What They Hate About Mumbai

by René | November 29, 2008 at 08:24 pm
181 views | 9 Recommendations | 4 comments
The terrorists’ message was clear: Stay away from Mumbai or you will get killed. Cricket matches with visiting English and Australian teams have been shelved. Japanese and Western companies have closed their Mumbai offices and prohibited their employees from visiting the city. Tour groups are canceling long-planned trips.


But the best answer to the terrorists is to dream bigger, make even more money, and visit Mumbai more than ever. Dream of making a good home for all Mumbaikars, not just the denizens of $500-a-night hotel rooms. Dream not just of Bollywood stars like Aishwarya Rai or Shah Rukh Khan, but of clean running water, humane mass transit, better toilets, a responsive government. Make a killing not in God’s name but in the stock market, and then turn up the forbidden music and dance; work hard and party harder.

If the rest of the world wants to help, it should run toward the explosion. It should fly to Mumbai, and spend money. Where else are you going to be safe? New York? London? Madrid?

So I’m booking flights to Mumbai. I’m going to go get a beer at the Leopold, stroll over to the Taj for samosas at the Sea Lounge, and watch a Bollywood movie at the Metro. Stimulus doesn’t have to be just economic.

Suketu Mehta, a professor of journalism at New York University, is the author of “Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found.”

This reminds me so much of what happens in New Orleans everytime a hurricane comes since Katrina. Hit harder by the economic loss of income. And they get hurricane-like storms and monsoons too.

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1
azzayindia

for me mumbai changed after riots.I have to Mumbai before and after and there was a difference in attitudes.Hope this will not change the basic fabric of Mumbai

0
René

I'm sorry for my ignorance on these riots you mention. When and why did these happen?


Unfortunately these kinds of events do have a lasting effect. But life does go on.


1
reshmi

the change in fabric has begun though. the waves felt this time is different. people are shrugging off their indifferences. there are concrete plans shaping up. i can see that around me. i hope it is seen in every locality.

0
René

past time for better protection in your devastated country. but I see, from here, a huge resilience in India.

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azzayindia
First Flagged at 10:46 PM, Nov 29, 2008 by azzayindia

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