Thursday, April 16, 2015

Chhota Sa Sheher Hai

छोटा सा शहर है.
छोटी छोटी गलियां बड़ी सड़कों में आ मिलती हैं,
और बथेरों ज़िन्दगियाँ इन्हीं सड़कों से होती हुई
गलियों में कहीं खो जाती हैं.


सबकी अलग दुनिया है.
और सबकी अपनी अपनी दुनिया,
यहीं इस छोटे से शहर में
एक दूसरे से टकराती हुई
अपने सफर में बढ़ती रहती हैं.


 छोटा सा शहर है.


सभी आस-पास ही रहते हैं.
रोज़ एक सड़क से ही गुज़रते हैं.
मिलने के वादे-इरादे भी अक्सर हुआ करते हैं.
लेकिन वो कल कभी नहीं आता.
मिल कभी कोई नहीं पाता.


 इस छोटे से शहर में,
खुद से मिलना ही दुश्वार है.
और अगर इत्तेफ़ाक़ से कहीं  कोई टकरा भी जाए,
तो मिलना मुमकिन नहीं होता.


छोटा सा शहर है.


इस शहर में सैंकड़ों कहानियां.
कहानियों के अनगिनत पात्र
और इन सभी पात्रों की अपनी अलग दुनिया.
कुछ मिली-जुली, कुछ कोसों दूर की दुनिया.
और इनकी टक्करों से बनती नयी कहानियां.


सभी कितने करीब हैं.
हरेक के तर कहीं न कहीं सबसे जुड़े हैं.
फिर भी, कोई किसी के पास नहीं है.
कहीं भी अपनेपन का ऐतबार नहीं है.


छोटा सा शहर है!!


 

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Mumbai talks.....or, does it??

It's 10 AM. I'm walking down the road, setting off for the day. An auto-rickshaw zooms past. A few paces ahead, it slows down. The khaki-clad driver peeps out of the moving rickshaw, and gives me a look, eyebrows raised. I can see that there already is a passenger sitting inside with a pair of long iron rods clutched between his legs. I nod at the driver. The brakes are applied. I reach the auto-rickshaw and climb inside. The vehicle is accelerated again. And a journey commences.

And, all of this happens within a few seconds. No words exchanged. Nothing said.

This is a convenient arrangement in a busy usual morning scene on a Mumbai street; a shared auto-rickshaw ride to the local station - a good money and time-saving settlement. The prowling eyes of the rickshaw driver recognize a person walking on the street as one who goes to the station around that time every day. A person in hurry recognizes a rickshaw which ferries passengers ‘sharing’ to the station. A moment’s glance is exchanged, and the deal is struck.

That’s predominantly how Mumbai communicates. Through little, meaningful gestures. The traditional modes of interpersonal conversation have been done away with in this city where no one has an extra second to waste. Who really needs words and long conversations, when you can ask for what you want just by a simple movement in the neck? Under the loud din of multifarious noises all around, this silent, gestural language is what the working, the running Mumbai talks in.

The numerous air-kisses blown from all directions on Mumbai roads is a clear example. No, these aren’t love-signals being sent out to sweethearts. This instead, is the most common way in which a Mumbaikar calls out to someone. A sound produced by sucking in air through pouted lips, loud enough to be heard and recognized as a call-signal by a person across the street, is a special technique now mastered by everyone on Mumbai roads.

As against the legendary ‘Oye’ from Delhi, this signaling through pouted lips in Mumbai wastes no words, requires no use of the vocal chords and astonishingly, is recognized by just the person being called out to. Only, it might once in a while, invite wrath of some lady who is new to the city streets and unaware of the simple mannerisms of the Mumbaikars.

A slight tap on the knee while sitting in a local train tells you that you’re required to squeeze in even further than you already are, so as to accommodate an extra fifth person on the seat meant for three. In this particular case, even the customary glance is done away with. One could be busy reading, or listening to music on headphones, or even fast asleep, but the slight tap near the knee is sure to garner the reflex reaction of squeezing in further, without caring to even look who touched you.

In any of the numerous cafés or restaurants across the city, just a forefinger raised from a table is enough to convey to the waiter that chai is wanted on the table. The number of cups required and the specifications of the chai; full or cutting, kadak or paani-kum or sulemaani chai; are also communicated only through the raised hand coordinated with a signaling from the brows. The men at the table don’t bother breaking from their conversation to order the tea.

This then, is another of the magical facets of this wondrous city. A city so metropolitan, full of people from innumerable diverse regions and ethnicities, and yet, a city where everyone understands without much effort, what everyone else wants to communicate.

How does this become possible? How do a people so diverse and so disjointed, connect so well that no words are required for the exchange of messages?

Probably, the common thread which runs across the city; the unending rush, the commitment to work, the race to grab opportunities, an order in everything, and a mutual understanding of each other’s struggles for survival brings all these varied people to one plane, where communication becomes so easy and basic that just a glance, a twitch of a few facial muscles, a simple touch or a sound, or some basic hand gestures are language enough to keep the city running.

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Life in a 'Local'

I entered hell that evening. No seriously, I did. I was crushed like sugarcane, big red eyes of devils glared at me from all directions and I was abused profoundly. The heavy stink burning into my nostrils was an added punishment.

My crime? I did not give a thought to where exactly I was entering before stepping in.

This was the luggage compartment of a fast local train from Churchgate to Virar at 9:05 P.M. and it was, literally, one hell of a journey. Body odour mixed with alcohol-infused breath was the stink that lingered heavily in the tiny compartment, which housed six times more men than its capacity at that particular time. And those devilish men were rowdy, loud and all very heavily drunk. I was lucky come out of that compartment alive with all my bones in place.

The Mumbai local, rightly called the lifeline of the City of Dreams, is an experience in itself; experience outsiders take a few days getting used to. The smoothest connecting link between different parts of the long stretching city, the locals is the most popular mode of transport for Mumbaiites. Even fairly affluent people prefer travelling by the local train as taking the roads in Mumbai means getting caught up in big traffic snarls every few minutes. Moreover, the city being in a straight line unlike a spherical Delhi, the distances are pretty long for road travel.

To get acquainted with the oft-glorified idea of Mumbai swarming with an ever-expanding crowd of people, all one needs is to spare a glance at any one of the local platforms. It seems like a celebration of people. People hanging out of doors of moving trains, people running, pushing, falling and jumping over each other to park a toenail of theirs in the train, people hurriedly gulping their snack at the samosa-vadapav counter, people reading magazines, people getting their shoes polished, people begging for money, people squatting on floors.

The local train is so much a part of the Mumbaikar’s life, that it has now become a routine, a way in which the city functions. It is a prime illustration of the hard work-oriented culture of this city. So much so, that people know and keep track of which train will come at which platform, which compartment to board on the train, and even the spot exactly where that compartment will halt on the platform. One also decides one’s own preference between a fast rain and a slow train. Well, the classification between fast and slow is a misnomer. There is absolutely no difference in the running speeds of the trains. The only factor that makes a fast local faster than the slow one is that the former skips a few stations along the track, halting only at the major stations where the crowd is heavy. The choice is between your preference of travel; if you want to reach your destination faster, be ready to be sandwiched in an over-crowded fast local, but if you want to travel a little comfortably but do not mind getting late by half an hour or slow, catch the slow train. In the overcrowded fast trains, irrespective of whether you are the adventurous sorts or not, invariably once in a few times you’ll be compelled to hang at the doors, relying on those two fingers gripping the makeshift handlebar and clutching the collar of someone’s shirt for dear life.

Every compartment has a story to tell, and every commuter has his favourites. A favourite seat (or standing position) in a favourite compartment in a favourite train at a favourite time. This is because every compartment sees numerous relationships flourishing each day, and on every journey. People travel in particular trains just to meet their friends, all of whom have different destinations to go to, and this travel is the only time they are together, the only foundation to the relationships. Many such instances can be found everyday.

A group of men gather to play cards every morning in the Andheri to Churchgate slow local; a briefcase perched on the knees of two men serves as their table, elastic bands tied innovatively across the briefcase so as to hold the cards steady. A journal is kept of all proceedings of the game, and the play is resumed every morning from the point it was left the previous day.

Another group of Gujarati people have a compartment reserved for them every morning and they go singing bhajans loudly throughout the journey. Some of them carry musical instruments, which they play along with the bhajans, and the music continues till the train’s last stop, with people exiting and entering the group at various stations along the journey. This compartment is recognizable from a distance; the music is so loud.

There are numerous such stories of bonds of fellow-travelers, some of which last for years, others for some days or weeks, and a huge number of those which are forgotten with the first step out of the train.

Every person has his or her own way of making this arduous daily journey tolerable. Some read the day’s newspaper; many listen to music on their phones or music players; some start conversations with random people, and a few engage with the salesmen who claim in a monotonic drone that their product is just the right thing the commuters need that very moment. There’s also a considerable lot of men who pass time by poking fun at others, bantering, creating a ruckus or abusing anyone around at the top of their voices (it is these kind of men who generally inhabit the luggage compartments of fast trains mentioned above). The riot like scene that ensues every time a train halts at a station between the commuters getting in and those stepping out of the train, is often their idea of mischief.

Peculiarly, the trains also have a colour coding to them. The green inside, red-and-grey outside, are the old coaches, which are grimier and very stuffy. The violet and white coaches are the new ones and are a lot more airy, have more room to them and have better seating and standing arrangements, plus the fans are in proper working condition and not rusted like those in the old coaches.

But it’ll be tough to spot the real colour of the trains’ inside walls, as every inch of them is covered in a collage of posters advertising about Baba Bengalis and agencies promising direct entry to Bollywood, to insurance companies, part-time job offers, PG accommodations, tiffin services and what not.

This journey, full of new experiences, full of life, a routine for most, when it ends each day, the sweat and stink on your shirt (and you’re sure to have it), cannot be credited to your body alone; a lot of people have surely contributed their bit to it.

But guess what? It comes cheap. The maximum fare of the local train journey is just Rs. 8, nearly equal to the lowest fare for the shortest distance in the Delhi Metro.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

The Battle Half Won

Mumbai is said to be a city where sleeping on even footpaths comes for a price, and rightly so.

The uncontrolled influx of a huge crowd of people has given rise to a constant race between the ever expanding population of the city and the living space, which eventually each time (at least till now) ends with living space matching step with the population just at the finishing line, always giving you the belief, that the city cannot accommodate any more people than it already does. But courtesy the so-called "Builders" of the city, at whose behest the city is expanding fast, vertically more than horizontally, everyone manges fit into the spilling cauldron of people, sleeping wherever his/her economic strength allows them to.

So, to find a respectable rented accommodation in the city was a struggle of its own. Some advertisement samples on websites catering to our requirements were like:

2Bhk Flat in Posh Location, Well-Furnished, 24-hour water supply, near Railway Station
Rent Rs. 30000 per month.


Studio Apartment, with Kitchen and Bathroom, 6th Floor, in a Good Building with Decent people, Lift available
Rent Rs. 18000 per month.

1HK Apartment, Sea facing, spacious, with 24-hours water supply. 5mins from railway station.
Rent Rs. 19000, negotiable.

Don't they all sound fabulous? Don't they create images of lavishly beautiful luxurious flats, waiting to be ours at throwaway rental charges, and that too negotiable?
But once you set out to find yourself a good place to sleep in going by these wonderful sounding ads, its a different story altogether. The first lessons in the struggles of the difficult Mumbai life are learnt on this tour. Dealing with the ever-smiling, shrewdly persuasive brokers, meaneauvering your way through bridges made of planks over stinking nallahs in the midst of slums, when you reach the site to inspect the flats in so-called posh locations, you discover that the spacious-sounding 1Bhks and 2Bhks claimed by the brokers actually referred to minuscule matchbox-sized rooms where one can barely stretch oneself fully. And the 'well-furnished' claims go for a toss when you realize that the only furnishing provided is a bare bed(only if you are very lucky) and a showcase.

Reminiscent of the cubicle-sized flats and Paying-guest accommodation on offer at Delhi's Satya Niketan, South Extention, Vasant Vihar or ther North Campus, flats here come for a price generally higher. And for obvious reasons, the nearer to a Railway Station the residence is, the more expensive it gets to lodge in there; the local trains are the most popular mode of transport for the city.

A noticeable peculiarity in the housing system here is that all across the city, the residential places are in the shape of multi-storeyed buildings only, individual homes being extremely rare- the kothi system is nowhere to be seen. The ones that are, are expensive bungalows belonging to the over-affluent dwellers of the city.

Finding a decent enough place to live in Mumbai at a reasonable enough price, where basic necessities of human dwelling can be fulfilled is actually credible feat. Being smart, aware and well-researched is the key to success. And if you mange to do that, all the wise men in the city will tell you that in the struggle for success in the city of dreams, half the battle is won.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Mumbai, Mayanagri.......The City of Dreams!!!!!
The city which witnesses the onslaught of hundreds of people everyday, which overflows on all sides, where being "street smart" is the necessary baggage to carry, and a city where the contrast between extremes stretches to unimaginable extremities.

This is Bombay, oops, Mumbai, seen through the eyes of a dilliwala. So a lot of the forthcoming posts might contain a lot of direct and indirect comparisons between the national capital and the financial capital of the country, vis-a-vis, the city where i grew up and the city where I currently am in on an adventurous journey, respectively.

These posts are an honest attempt at portraying the nuances of the city which has begun to amaze me and excite me. The portrayal will come across through the filter of my eyes of course, as also through the Dilliwala in me.

In no sense will these posts or comparisons contained in them aim at ranking one city lower or higher then the other, or to comment on the establishments' achievements or failures. As said earlier, all these accounts will be based on the unique experiences, realizations, feelings, and observances in a new city, in an attempt to understand the character, or in a way to touch the soul of the new city, just like i managed to do it to some extent, back home in Delhi.

Another very important thing...... I would like to dedicate these blog posts to one Mayank Austen Soofi, whom I idolize, look up to and envy. Mayank writes for HT City in Delhi and blogs by the name 'The Dilliwala'. He does everything that i wish to do in the city I love the most, my very own Delhi. I aspire to draw inspiration from his work, but in no way will I attempt to match his excellence.

Hoping for a refreshing, exciting and fulfilling new journey.
Mayanagri Me Badhte Pehle Kadam.......




P.s. :- Guys please respond when you read stuff here, because this is my first attempt at blogging, so i'd appreciate the response. Thanks