Savoy
Beckons In Summer And In Mussoorie’s Monsoons
Saeed Naqvi
I had never been advised to visit a hill
station in this fashion. The e-mail from an itinerant friend read: “The Savoy
in Mussoorie, which was once better than the Savoy on the Strand in London, is
promising to recapture its old form when it re opens. Earlier we visited
Mussoorie. Now we must visit the Savoy, because Mussoorie is too crowded.
Earlier, Savoy was the most elegant hotel in an exquisite hill station. Now
Savoy is being conceived as a magnificent resort – complete in every sense of
the term – a destination in itself, at a distance from a crowded hill station.
What is more it will provide respite from the sizzling heat in summer and an
experience of the monsoons – Saawan and Bhadon of our folk songs.” The
hyperbole was self evident. But having been denied a summer break from the
plains because of mother’s health, we decided to buy the hard-sell, now that my
mother was recovering. In fact we found ourselves among the first guests,
signing in on June 1, the date of Savoy’s inauguration. The grand garden party
(on lawns which were once the hotel’s tennis courts) had, among its many
guests, that wonderful chronicler of our times, one whose name is synonymous
with Mussoorie – Ruskin Bond.
Yes, the idea of Savoy, as spelt out in
my friend’s e-mail, is being realized in stages. The first phase consists in
the restoration of 50 rooms – restored like they were when the hotel opened in
1902, the peak of the Raj, just as the railways first reached Dehradun,
Edwardian furniture and forests worth of Oak carted up on bullock carts to create
the iconic, imperial haunt. When automobiles became available after the First
World War, Savoy became the universal rendezvous, not for Tom, Dick and Harry
but a category of aspirants a notch above them.
Jawaharlal Nehru, just the recreated
Englishman Thomas Babington Macaulay prescribed for the colonies, became a
patron, along with other members of the family, including daughter, Indira
Gandhi. In fact once, in 1938 to be precise, the British authorities had to
request him to vacate the premises because King Zahir Shah of Afghanistan was
also in residence. Since Britain’s relations with the King were at a delicate
stage, the presence of Nehru at the Savoy was, in imperial perception, loaded
with possibilities of intrigue.
Well, I do not wish to list the
Emperors, Kings, Viceroys, Princes and sundry sidekicks who stayed here. Nor
will I pretend to have fond memories of the place in days of yore. The closest
I came to the place was when my father had rented a bungalow on Gun Hill next
to Dr. M. Mujeeb, the great author of Indian Muslims, who helped me fill my
form for St. Stephens college were, let me add in parenthesis, I was never
admitted because my father insisted in keeping me on the straight and narrow by
sending me to Aligarh Muslim university from where I ran away. For the rest
read my book.
Yes, we did visit the Savoy as a gang of
four schoolboys – Vinod Mehta (the hot shot editor), Ashok Kwatra (trying to
retire with a French wife in Cheltenham), Azad Ahmad Khan, the richest amongst
us and the most generous. We pooled in our pocket money, borrowed some from
Azad, and took up residence in an inexpensive hotel to be able to visit the
Savoy, peep into the grandest dining hall in the Empire and ofcourse the
Writer’s Bar, once boasting of such clientele as Pearl S Buck and, ofcourse,
Rudyard Kipling.
We must have looked very silly,
teenagers pretending to be much older, in our suits, badly cut by our Lucknow
tailors.. Indeed Yeat’s poem on Keats comes to mind: “I see a schoolboy when I
think of him, his nose pressed hard against the sweet shop window”. Here there
were four such noses pressed hard against the window. It therefore feels nice,
now that the Savoy has been resurrected, and my wife and I can legitimately
reserve a table in the grand dining room.
We can now afford it in the summer and
believe it or not, in the monsoons, because there are enough cunning passages
and covered verandahs in the Savoy to keep you in fine fettle, walking indoors.
And when the clouds open up, that clear snowline has a divine glow and the
lights of Dehradun are like a starlit sky, upside down.
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