Monday to Friday driving through the
Republic of Ireland, from Dublin down the east coast to Cork, then speeding
across via Limerick to the Galway in the west and back again via Shannon town
to Dublin – one week, a world away from the bustling city that is Chennai –
inhaling the best of what academia had to offer – to say it was a heady
experience would be selling it short.
I was met at Dublin Airport
by Brian, a taxi driver in a suit and tie. Helping me with the luggage, he said
to me, “would you like to sit in the front seat or the back?” I say, “what do
you say?” He said, “Well, if you sit in front we can talk on the way to Cork .” I slid into the
front seat, quite unaware that we were going to be engaged in conversation every
minute of the three and half hour drive down to Cork . And
flow the conversation did, from the education system in Ireland , to
religious differences, to personal takes on abortion laws, to marriage, the
egalitarian attitude of the Irish, to the language itself. As Brian put it,
“When you reach Cork , you will already have an
impression of Ireland ,
which will add to your story.” That taxi ride certainly put me at ease in a new
land, not for nothing, I felt, has Ireland been voted the friendliest
nation, by Lonely Planet.
As we entered Cork , driving along the River Lee to find my
hotel, I was surprised to see a board saying, “The Independent Republic of
Cork.” I learn from Brian that the
people of Cork consider it the real capital of Ireland. I hear for the first time the oft-quoted
joke – “ A Cork
man with an inferiority complex thinks he is only as good as others.”
I
leave my bags in Hotel River Lee and rush back to find my taxi waiting. I get
dropped at Cork Institute of Technology. I also get a hug and a “Young lady,
you take care of yourself,” from Brian…
It was easy finding the other journalists
in CIT. I immediately bump into Bharat Joshi. Speedy
introductions follow, I meet Vikram Chaudhury, Maitri
Porecha, Jayant Sriram and Pankti Mehta.
Presentations at Cork Institute of
Technology waft all around. The meeting is held in the conference hall which is
circular – for better communication all around, we are told. Some of their
brightest students do innovative internships during their third year of
undergraduate degree we are told. We learn that the undergraduate degree is a
four year course, while a postgraduate one can be one year or two years,
depending on the course. Everyone speaks well – no wonder for legend has it
that anyone who has kissed the Blarney stone is endowed with the gift of
eloquence – and the Blarney stone, found in Blarney Castle, is just about 8
kilometres from Cork, which should say it all.
University College
Cork, ranked between 250 and 300 among world universities by Times Higher
Education, was our next stop. The bus we were in took us right up the grounds
and stopped a short distance from the Main building of the university. As we
tried to dodge the drizzle and made our way, we could hear the bus driver
enquiring whether he could park there…
The university spans a
range of periods from archival stuff to modern institutes where frontier research
is being conducted.
No comments:
Post a Comment
You can leave your comments or simply sign here.