Roads to riches, road to doom
While the influx of pilgrims and tourists may have changed some parts of Himachal Pradesh, other parts have resisted the destabilising influences of highways. But will this still hold true as the network of roads expands to further exploit the state´s natural wealth?
Gods, sages and renegades apart, the hills were traditionally a forbidding place for plains folk. It was the British who, escaping from the hot, dusty, diseased ´India´, began to dot the Himalayan landscape with hill stations. Sanaloriums, cantonments and exclusive retreats sprang up on the cooler slopes, amidst the fragrance of pine and cedar. The annual migration to the Himalaya of people who mattered, or were too ill to matter, assumed the nature of a ritual. To spend the summer in the hills was no ordinary privilege. Even the humble babu who followed the sahib with files revelled in the second-hand importance that it gave him. Shimla, the summer residence of the Viceroy, became particularly important as a centre of British social and political activity — not to mention the decisions of imperial significance that were taken inside its (in-roofed chalets.