Pondicherry
City Guide

Pondicherry
town is a surprise in India. This you'll realise as you pass through well-laid,
wide streets carrying French names and kept unpolluted. Clean. A French past is
still present.
Pondicherry cheers the heart of the romantic. With grand
boulevards and quiet promenades. You'll be greeted with large bouquets of bougainvillea
hanging over the ivory-coloured walls of colonial mansions. Pondicherry with its
ashram charm, is sought out by the peace-seeker. And with its safe and secluded
beaches, by the tan-seeker.
Pondicherry is richly cosmopolitan. A staggering
number of 55 languages are spoken here. By an easy, relaxed set of people. Pondicherry
is a favourite hunting ground for the shop-hopper. Where wonderful bargains are
easy pickings. Pondicherry is a peaceful, easy feeling. That makes you want to
put your feet up. And let your hair down.
The French Heritage
Pondicherry has a rich French cultural heritage, having been the capital
of the French colonies in India since the 17th century. Pondicherry, Karaikal,
Yanam and mahe were transferred to the Indian union in 1954. This French legacy
is visible in the well-Planned town, neatly laid roads, wide and vibrant beaches,
beautiful promenades, architecturally imposing churches and public buildings and
the statues of joan of ark and joseph Francois colonies in India from 1742-54.
The town also has an alliance Francaise and the French institute. Among
the notable French personalities who left their indelible mark on Pondicherry,
four names stand out.
The Land of Yoga and Spirituality
If you are tired of the rat race that today's world has become and are
in search of inner peace, harmony and spirituality, then Pondicherry is the place
to come to. It has been seat of learning and Vedic culture since ancient times
and was also the home of the great Hindu sage Agastya. Pondicherry mystic spirit
found a great resurrection in the twentieth century with the establishment of
Aurobindo Ashram.