By Louis Mullinder
[excerpt; 1996 Christmas newsletter]
Meintjeskop Ditaba II/1998
But I have seen Afrasiab' s cities only,
Samarkand, Bokhara and
lone Khiva in the waste,
And the black Toorkmun tents; and only drunk
The desert rivers,
Moorghub and Tejend,
Kohik,
and where the Kalmuks feed their sheep,
The
Northern Sir, and the great Oxus stream,
The yellow Oxus.
Matthew Arnold, 'Sohrab
and Rustum'
Marion and I had always wanted to see the
old silk road, and so we set out in the middle of August, together with two
very dear friends - Simoneta, an Italian friend who lives in Paris, and our
English friend, Peter. Our aim was to trundle through Uzbekistan in a minibus
and to soak up the essence of that ancient and glorious civilisation, but also
to visit the bazaars" In short - it was wonderful I We set out from St
Petersburg by air via Kazan, the capital of Tatarstan: any traveller's worst
nightmare, with officious bureaucrats, no bathroom facilities, overcrowding, the
inevitable pervasive odour of stale Russian garlic sausage, but fortunately no
live chickens or goats!! Peter had flown directly from London and so we all met
up in Tashkent. We travelled the next day to Samarkand, via a small market town
in Kazakhstan, Ettisai - the place of seven shadows or seven shallow lakes -
specifically to visit a rug bazaar; the palette of colours was simply amazing
and having successfully haggled over a beautiful Merv- Tekke torba - a tent bag
- for some time, we left for Samarkand. After a comfortable journey of some
five hours from Tashkent, we arrived in Samarkand.
Sarnarkand is a lovely city, filled with spectacular
monuments, particularly from the time of Timur the Lame (alsoknown as
Tamberlane), much having been destroyed prior to that by Genghis Khan. The
Registan, the place of sand, with the mosques and madrassahs, or religious
schools, is most impressive, as are the necropolis, with it., stunning mosaics,
and the mosque housing the graves of Tirnur, and his son Ulughbek.
The Bibi-i-Kharnun mosque, in particular,
with its superb decorative calligraphy cannot be forgotten. The architect is
said to have fallen in love with Bibi-i-Kharnun, the favourite wife of Tirnur,
while overseeing the building of the mosque, and, she, so very impressed by his
work asked what reward he should have; his request that he be allowed to kiss
her was granted, but the mark remained on her cheek, and Timur decreed that all
women should henceforth be veiled - the story, told in the shade of the mosque forecourt,
seemed to add just that touch of mystique.
The Uzbeks are wonderfully friendly people,
all dressed in the most colourful national costume, and with very open, relaxed
religious views. We avoided hotels, preferring to stay a la bed and breakfast: Zoya's
in Samarkand is absolutely to be recommended - the most wonderful vegetarian
cuisine! From Samarkand we made some day trips: to Pendjikent in Tajikistan,
where we saw a wonderful archaeological diggings dating from the seventh to the
ninth century AD and destroyed by invading Arabs. Unlike most ruins, in
Pendjikent one perceives well what once stood there - for the uninitiated it is
difficult when most archaeologists point to a mound of rubble and tell one it
was a temple, or something else.
The Tajiks are very surly, like Russians,
but then they are having a little civil war there, I suppose I En route we
stopped at Urgut, a market town in Uzbekistan, to look for suzanis, embroidered
Uzbek wall hangings - needless to say we managed to find some lovely ones' We
also visited Shakhrisabz, the birthplace of Timur, which was the most amazing
portals, but sadly little else of the original palace.
Lunch was memorable in that our guide, Raisa,
a charming lady, haggled in the kitchen and managed to find some eggs, which
she proceeded to boil: the restaurant was a throw-back to the all-pervasive bad
Soviet cuisine,' most un-Uzbek in character.
Stopping by briefly at Ulughbek's
observatory - poor man was murdered by the priests, since his scientific
approach threatened to erode their power base - we left Samarkand and, on with
the silk road, after a journey of five hours, we arrived at Bukharal,
A wonderful city, with people living and
working in the old city itself: bustling, full of life, magnificent architecture
and wonderful pavement cafes, and tea-houses - or chaihani - where we enjoyed
melon, salad, and lamb kebab. Bukhara is charm itself - how much more charming
had the Soviets not drained the pools leaving the stork colonies no food - but
so charming none the less because the city as such is preserved, unlike
Samarkand where 'civilisation' has encroached. The history, just so interesting
at every turn, from the imprisonment of Queen Victoria's emissaries in a
foul-smelling pit in the Ark, or citadel, through to the complete misnomer of
the 'Bokara' carpets, which are in fact Turkmeni, and were only ever sold in
the markets of Bukhara!! Our small collection of knotted artifacts and woven
suzanis naturally increased as we made our way through the country along the
roads lined with mulberry trees!
We then set out through the Kizylkum desert
[desert of red sand] to Khiva, which lies almost on the border with
Turmenistan, a journey of some seven hours, which passed quite easily as we
sped past the camels, stopping briefly on the banks of the Arnu Dar'ya or Oxus
river Khiva is like a Hollywood set in the desert
- it is now an open air museum, but unlike Bukhara, has little atmosphere,
although one must say it is stunning architecturally, absolutely stunning, especially
by moonlight. Indeed it was on that brightly moonlit night that our rug
collection increased by a beautifully rich Ersari Turkoman hali serai - or
palace carpet !
From Khiva we set out on a day-trip to
Kunya-Urgench in Turkmenistan to view the archaeological ruins - the
Turkrnenis, like the Tajiks, are also surly and seem very closed in comparison
to the Uzbeks.Peter and I also visited a nature reserve in Karakalpakstan - the
place of the black- hatted people - which is also to be found on the banks of
the Arnu Oar'ya, incidentally the main river which feeds the Aral Sea, now a
complete ecological disaster due to excessive drainage by Soviet engineers to
irrigate an ever- increasing cotton production in Uzbeki.tan. the Uzbeks seem
to be continuing in the same vein!
Karakalpakstan enjoys the status of an
autonomous region within Uzbekistan, lying mainly in the Karakum desert - the
desert of black sand. The reserve was not particularly inspiring, nor did we
see any black-hatted people! The story goes that in the resurgence of
nationalism and re- adoption of old symbols, they couldn't find anyone who
remembered what the black hat looked like!
We returned to Tashkent in a creaking
propeller-driven aeroplane, completely overweight - rugs weigh so much - except
for our very selves: the rich Uzbek cuisine played havoc with each of us from
time to time, and can be recommended in place of a visit to a fat farm I We
were not enamoured of Tashkent particularly, and spent a few days with some
friends there - Michael and Felicity Timcke - enjoying a welcome respite after
ten days of travel in hot and dusty climes. The Museum of Applied Arts is
certainly worth a visit.
The fact that when we got to the airport
and discovered that we had been soldtickets for flights that did not exist, nor
had they ever existed, and with Simoneta then being arrested on arrival in
Moscow, after we finally managed to leave Tashkent, for not having a visa, is
another charming twist to our sojourn - the joys of travelling in the former
Soviet Union!
Peter had by this time already arrived in
England, having had the foresight to use a European airline.
While the Soviets have destroyed much since
the twenties, one wonders how much the Uzbeks would have preserved: the borders
were drawn artificially under Stalin anyway ... one also wonders how democracy
and increasing globalisation will change the region - not always for the
better, we feel!
And so we visited Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Karakalpakstan and Turkmenistan, having stopped on the way in Tatarstan .. almost like a nursery rhyme ... and popped across borders with seemingly no control a simply wonderful holiday, and completely different from the gracious and beautiful St Petersburg
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