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Kumbh Mela 2001, India NEW!
The greatest of the Hindu pilgrimage festivals is a riverside religious fair held every 12 years.

History and Culture

Indigenous Aryans? NEW!
Few topics in ancient history are as disputed today as the role of Indo-Aryans in ancient India
...

Just Not Cricket NEW!
In a recent cricket match played between India and Australia in Sydney, the Indian cricketer Harbhajan Singh was accused of hurling a racist insult ...

Chinese Food for Thought
In gastronomic matters, I am squarely among the less intrepid of men. Raised by a vegetarian mother who wouldn't allow meat in her kitchen ...

On Telling Stories
We often ask what it is that makes us human ... I’d have to say it’s our penchant and need for story-telling: human beings are the story-telling species ...

Forbidden City
Surrounded by moat and high walls, the fabled Forbidden City earned its name by being closed to everyone outside the Chinese royal family and their eunuchs and maidservants ...

On Diversity
Last October, I went sightseeing in Calcutta with a friend. We began with a short cycle rickshaw ride, took a local train to Sealdah, wandered near College St ...

John Frum
... a village on the island of Tanna in Vanuatu, where the people believe Prince Philip of England is a god. Though it might sound preposterous ...

Swastika
When I visited India the summer I turned 9 years old, my grandmother took my siblings and me to a jeweler so we could each select a pendant to bring back with us to the US ...

 

Books and Authors

This Way for the Gas, Ladies & Gentlemen NEW!
Tadeusz Borowski was 21 years old when he was deported to the cluster of concentration camps collectively known as Auschwitz, in 1943 ...

Shantaram: A Review NEW!
Shantaram is the story of a violent man's search for the man of peace within himself ...

Rereading Naipaul
I first read Naipaul in the mid-90s: India: A Million Mutinies, The Enigma of Arrival, and A Way in the World. They resonated with me well enough. But ...

The Reach of Reason
Perceptions of culture, history, and identity are necessarily subjective and selective. There's no impartial and omniscient chronicler of events, no 'scientific' history...

The Tragedy of the Congo
The history of European colonialism is replete with examples of extreme cruelty. The decimation of the American Indians in South America ...

The Wonder That Was India
Various societies at different times have dazzled with their bursts of creative and intellectual energy. Historians [call] them Golden Ages ...

 

Art, Music, Cinema

On Photography
If a picture says a thousand words, which thousand words does it say to whom? If we all wrote down what we hear, no two accounts would be the same...

A Qawwali Concert
A year or so ago, I attended an open-air Qawwali concert by the famous Sabri Brothers, who claim direct descent from Mian Tansen himself, ...

Peter Brook's Mahabharata
Earlier this year I saw Peter Brook's Mahabharata for the third time in fifteen years. Each time my admiration for it has grown ...

Jack the Dripper
Does art lie entirely in the eye of the beholder, or should it have minimal standards? ...

 

Economics and Geopolitics

The Last Empire NEW!
Much has been written about China's environmental crisis in recent years...

Beyond Hope and Change NEW!
Two eager contestants, tooting their horns and dissing each other. The media readying us for fireworks, sharp attacks, a "do or die" fight...

Free Market News
The newspaper business has changed radically in recent decades. Most newspapers are now owned by a handful of large corporations, ...

America and the Cold War
The US pulled out of Vietnam in 1975 after more than a decade and a humiliating defeat. The war had been expensive, the draft unpopular, ...

Science, Religion, Philosophy

How Terrorism Works NEW!
Experts on Islamic terrorism are now everywhere, spouting wisdom on countless media outlets and blogs [on] what turns Muslims into terrorists...

Pinker, the Storyteller NEW!
Many evolutionary psychologists, including Steven Pinker, professor at Harvard, claim that ... evolution has endowed humans with a "moral instinct"...

From the Outside, Looking In NEW!
... speaking of Muslims as fanatics and terrorists is not even considered bad manners; it’s seen as a comic expression of the truth ...

The Politics of God
In response to 9/11 and the alarming role of evangelical Christianity in US politics, a host of loud atheistic voices have emerged. Most belong to concerned citizens ...

The Basis of Belief
Do we arrive at our beliefs in a systematic manner or through an intuitive process? Are we predisposed towards some beliefs while being skeptical about others? ...

Rediscovering Golem
What is life anyway, and how did it really happen upon this world? As a physical phenomenon, is life an accidental and rare occurrence?

On Being Spiritual
Spirituality is cool these days. Its warm and fuzzy aura now appeals to more and more people in the West. Online dating sites abound with claims of being ...

The Carvakas
It comes as a surprise to many that in ancient "spiritual" India, atheistic materialism was a major force to reckon with ...

Eugenics Record Office
James Watson, co-discoverer of the structure of DNA, is in trouble again, this time for a racist remark that has led to wide criticism and his firing ...


Biography

Percy Julian, Chemist Extraordinaire
Percy Lavon Julian, born in Montgomery, Alabama in 1899, the grandson of slaves, was one of the most accomplished chemists of the 20th century...

Omar Khayyam of Persia
In his lifetime, Omar Khayyam (1048-1131) achieved great fame as a master of philosophy, jurisprudence, history, medicine, astronomy, and mathematics ...

Al-Farabi, Medieval Islamic Philosopher
During the so-called golden age of Islam in tenth-century Baghdad, ... The man ... held second only to Aristotle was called Abu Nasr al-Farabi (870-950 CE)...

 

Musings and Humor

Reporting from Home
I'm a non-resident Indian (NRI). I left India in 1989 for a masters degree in the US. I then lived in N. California and W. Europe and had traveled to 50+ countries by ...

Advice to a Young Artist
The idea for writing this came to me from an interview in which an author was reverentially asked, ‘Sir, what would be your advice to a young artist?’...

Size Matters!
For ages now, men have made women feel self-conscious, nay worthless, making them obsess over the size of their, er ... various body parts...


Travel

An Indian-American in China
Arriving at the mausoleum of Mao Zedong on Tian'anmen Square, I looked expectantly to join a long line of Chinese tourists awaiting their moment to view Mao's body, ...

Divinity is Here
I am in the village of Rum in south Jordan, all signed-up for two days in the desert. The clincher was the Bedouin honcho's sell job:  "I have open jeep, ...

The Lost City of Ugarit
The road to Lattakia goes over the Anti-Lebanon Range. I had left Aleppo under a blue sky at noon; now a thick fog rolls in, tall conifers appear in the valleys, visibility drops ...

Nobody's Land
"Cuiabá is the city of mangoes. We don't buy them, just pluck and eat," says Rizardo, our wildlife guide. Riding in the bed of a pickup truck, we are going down the ...

At the Foot of Mount Yasur
I am six hundred miles east of the Great Barrier Reef in the archipelago of Vanuatu-or, as they say in Vanuatu, the "ni-Vanuatu" archipelago -- home to nine active volcanoes ...

Forbidden City

The fabled Forbidden City earned its name by being closed to everyone outside the Chinese royal family and their eunuchs and maidservants ...

The Burning Ghats of Varanasi

Varanasi, on the left bank of the Ganga, is one of the seven sacred cities of the Hindus.

Bodh Gaya
Bodh Gaya is the single most sacred site of Buddhism. It was in the forest here that Prince Siddharta sat under a tree and achieved enlightenment....

The Dilwara Temples

Many Indians claim that the Dilwara Jain temples of Mt. Abu are a more magnificent achievement than the Taj Mahal ...

The Birthplace of Ganesh

Dodi Tal, considered the birthplace of Lord Ganesh, is a lake in Garhwal, western Uttaranchal. We hiked 44 km in 3 days, from 5,000 ft to 11,000 ft...

Potala-in-Exile

The seat of the Tibetan government-in-exile is in McLeod Ganj (upper Dharamsala), a picturesque town ... in the Indian Himalayas.

Anandpur Sahib

Anandpur Sahib is a holy city in Punjab. Its historical significance to the Sikhs is second only to Amritsar. Hundreds of Sikhs once embraced martyrdom here...

Nagarjunakonda

About 1,700 years ago, Nagarjunakonda flourished as a city and a great religious and educational center of Brahmanism and Buddhism in ... south India...

Melting Girls, Serpent Women
A day trip to the Pushkar camel fair that attracts over 250,000 visitors from India and abroad. Villagers turn up for both business and pleasure...

Nalanda University

Nalanda in Bihar, India, is one of the most spectacular archaeological finds on the subcontinent. Nalanda was once a famous Buddhist monastery and university...

Death in the Afternoon
A hot Sunday afternoon in Mexico City. The largest bullring in the world is packed with feisty locals. Restless, they whistle and hoot before the main event
...

The Rann of Kutch
Once an extension of the Arabian Sea, the Rann ("salt marsh") has been closed off by centuries of silting. During Alexander's time it was a navigable lake, ...

Rock Shelters of Bhimbetka
Bhimbetka remained a center of human activity from the lower Paleolithic times—the oldest [rock] paintings are believed to be 12,000 years old ...

Land of the Asiatic Lion
The only lions in the wild outside Africa are in the Indian state of Gujarat in the Sasan Gir Forest Reserve, created in 1913 and accorded sanctuary status in 1965...

White Desert, Egypt NEW!
Scenes from the hauntingly beautiful White Desert in the eastern Sahara, with its otherworldly white chalk rocks.

LGBT Pride Parade, 2008 NEW!
The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) Pride Celebration & Parade in San Francisco, 2008.

Teotihuacan, Mexico City NEW!
Teotihuacan, famous for its pyramids, was the grandest city in Mesoamerica during the Classic Period (150-450 CE).

Ghost Town in the Levant NEW!
Quneitra was once a bustling town in the Golan Heights ... now it is a ghost town. Scenes from my visit to Quneitra, Syria, 2001. Music by Fairuz Wahdon.

A Sunday in São Paulo NEW!

Wander the streets of the most energetic and cosmopolitan metropolis of Brazil.

Whirling Dervishes NEW!
Whirling dervishes performing at a restaurant in Damascus, Syria, 2001 (plus a titillating dinner buffet!)

Halloween in the Castro NEW!
Anthropologically curious footage from the Castro district, San Francisco.

 
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