Glimpses of India — Class 10 English (First Flight)
"India: a country of countries — each state a world in itself."
1. About the Chapter
'Glimpses of India' is THREE SHORT PIECES showcasing different regions of India:
- 'A Baker from Goa' by Lucio Rodrigues — Portuguese influence in Goa
- 'Coorg' by Lokesh Abrol — coffee paradise in Karnataka
- 'Tea from Assam' by Arup Kumar Datta — tea gardens of Assam
This chapter is a CELEBRATION of India's regional diversity.
2. PART 1: A Baker from Goa
Author: Lucio Rodrigues
Setting
- Goa, India's smallest state
- Portuguese colonised Goa for 451 years (1510–1961)
- Bakers known as 'pader' in Goan culture
Key Points
Portuguese Influence
- Goa was a Portuguese colony
- Many cultural traditions remain
- Especially BREAD-making
The Pader (Baker)
- Bakers visit homes daily
- Sound bamboo sticks ('jhang, jhang') to announce arrival
- Children rush out to see them
Traditional Bread
- POI (round, flat)
- Round bread loaves
- Sweet bread for occasions
- Bread is essential for Goan meals (especially Christian)
Occasions for Bread
- Marriage cakes (without bread, no marriage!)
- Christmas
- Engagement parties
- Daily breakfast (with butter, jam)
Baker's Dress
- Distinctive 'KABAI' — single-piece long frock-like dress
- Half-pants and shirt (modern)
- Made by hand
Baker's Income
- Bakery was prosperous
- Baker family well-off
- 'Plump physique' = sign of prosperity
Themes
- Cultural fusion — Indian + Portuguese
- Tradition persisting despite modernisation
- Childhood nostalgia of bread vendors
3. PART 2: Coorg
Author: Lokesh Abrol
Setting
- Coorg (now KODAGU), Karnataka
- Smallest district of Karnataka
- 'Scotland of India'
- Between Karnataka's coast and Mysuru
Key Points
Natural Beauty
- Coffee plantations everywhere
- Rolling hills, evergreen forests
- Cardamom, rosewood, teak trees
- Wildlife: deer, elephants, langur monkeys
- River Kaveri (Cauvery) originates here
Coorg People
- Independent, proud, hospitable
- Kodavas are martial race
- Indian Army recruits many Coorgis
- General Cariappa (first Indian Army chief) from Coorg
Origin Legend
- Coorgis believed to be of GREEK or ARABIC descent
- Long, black cloak = of Kashmiri/Arab style
- Different from rest of South India
Adventure Tourism
- River rafting
- Canoeing
- Rappelling
- Rock climbing
- Mountain biking
- Trekking to:
- Brahmagiri Hills
- Tibetan monasteries in Bylakuppe
- Nisargadhama (river island)
- Iruppu Falls
Coffee
- Coorg = major coffee producer
- Sweet aroma of coffee fills air
- High-quality Arabica coffee
Wildlife
- Animals from elephants to:
- Macaques
- Malabar squirrels
- Langur monkeys
- Slender loris (nocturnal)
Themes
- Natural beauty of India
- Cultural distinctiveness of regions
- Adventure tourism
- Pride in local heritage
4. PART 3: Tea from Assam
Author: Arup Kumar Datta
Setting
- Assam, Northeast India
- World's LARGEST TEA-GROWING REGION
- Pranjol and Rajvir on train from Calcutta to Assam
Story
Pranjol (an Assamese boy) invites his friend Rajvir to visit Assam during vacation. Pranjol's father is manager of a TEA ESTATE.
Key Points
Tea Trivia (Rajvir shares)
-
Worldwide, 80 crore (800 million) cups of tea drunk daily
-
Tea is from a plant called CAMELLIA SINENSIS
-
TWO LEGENDS of tea's origin:
Chinese Legend:
- Emperor Shen Nung drank boiled water
- Leaves from a nearby plant fell in
- It tasted refreshing — tea born
Indian Legend:
- Buddhist monk Bodhi Dharma fell asleep meditating
- Cut off his eyelids in anger
- Where they fell, tea plants grew
- Chewing them kept him awake!
Tea in India
- Brought to India by BRITISH (~1830s)
- First tea garden: Assam, 1837
- Now: India is largest producer (after China)
- Major regions: Assam, Darjeeling, Nilgiris
The Tea Garden
- 'Sea of orderly green bushes'
- Workers (mostly women) plucking leaves
- Process: pluck → wither → roll → ferment → dry → grade
Cultural Importance
- India's most popular beverage
- Chai = morning ritual
- Tea industry employs lakhs in Assam
Themes
- Indian agriculture and global influence
- Travel broadens horizons
- Knowledge and curiosity (Rajvir)
- Heritage of tea cultivation
5. Comparing the Three Parts
| Feature | Goa Baker | Coorg | Tea from Assam |
|---|---|---|---|
| Region | Goa (West) | Karnataka (South) | Assam (Northeast) |
| Focus | Bread/baker | Nature/adventure | Tea industry |
| Influence | Portuguese | Indigenous + Greek/Arabic legend | British |
| Mood | Nostalgic | Adventurous | Educational |
| Tradition | Daily bread routine | Hospitality, martial | Tea cultivation |
6. Themes (Combined)
1. India's Diversity
- North, South, East, West — all distinct
- Each region has unique foods, customs, history
2. Cultural Fusion
- Goa: Portuguese + Indian
- Coorg: Greek/Arabic legend + Karnataka
- Assam: British + Indian agriculture
3. Food and Culture
- Bread, coffee, tea — all connect cultures
4. Travel and Discovery
- Each piece is a 'glimpse' (small window)
- Encourages exploring India
5. Pride in Heritage
- Local pride in traditions
- Each region preserves its identity
7. Important Vocabulary
A Baker from Goa
- Pader: Goan baker
- Kabai: long single-piece dress
- Moulders: those who shape bread
- Sweet bread (bol): festive bread
Coorg
- Kodavas: native Coorg people
- Pollibetta: a tourist spot
- Bylakuppe: Tibetan settlement
Tea from Assam
- Camellia sinensis: tea plant scientific name
- Tea estate: large tea farm
- Pluckers: tea-leaf pickers
8. Common Mistakes
-
All three pieces have same author — NO. Three different authors.
-
Goa was British colony — NO. PORTUGUESE colony (1510-1961).
-
Coorg is in Kerala — NO. Coorg/Kodagu is in Karnataka.
-
Tea was Indian originally — Tea was brought to India by BRITISH around 1830s. Two legends exist (Chinese and Indian).
-
Coorgis are South Indians ethnically — Origin legend says GREEK or Arabic descent (unique to South India).
9. Lessons / Morals
- India is incredibly diverse — celebrate it
- Local traditions carry deep history
- Travel is education
- Cultural fusion enriches us
- Heritage must be preserved
10. Worked Examples
Example 1: Goa
What is special about Goan bread tradition?
- Portuguese influence (451 years of colonisation). Bakers ('pader') still visit homes daily with bamboo sticks. Bread is essential for marriages, Christmas, and meals. The traditional 'kabai' dress is still worn. Goan bakers are prosperous and well-respected.
Example 2: Coorg
Why is Coorg called 'Scotland of India'?
- Coorg has rolling green hills, mist, coffee plantations, rivers, evergreen forests — resembling Scotland. Adventure tourism (rafting, trekking) and martial pride (General Cariappa) add to its uniqueness. Coorgis claim Greek/Arabic descent.
Example 3: Tea
Describe the two legends of tea's origin.
- Chinese: Emperor Shen Nung drank boiled water; leaves from a nearby plant fell in. Refreshing taste = birth of tea.
- Indian: Buddhist monk Bodhi Dharma cut his eyelids to stay awake; tea plants grew where they fell. Chewing leaves prevented sleep.
11. Indian Heritage Highlights
Goa
- Basilica of Bom Jesus — UNESCO heritage
- Old Goa churches — Portuguese architecture
- Carnival — pre-Lent festival
- Tiatr — Konkani drama
Coorg
- General K.M. Cariappa — first Indian Army chief
- General K.S. Thimayya — another Coorg general
- Kaveri river origin (sacred)
- Coffee — major export
Assam
- Assam tea — world-famous CTC variety
- Bihu — Assamese harvest festival
- One-horned rhinoceros at Kaziranga
- Brahmaputra river — life of Assam
12. Conclusion
'Glimpses of India' is a JOURNEY through India's diversity:
- Goa's BREAD culture
- Coorg's NATURE and people
- Assam's TEA gardens
These short pieces remind us:
- India is MANY countries in one
- Local TRADITIONS are precious
- TRAVEL is education
- HERITAGE must be celebrated
For Indian students:
- VISIT different states
- READ regional literature
- APPRECIATE diversity
- BE PROUD of Indian heritage
'Glimpses of India' — three windows into a vast and varied land.
