The Inheritors
While inspecting some of the earliest and finest examples of rock-cut caves, don?t be surprised if you feel a soft tug on your trousers. You look down expecting a child demanding your attention. Instead it is a monkey, supported by a large gang a few yards away, grimacing at you. If you pay heed to local wisdom, you won?t scream but hand over the water bottle. The monkey minutely inspects it as if it is checking the expiry date of the contents, but all it?s doing is trying to open the bottle, albeit in vain. The monkeys of Badami must have the largest collection of unopened mineral water bottles in the world. In Tirupati, the monkeys are trained to steal. Here, the methods are more like brazen robbery at knife-point. If you don?t have a water bottle, throw anything edible you may have. Badami?s monkeys don?t accept cash.
A while ago, some sarkari types tried to do something about the monkey ?menace?. They managed to catch one small monkey, whose wailing brought the rest in hundreds from every nook and corner of the hill. It took nearly an hour for the officials to escape. They would do well to leave the monkeys alone, for they have been a part of the landscape in Badami for ages. Proof of this is carved in stone in one of the caves, which has detailed carvings of monkeys. The monkeys often prompt the undecided into climbing the steps up to the caves on the hill, chiefly by chasing them. Ironically, the chased are, more often than not, grateful. But for the monkeys they would have missed the breath-taking view from the sandstone cliff of temples, which have remained the blueprints for South Indian temple architecture across centuries. |
Content Source:
Outlook Traveller
Contributed by:
MN Chakravorty
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