Category Archives: Travel Blogs

Small galleries of travel images with narrative.

The Kumbh Mela, Haridwar India

Every three years the Hindu people of India flock in their millions to participate in the Kumbh Mela and to bathe in one of the sacred rivers at four holy locations. It is said that a dip during the Kumbh Mela takes humans out of the circle of life and death and into a state known as Mosksha. 2010 was the turn of Haridwar, in Uttar Pradesh state (220 kilometers from Delhi), where the River Ganges rushes from the foothills of the Himalayas onto the plains and the first geographic opportunity for mass bathing – and a mass bathing it really is! This year an estimated 70 million souls took part during the 3 months of the festival, with 15-17 million bathing in and around Haridwar on the holiest day, Shahi Shan, Wednesday 14th April. This is largest religious festival on the planet, 15 million is about twice the population of Switzerland.

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Auschwitz and Birkenau Death Camps

It was a bitingly cold winters day in 2008 when we visited Auschwitz and Birkenau concentration and extermination camps. I had a pretty good idea of what to expect but not how the ensuing visit would make me feel or the memories that would stay with me.
We entered Auschwitz 1 under the infamous arch and were greeted with the words “ARBEIT MACHT FREI”, (work sets you free). As foreboding as Auschwitz 1 is with it’s fences and barbed wire, sentry towers and blocks of brick built prison buildings it did not prepare me for my visit to Auschwitz 2 – Birkenau.

Read my journal and see my Black and White images.

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South Park Street Cemetery, Kolkata, India

South Park Street Cemetery was opened in 1767 for the employees and families of the East India Company and early colonials. Tropical illnesses and problems at childbirth were the main causes of death and many of the young wives interred were not long off the ships from England, lured no doubt by the promise of a luxurious lifestyle with a gallant and well heeled young officer. Many tombs are in the shape of massive neo-classical pyramids, pavilions, obelisks and pagodas and the names on the tombs are a veritable “who’s who” of the time. See photographs taken there in 2008.

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