisa Augusta Wilhelmina Amelia) (10 March 1776 – 19 July 1810) was Queen consort of Prussia. called Q. Louise of Meckenburg, this iron hearted lady stood by her people. As Queen of Prussia, she commanded universal respect and affection, and nothing in Prussian history is more admired than the dignity and unflinching courage with which she bore the sufferings inflicted on her and her family during the war between Prussia and France. After the battle of Jena she went with her husband to Königsberg, and when the battles  with France had placed Prussia absolutely at the mercy of France, she made a personal appeal to Napoleon I of France at his headquarters in Tilsit, but without success.


And so we stop here letting you savour these different buildings in Potsdam,
 Some Dutch, some barracks, some Siberian, some tudor, some plain ols german. All hertitage buildingsd and the town itself is one big building musuem.
We enter through the Brandenburg tor, as Potsdam is the capital of Brandenburg.


Another interesting gate is this rocky cave entrance to the Nordic gardens at Sanssouci. Apparently if you are a liar, rocks will drop on your head here. ( politicians beware). Philosophers rest assured the gate is confused if you ask it- what is truth? See I stood for ages for this shot and not a dust dropped on my head. Social scientists may ask what is reality? instead. Scientists... Mmm I dont know just be careful. Politicians, dont dare come near anywhere. It may decide to throw rocks rather than drop them.


 
Above are  pictures of the siberian houses colony in Potsdam, a set of wooden houses. There were many Russian soldiers stationed here Totally classic!!

The Dutch were called to drain the marshy lands in Potsdam and encouraged to stay and enjoy trade. A dutch colony was created that later of course was occupied by local traders.

 
 a totally false egyptian needle a minaret style pumping station are other quaint sights.
 
 More Pics Celciahof  from my previous blog in Tudor style. Notice the Chimneys...

 and the nice geometry.

( Faintly the star, a political symbol on the lawn usually filled with blue flowers in spring, now its winter and so brown)


houses with german rocco, restored and occupied.


Rajahamsa at the garden?


 Most of the statues were boxed up but this one on a pillar.

Yava shilpi kanda kanasu Neenu? ( lady, whose muse art thou?)



 and final pic to celebrate Baccus, the lord of wine and drink, a water fountain ( may be it was a beer fountain. )considering that we don't get plain water anywhere unless we ask for it.



Finally I think that's it about Potsdam.
The next blog is about LIFE in DDR ( east germany): common potty breaks in school and a plastic body car and a bit more on Bunkers after the second underground tour I took. Signing off from Berlin, your doctoral candidate friend in Berlin breaking out of her own walls, all wrapped up in wool... (PS.Gelathi, notice your nice gift's new use, it holds my mufflers in place)