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OVERLAND – 1964-2000
Ilay hitched back from Austria in 1962
then, for a bet, in April 1964, he set
off with £10 to tour round northern
France, sleeping rough and visiting
cathedral towns. Hitching to Athens
later that year he met up with a German
philosophy student. That led him into
Asia. They sailed to Chios and Izmir,
then continued through Turkey, Syria,
Jordan, Palestine, Iraq and Iran.
In 1965, he travelled overland to
Pakistan, India and Nepal. War slammed
the Indo-Pak frontier shut behind him,
so he returned by sea, deck-class, from
Bombay to Basra. He crossed Iraq and
Turkey, then took the Orient Express to
Paris. After five years in London and
Paris, he set out for India again in
1970. The hippie era was at its height,
the overland road embellished with sex,
drugs and rock’n’roll. He rented a
cottage in Goa but, after several
months, dissatisfied with the Scene, he
continued alone through Karnataka,
Kerala and Tamil Nadu, then via Andhra
Pradesh and Orissa to Calcutta and
Delhi. On the train towards Pakistan and
home, he met a student from Haryana who
was to lead him indirectly into
Shekhawati.
Air fares were high, so his first nine
journeys to or from Iran or India
(1964-1975) combined hitch-hiking with
buses and trains. The route varied, but
always included a few days rest in
Istanbul. In Iran a gilded figure of the
Shah stood in the centre of every town
and village and the Sevak, the secret
police, was everywhere, hunting for folk
tarnished by thoughts of democracy.
Despite its beauty, Iran was an unhappy
country, humiliated by foreign
interference. Oil wealth had been its
downfall, until the Islamic Revolution
of 1979 restored its sense of pride.
The route onwards to India passed
through Afghanistan or southwards across
Baluchistan. The former was favourite,
taking in Herat, Kandhahar and Kabul
before descending through the Khyber
Pass to Peshawar. In Pakistan, once part
of British India, he would divert to
repair his grandfather’s headstone, a
marble cross, always vulnerable, always
smashed. In India, he headed for Delhi,
where there were friends.
In 1975, he set off by motorcycle,
reaching Istanbul before the bike was
stolen. Hitching a lift to Teheran, he
continued to India. That bike journey,
unfinished business, was postponed until
2000 when he returned from Churu to
Purbeck with a friend, Peter Ducane,
both on a 1962 Royal Enfield 350cc
motorcycle. They sidestepped the
hostility created from 2001 onwards by
El Quaeda and Anglo-American forces.
Apart from that bike trip, his post-1975
Anglo-India commutes were by air.
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