Home
of one of the world's oldest civilizations, and several
of the world's great religions, India has been changing
and re-shaping itself for as long as anywhere on earth,
forever producing new forms of culture and absorbing
new influences. You'll see spectacular carved temples
and gleaming marble palaces, lonely Himalayan lamaseries
and far-flung dusty villages where council meetings
are held under the shade of a banyan tree, plodding
camels, holy cows, snake charmers and wild-haired sadhus;
you'll also find a dynamic state racing into the twenty-first
century.
The
boundaries of modern India, fixed some fifty years ago,
are merely the latest in a four-thousand-year sequence
of redefinitions that have produced one of the most
heterogenous societies in the world. The land where
the Buddha lived and preached, and where the Moghul
Muslims erected the Taj Mahal, has recreated itself
as both a majority Hindu nation and the world's largest
secular democracy, home to almost one thousand million
people.We will presnt India in terms of her tourist
Regions: the North, the Himalayas, the West, the East,
and the South.
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