It’s quite galling for an enthusiastic traveller like me to discover that while she’s been off exploring distant places, there are gems at her doorstep she hasn’t a clue about. This is how I felt when a culinary historian friend told me about the many happy afternoons he has spent in Delhi’s Little Tibet, Majnu ka Tilla. “It’s a tiny neighbourhood in north Delhi, but the minute you enter it, you’re in a completely different world,” he says. During my years at the North Campus of Delhi University, I vaguely remember going to eat momos somewhere on the banks of the Yamuna, but the place Ashish Chopra describes seems quite different. “Since the 1960s, Tibetans have settled down in Majnu ka Tilla, and have built hotels, shops, monasteries…indeed, their entire lives there,” he says. “Its narrow lanes hide many Tibetan marvels, ranging from authentic food to vignettes of their daily lives.” I beg him to show me MkT, as it is locally known, through his eyes, and he kindly obliges.
So off we go, one sunny afternoon, to peruse the mysteries of Majnu ka Tilla, which turns out to be a stone’s throw from Delhi University’s North Campus and iseasily reached by the Delhi Metro. “This place is named after a ferryman who rowed people across the Yamuna as a service to god. He became so wrapped up in spiritual musings that people began to call him Majnu, after the legendary lover driven to near insanity,” says Chopra. “Later, when a gurudwara was built here, it was named after him…” Tibetan refugees settled here in the early ’60s, after the Dalai Lama went into exile to Dharamsala. Today their next generation lives in the area officially known as Aruna Nagar. They call it Little Tibet or Majnu ka Tilla.
So passing by Thangka tailors, vendors selling baskets of fresh greens, travel agencies advertising buses to Nepal, Ladakh and Spiti and strangely enough, a couple of immigration agents — we walk straight up to Big Apple. It’s a small thali restaurant, but what wondrous thalis it serves! The Bhutanese thali I order comes with a robust beef and cheese stew (there’s a chicken version too). Their meat momos arrive, beautifully flavoured and bursting with liquidy goodness. Chopra’s partner, the beauteous Prescilla Zinyu, orders a Tibetan thali that is equally good. Then I learn about the non-alcoholic house beer, home-brewed with fresh pineapple juice. Of course I have to try some! The meal goes on and on, and so do I.
Groaning after the long lunch, Chopra and Zinyu make me stop at a Tibetan grocer selling everything from tsampa (the toasted barley Tibetan staple) to sunflower seeds. We buy a load of exotic provisions as well as a bagful of pokchoy and Chinese cabbage at a fraction of their price in the rest of Delhi. Zinyu and I decide to walk around MkT while Chopra drinks coffee and soaks in the sun. “Majnu ka Tilla has been a haven for me,” says Choden, the sweet-faced woman who runs a roadside stall selling Nepalese woolens. “When I came here from Tibet 10 years ago, I was alone with two small kids. Delhi terrified me as it was so different. But I felt at home here.” However, as the afternoon progresses to evening, I chat with more people and realise that others are seeking ways to escape MkT and India.
Tashi does put the pleasures of MkT into perspective. But it’s dusk and the hues of Little Tibet are mellowing down. Incense smoke and strains of Om Mani Padme Hum float across the alleys. A roadside barbecue emits heavenly aromas of cumin-marinated beef. Nearby, a man squats over a pan of Gyuma, Tibetan sausages. The place is filling up fast with locals, impecunious students and the odd tourist. “Hey, you said the momos are cheap here, but I hope these dhabas also serve beer,” says a young college kid to friends as they elbow past an old beggar. “Let’s hope the place is clean!” As I make my way out, it seems to me that the hustle and bustle and technicolour charms of Little Tibet hide the loneliness of that long-gone Majnu — surrounded by people but truly understood by few.