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KERALA,
INDIA |
Kerala
is a very easy place to simply sit back and enjoy. The name means “land
of coconuts”, and the palms shade nearly the entire state from the
tropical sun; many call the beach at Kovalam the best in India; visitors
can spend a day riding small ferries through the backwater lagoons or
watching elephants cavort in the wildlife sanctuaries; the spicy food
may be the best vegetarian cuisine on the planet.
But for
me, the real reason to visit Kerala, which lies at the southwestern tip
of the subcontinent, is the Intellectual adventure: Kerala is a bizarre
anomaly among developing nations, a place that offers real hope for the
future of the Third World. Consider: This small state in India, though
not much larger than Maryland, has a population as big as California’s
and a per capita annual income of less than $ 300. But its infant
mortality rate is low, its liaeracy rate among the highest on Earth, and
its birthrate below America’s and falling faster. Kerala’s citizens live
nearly as long as Americans or Europeans. Though mostly a land of
paddy-covered plains, statistically Kerala stands out as the Mount
Everest of social development; there’s truly no place like it.
In the mornings, from anywhere in Kerala, you can hear loud music from
the Hindu temples, wailing muezzins at the mosques, and church bells
ringing at the cathedrals. Religious tolerance is just one reason for
Kerala’s success. The state government has effected sweeping land
reforms and spends almost half of its budget on health and education. A
heritage of female-headed households means women have always been equal
participants here. Unlike almost everywhere else in Asia, women
outnumber men in Kerala, suggesting there has been no selective abortion
or female infanticide.
Kerala is not a quiet spot. It has a rate of newspaper readership that
is among the highest in the world and plenty of never-ending political
arguments. Parades of striking bus drivers or medical students or
kathakali dancers block traffic in the capital of Trivandrum almost
daily. But for me, that engagement with the world is one of the best
things about the place. Keralites meet you on more or less equal terms,
with neither the subservience nor the rage you’ll find in much of the
Third World.
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National Geographic Traveler
In its October 1999 special collector’s issue, National Geographic
Traveler selected Kerala as one of the 50 destinations of a lifetime.
The feature by Bill McKibben celebrated Kerala as a Paradise
Found - one of the ten in the world.
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National Geographic traveler
October 1999
National Geographic traveler
April 2001
Conde Nast Traveler
March 2002
Weekend Financial Times
London January 2001
Geo
Saison
February 2002
Time
April 2000
What the world says
Prestigious awards that came Kerala way |