Early this morning when it
was still dark outside, I snapped awake from the middle of a bad dream. In this
dream I was back home at my house running, trying to get away from a hooded
figure wearing a bright, red Indian scarf. I could see no face, but as I was
trying to run from room to room, it would suddenly appear and when I closed my
eyes in the dream, the image of the being would flash rapidly, repeatedly in my
mind. Sometimes it would reach out to me with a shadowy arm. When I woke up, I
could not erase the image from my mind. I prayed continually and sang praise
songs until the morning dawned and the rooftops were flooded with light. Only
then did I finally fall back asleep and had a couple more peaceful hours of
rest before waking again to embrace the new day.
I wanted to share this with
you because it made it very evident to me that we truly are surrounded by a
spiritual darkness in this place. I honestly cannot remember the last time I
had a nightmare until last night. When I woke up I was scared, but it was
comforting to know that God truly is with us. He is in this place and more
powerful than any force of darkness we may encounter. Our Lord reigns and we
have nothing to fear. Thank you so much for your prayers while we have been
here and please please please! continue to be praying for us and the beautiful
people of this country, who are so in need of the love and grace that we
experience in knowing Christ.
That being said, I’m excited
tell you a little about our day! As usual, it was very full, busy and exciting,
so just a forewarning this blog entry will be super long.
After breakfast in the
hotel, we boarded our bus and visited a Jain temple. Jainism is one of the
lesser common religions here- less than 1% after Hinduism, which makes up about
80%, then Islam with 15%... these are rough estimates, based off of my memory,
which could be off... If you are curious, definitely google it! I would, but
the internet is pretty iffy here.
What I did learn is that Jainists
are strict vegetarians. They respect all animals, even insects- if a mosquito
tries to bite them, they will gently swat it away, but never kill it. In other words I could never be a
Jainist. Luckily though, the mosquitoes haven’t been bad so far. Some [Jainists]
wear masks over their mouths to avoid inhaling an insect, and they don’t dig in
the dirt because they might squish a worm, although I swear I saw someone at
the temple digging in the dirt, so I’m confused. Also they don’t eat after dark
because you would never notice if you ate a bug on accident. The temple was
very ornate, gawdy and showy, entirely covered inside and out with mosaic glass
and mirrors, sparkling in the sun and radiating so much heat you felt like you
were in an oven. Some parts were very beautiful, although many of us agreed
that it was borderline tacky, for lack of a better word.
While it is really easy to
focus on the seemingly ridiculous aspects of some different religions, there is
a definite sadness that I feel when I see people worshipping a statue,
following certain rituals and building elaborate temples for gods that I do not
believe exist. But this is real for the Jainists and it is so interesting to me
how we believe certain things to be true. Later we walked through the streets
of Kolkata and observed the artists creating statues of the various Hindu
diety. It was beautiful, skilled workmanship. They created the bodies of the
statues from hay and yarn, then coated them with plaster and clay, molding and
sculpting the finer details of the faces and hands. But again when you think
about that to the Hindu people, these statues embody the spirits of their gods
and goddesses, there is once again for me a feeling of despair. I am not sure
what I am to do. I have felt that way a lot this trip. Not knowing what to do.
But I think we are just supposed to be, to be love to these people. To be love
and grace and light and hope. We are called to love as we were first loved, and
that is what we are doing the best we can, and we can have faith that God will
do the rest. It has been challenging to experience a culture so different from
what I have known, but I’ve loved every minute of it!
After the Jain temple we
went on a ferry ride down the Ganges River, which was really nice, and the breeze
felt so great. The boat was super crowded. The river was brownish green, and
large branches would float down; the current was very strong. Many people were
bathing in it.
For lunch, we had an amazing
banana leaf lunch at a Bengali restaurant. A couple of us tried some really hot
peppers that burned our throats and made our eyes water. Bad mistake. Our lunch
was a couple of curry dishes, rice, a thin deep fried bread, and a
potato/squash/okra/ unknown banana-slug-looking thing. We also had fish, chicken
and shrimp- all served on a banana leaf. I thought it all tasted great, until
dessert…there was a yogurt custard dish, which some people loved, and a
mysterious leaf with unknown spices and red chewy candies that tasted kind of
like soap. I did not try the leaf concoction, but I would definitely suggest asking
someone who did to describe it to you. Before leaving the restaurant we asked
if we could take the dishes, which is not common request among locals, but they
said we could. Tracy noted that it was like the equivalent to someone asking to
take the paper plates from a restaurant in the U.S. At this restaurant, the
dishes are made of terra cotta, and are meant to be used once, then they are just
tossed. So, many of us left the restaurant with nice little terra cotta plates,
bowls or cups.
Next some of us went with
Matt to visit the Film School while everyone else went back to the Hotel. We
had a nice little tour of the campus and talked to a couple students. Since I
don’t know anything about film, I was a little confused about what was going on
half the time, but it was interesting to see the sets where they would shoot,
the room full of hundreds of rolls of film, and the audio room where a student
was mixing and adjusting all the audio for a movie. Ask Matt or Cameron to fill
you in on this part for better details!
After the film school we
decided to stop by Science City! It was so much fun. Picture OMSI, but with
outdoor areas and rides. We walked through the jaws of a T. Rex and entered
“Evolution Park,” stepping into the Land Before time complete with paper mache
giant remote control dinosaurs. We even had the super humid rainforest jungle
feel. It was great. The “Gravity Coaster” was probably the best part. All 9 of
us piled into the roller coaster and we had a thrilling ride. Sandy took a
video of us laughing and screaming the whole time. We got to ride through the
track twice. There were also some sweet hands-on exhibits like a vertigo tunnel
and a giant piano keyboard that you could step on to play. The place was so
awesome. We could have spent like three hours there, but unfortunately only had
like twenty minutes before we had to jet.
After a long day we ate
dinner at a super cute, brightly colored restaurant called the Scoop. A few of
us ordered chocolate milkshakes, which ended up being chocolate milk. Then we
trekked back to our hotel, exhausted. It was another great day, and we’re
packing up and leaving for Chennai in the morning. Thanks so much for reading!
jade ice