The extravagant Gandhi Monument on the Pondicherry Esplanade.  |          
I am a huge fan of South Asian colonial architecture — but, sadly,  not too many of the pre 19th century gems survive.
          Of the Portuguese-Spanish colonial treasures there’s really  only a  few left: Galle, in Sri Lanka; the Intra Muros section of  Manila; Banda Neira  in Indonesia’s Spice Islands; and Panjim, the  capital of Goa, in India.
          Pondicherry is really the only surviving example of French   Colonial 19th century town planning and architecture. The old French   colony is 100 kilometers south of Chennai (Madras), once the 18th   century seat of the mighty British East India Company.
Aurobitty channels Lady Edwina Mountbatten in Cluny Park.  |              The former palace of the French Colonial Governor-General, now the home of Pondicherry’s Governor.  |            
Many of Pondicherry’s heritage buildings are painted like buildings in the French Riviera.  |              |
Air Asia now  flies to Chennai from Kuala Lumpur in under  four hours. And from Chennai  Airport there is a new, four-lane highway  that drops one at the  French-colonial-coastal fantasy-land in just 90  minutes.
          I stayed at the  delightful Hotel de L’Orient, a Neemrana  Non-hotel (their term). The building is a late 18th  century townhouse  with superb 18th and 19th century  interiors.
A priest greets guests in the Hotel de l’Orient’s lobby.  |              |
The French quarter  of Pondicherry — as  opposed to the Tamil quarter next door — survives in no small part due  to  semi-divine intervention. In the 1950s popular seer Sri Aurobindo  and his  French born ‘divine spouse’, The Mother, bought up huge tracts  of historic  Pondicherry and restored them; their ashram buildings were  painted Christian  Dior grey and white.
          Further inland  they founded a commune called Auroville which  survives today as a model of  inter-racial harmony, alternate  lifestyles, and unkempt median strips.
Meditation Centre in Auroville Pondicherry  |              ||
Unesco and the French government have, over the past few decades, donated generously to the restoration of many heritage buildings too: some of these are painted mustard and white in the French colonial tradition. French institutions such as the Lycée, the Académie Française and the École Française d'Extrême-Orient (EFEO) survive to this day.
The gorgeous librarian at the École Française d'Extrême-Orient.  |              A Chola period Garuda statue in the École Française d'Extrême-Orient library’s collection.  |            
In the EEO library, which is open to the public daily, I discovered a sari-clad lady librarian of such indescribable beauty that I had to request a book! They had thousands of research books from the 18th century to the present day and I discovered that South Asian Art and Architecture was the EEO’s specialty. Their museum contains some striking examples of ancient and ‘medieval’ Tamil classical art.
 ‘Ancient and Medieval’ is the prescribed  look  for most of the area’s European, American and Australian  ashram-loyal  inhabitants too — earth tones and muted hues are all the  rage in tropical day-wear.
          There is a  pervading sense of piousness amidst the pizza parlours and artshops too —  rather like Bali in the 1980s.
• • •
On my first morning I woke early and walked to Cluny Park in the centre of town: I strolled past the multi-hued kiddies grouped outside the Lycee; past the vibrant coloured Tamil housewives parked outside UNIVERSAL spice store; past the old Mexican fortune-teller in an orange sarong sitting on the footpath, and past the Tamil flower ladies outside the busy Hindu temple opposite.
          The park was   alive with morning meditators and fitness fanatics, all  dotted amongst  the colonial-era garden ornaments.  Tragically, brutalist,  rough-hewn-granite-columned pergolas have recently been  installed at  strategic points by a local architectural conservationist.
          What it is about  architectural conservationists? About how  the wheels fall off when they move  into the garden. Dr. Kinsley, in his  famous report in the 1950s, attributed this  to the sexual repression  of the over- fastidious.
Mahatma Gandhi's monument  |            
          At the  opposite  end of the scale, successive joyous, local, communist  governments have added  all sorts of funky statuary in Pondicherry’s  many squares, including a monument  to Mahatma Gandhi on the esplanade  that is breathtaking in its ugliness.  Chola-Era Hindu columns are  ‘pretty-littered’ amidst rows of Orly-Modern-not-quite-Phillipe  Stark  street lamps.
          I was oftened  relieved to return to my hotel, a haven of chic homo-erotica.
25th March 2012: To the  spiritual hub of New Pondicherry 
          Almost immediately behind the Raj Niwas,  (Governors Palace),  are the pearl grey and white Ashram buildings.  The  atmosphere in these  streets on the French, seaward side of the Canal is  serene.  The  compound of the section of the Sri Aurobindo Ashram  (occasionally open  to the public) encircles what was once the grand 18th  century villa of  the former, distinguished governor Dupleix, (1742-54).   Under the  spreading branches of a miraculously long lived Service Tree is  the  Samadhi containing the mortal remains of Sri Aurobindo who left his body  in  1950, and Mira Alfassa known as the Mother who was interred there  after  her death in November 1973.  
The Mother and Sri Aurobindo, in 1950. (Courtesy photo by Premasagar on Flickr)  |            
The ambience here is  one of  peace and quiet as people come here for meditation. The ashramites and   visiting devotees move quietly and perform obeisances. The  Mother’s  love for flowers is reflected in the Ashram’s gardens that are lush   flowering plants such as orchids. A remarkable miniature  cactus garden  can be  seen just inside the entrance. 
  
  I hugged the tree, following the example of my spiritual guide,  Jan Allen, and was rewarded with a blast of  well-being.
  On cloud nine I floated towards the soft-grey dining hall, removed  my  sandals and squatted down on my haunches next to  shiny stainless steel  bucket of dal (chick pea slop).
          Everywhere neat queues of weathered devotees formed. People  ate in  silence or read from the collected writings of the great guru. ‘Prefects’ (burly Belgians in starched  kotha pyjamas) stood guard.
          (One weatherd observer  did not notice the gentle expressions  of the sweet old ladies, and the quite  youthful students of the Ashram  school and the dear old male devotees with  their acquired wisdom and  gentleness. Ed.)
First Fleeter Nabob Johnny Allen and wife, Jan, the Lady Aurobitty Baby Push.  |            
The other side of the  Raj  Niwas is the Ashram Dining Hall where you can get a bite of organically   grown food that is prepared using a solar oven on the roof of the very  gracious  building.  The food is lovingly prepared and served by  devotees, it varies  each day but is always simple vegetarian fare. 
          My friend Jan told me how she used to present her son to the   mother every year on his birthday and stay at the Ashram for a few days  for  fine tune.
  When the mother was dying all the disciples moved into  the Ashram for a long vigil. 
One night Jan was awaken by the sound of  concrete  walls being broken — a gentle tap-tap-tap-ing that grew into a  din; the walls  of Shri Aurobindo’s tomb (he had died in 1950) were  being opened so that The  Mother’s body could be interned with his.
          In the East, it is only in India that ‘foreign living saints  are  afforded the same adulation as native spiritual gurus.