Discovering
India!
Discovery Channel launches its six-episode programme, The Story of India
Virumandi has an interesting genetic history. Thanks to research by
Prof. Pitchappan and his team from the Department of Immunology, Madurai
Kamarajar University, it was discovered that Virumandi’s DNA h early
settlers of India. But the credit for bringing this sensational scientific
finding out of the rarefied world of genetic research goes to Discovery
Channel.
While discussing the roots of the Indian nation, the first of Discovery’s
six-episode programme, “The Story of India” (on air at 8 p.m. every
Wednesday starting from April 16 and retelecast every following Sunday
at 11 a.m.), gives details about the experiment that has turned Virumandi
into a celebrity.
Historian Michaeal Wood, through whose eyes the viewer gets to witness
the wonders of India, is treated to a varied fare as he walks around
the Ganges Plain, “the lost cities of Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro” and
other archeological sites which have not ceased to throw surprises.
His attempt to unearth Indian origins takes him out of the country —
to Pakistan and Turkmenistan.
Another episode discusses why India has been a melting pot of ideas.
With great drama, the events that changed the lives of Siddhartha and
Asoka are related. Wood visits the country’s holy sites and meets up
with the Dalai Lama.
The third episode traces the beginnings of international trade in the
Indian subcontinent. It tells how the “Spice Route and Silk Roads” changed
the landscape of Indian trade in the centuries immediately following
the death of Christ. Wood gets to sit on traditional boats and Indian
trains, as he retraces India’s ancient trading trails.
Subsequent episodes are about medieval India’s achievements in astronomy,
the evolution of wrought-iron technology, the making of the world’s
first sex manual, the Kama Sutra, the rituals specific to the Chola
temple (1010 A.D.) in Tanjore, a visit to Multan, a trail through the
deserts and the Mughal cities.
The programme culminates in an exploration of events that took place
during British rule and a commentary on how India has grown following
Independence.