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Mumbai Fables PDF

211 Pages·2010·33.8 MB·English
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'A fascinating exploration ••..•-v,f my favourite city, full of insider knowledge and sharp Insights.'-SALMAN RUSHDIE /-~~. -~. . - - . .- --. MUMBAI FABLES Tulsi 6 x Lake 4 -3 C .-0- 1 $3 I Vihnr 6 u) Lokr 2 $a Q '. W- Pow &- Lak &' Gyan Prakash d w"? 1 ,,,:it.* .!. . " t. .._.I ' !-, p .... -, - ,.- ) ,: .- - -' ..- NEW MUMBAI ... ,' J r. f' ... :> (, ," .,! : < ,, ., Lr- -- -,J r- -- i I HarperCollins Publishers India ik ln '1'7 - . a joint venture with . Frontispiece. Mumbai. Courtesy: Tsering W. Shawa Contents List of Illustrations THE MYTHIC CITY THE COLONIAL GOTHIC THE ClTY ON THE SEA THE COSMOPOLIS AND THE NATION THE TABLOID AND THE ClTY FROM RED TO SAFFRON PLANNING AND DREAMING AVENGER ON THE STREET DREAMWORLDS Acknowledgments Notes Index Illustrations FIGURES Frontis. Mumbai 1.1. Mario's Bombay 2.1. The Fort and its environs 2.2. Seven Islands 2.3. Raw cotton for Bombay mills 2.4. View of Elphinstone Circle from the Town Hall 2.5. The Gothic parade 2.6. Victoria Terminus and the Municipal Corporation 2.7. The Island City in 1909 2.8. A chaw1 2.9. Plague inspections 3.1. Marine Drive in the early 1950s 3.2. Rain-drenched romance on Marine Drive in Kala Bazaar 3.3. Davidge's plan 3.4. "Back Bay Bungle" 3.5. Ideal Home Exhibition 3.6. Art Deco apartments on Marine Drive 3.7. Eros Cinema 3.8. The Crickett Smith Band, Taj Mahal Hotel, 1936 3.9. Teddy and His Plantation Quartet, Taj Mahal Hotel, 1939 3.10. Fearless Nadia 4.1. Happy times The vagabond Raj Kapoor in Awara PLATES A beggar explains Bombay to Raj Kapoor 1. Doga and Suraj in Shree 420 2. Planning violence Bombay's cosmopolitan world in Taxi Driver 3. Doga's pathology Love and freedom in Bombay-Dev Anand and Kalpana Kartik in Taxi Driver 4. The opening page of Khaki Aur Khaddar 5. Monica forced to watch atrocities Karanjia with revolutionaries 6. The comic-book panels scrambled by the chaos of violence Blitz front page: "The Tragedy of the 7. Doga fights the rioters in vain Eternal Triangle" 8. The superhero is assailed by self-doubt The accused commander 9. The superhero despairs at the loss of humanism Crowd gathered outside the court 10. Steel and Art Deco The murder scene 11. Luxurious 1,293 BHK Flats Nanavati goes to jail 12. Taxi stickers Case for prosecution 13. Objects in the Mirror Are Closer than ?hey Appear Case for defense 14. Altamount Road Bombay State in 1951 15. Free enterprise in Dharavi Communist leader Dange addresses a meeting 16. Collectors of discarded history in Chor Bazaar for Samyukta Maharashtra 17. Atul Dodiya, Bombay Buccaneer The state of Maharashtra The snarling tiger and the Sena chief For plate 1 referred to in chapter 3, please see plate 10. Cartoon war 1: A Thackeray cartoon showing For plates 2-1 0 referred to in chapter 8, please see plates 1-9. the Sena slaying the Communist giant Cartoon war 2: A Communist cartoon showing Thackeray performing cabaret for the elite Funeral procession for Krishna Desai Mulk Raj Anand with Le Corbusier in the architect's studio in 1953 The Twin City plan The Twin City transportation network plan Unreclaimed Backbay blocks Nariman Point towers in the 1990s x List of Illustrations List of Illustrations xi THE MYTHIC CITY It is just before two o'clock in the afternoon in April, the hottest month of the year. A tiny speck appears in a cloudless Poona sky, moving steadily toward the Tower of Silence, the funerary place where the Zoroastrians expose their dead to be consumed by birds of prey. It is not an eagle; nor is it a crow, for it could never fly that high. As the speck approaches the tower, its outline grows larger. It is a small aircraft, its silver body gleaming in the bright sun. After flying high above the Parsi place of the dead, the plane dis- appears into the horizon only to double back. This time, it heads determinedly to the tower, hovers low over it, and then suddenly swoops down recklessly. Just when it seems sure to plunge into the ground, the plane rights itself and flies upside down in large circles. A bright object drops from the aircraft into the well of the tower, illuminating the structure containing a heap of skeletons and dead bodies. As the light from the bright flare reveals this gruesome sight, the plane suddenly rights itself and hovers directly overhead. The clock strikes two. A camera shutter clicks. The click of the camera shakes the Zoroastrian world. The Parsi head priest of the Deccan region, taking an afternoon nap, imme- diately senses that foreign eyes have violated the sacred universe of his religion. Parsi priests, who are performing a ritual at their Fire Temple, feel their throats dry up abruptly and are unable to continue their chants. As the muslin-covered body of a dead Parsi sorcery, however, operate in a thoroughly modern environment. In- is being prepared for its final journey to the tower, the deceased's dustrial modernity, in the form of planes, trains, and automobiles, mother suddenly lets out a piercing shriek. When the sacred fire figure prominently. The high-altitude camera and the illustrated burning at a Zoroastrian temple bursts into sparks, the assembled magazine reflect a world of image production and circulation. The priests agree that a vital energy has escaped the holy ball of fire. novel travels easily between Britain and India and comfortably in- habits British popular culture. Imperial geography underwrites this space. Colonialism conjoins Britain, India, and Burma and produces the cosmopolitan cultural milieu that the novelist presents as entirely Thus begins "Tower of Silence," an unpublished novel written in natural. Beram dwells in this environment while proudly asserting 1927 by Phiroshaw Jamsetjee Chevalier (Chaiwala),' a Parsi from his religious identity. He is no rootless cosmopolitan but a modern Bombay.' After setting the scene of this grave sacrilege to the Zoro- subject, deeply attached to his community. His quarrel with the pi- astrian faith, the novel shifts to London. On the street outside the of- lot, the photographer, and the editor is not anticolonial. Chaiwala fice of the journal The Graphic is a large touring Rolls-Royce, richly mentions the Gandhian movement against British rule, but Beram upholstered and fitted with silver fixtures. In it sits a tanned young expresses no nationalist sentiments; his sole motivation is to right man in a finely tailored suit, with a monocle in his left eye. He is Be- the wrong done to his faith by modernity's excesses, by its insatiable ram, a Parsi who blends "the knowledge of the shrewd East" with appetite to erase all differences and violate all taboos. He represents that of the West and is a master practitioner of hypnotism and the a form of cosmopolitanism that is based on an acknowledgment of occult. He is in London to hunt down and kill those who have defiled cultural differences. his religion-the pilot who flew the plane over the tower, the pho- The novel bears the marks of its time, but it also presents a picture tographer who clicked the snapshot, and the editor who published it of Bombay that persists. This is evident as much in the depiction of in The Graphic. This locks him in a battle of wits with Sexton Blake, the city, where Beram and Sexton Blake play their cat-and-mouse the famous 1920s fictional British detective, and his assistant Tinker, game, as in the whole imaginative texture of the novel. A Bombay who are employed by the magazine. As Beram goes about system- man himself, Chaiwala celebrates the city's mythic image when he atically ferreting out his intended victims, with Blake and Tinker in describes it as "gay and cosmopolitan," a heady mix of diverse cul- pursuit, the novel traverses London, Manchester, Liverpool, Burma, tures and a fast life. Its existence as a modern city, as a spatial and so- Rawalpindi, and Bombay. It concludes with Parsi honor restored. cial labyrinth, can be read in the detective novel form. The sensibili- In Chaiwala's thrilling fable of Parsi revenge, the protagonists ties and portraits associated with Bombay are inherent in the novel's slip in and out of disguises and secret cellars. They follow tantaliz- geographic space, in its characters and their actions. ing clues and leave deliberately misleading traces, practicing occult When I came upon Chaiwala's typescript in the British Library, I tricks and hypnotism to gain an advantage in their quest. Magic and found its fictions and myths resonate with my childhood image of Bombay. Cities live in our imagination. As Jonathan Raban remarks, BombaylMumbai: Unless I am referring to the period after 1995, when Bombay was officially "The soft city of illusion, myth, aspiration, nightmare, is as real, renamed as Mumbai, I use the name Bombay, as the city was called, for most of the period covered by maybe more real, than the hard city one can locate on maps in sta- the book. 2 Chapter 1 The Mythic City 3 tistics, in monographs on urban sociology and demography and ar- life. Of course, the word modernity was not in our vocabulary then; ~hitecture."T~h is is how Bombay, or Mumbai, as it is now officially we spoke of Bombay's charms with signs and gestures, with wistful known, artlessly entered my life. Bombay is not my hometown. I was looks and sighs, expressing desires for self-fashioning and deprived born more than a thousand miles away in a small town named Haza- pleasures. We knew of New York, Paris, and London, but they were ribagh. I grew up in Patna and New Delhi and have lived in the Unit- foreign places, holding no emotional resonance. To us, the most fa- ed States for many years. Mine is not an immigrant's nostalgia for miliar large city was Calcutta, in the neighboring province of West the hometown left behind, but I have hungered for the city since my Bengal. Many, particularly the poor, from my province of Bihar went childhood. Its physical remoteness served only to heighten its lure as there to work. But the proverbial Bengali cultural arrogance was a a mythic place of discovery, to sustain the fantasy of exploring what hurdle in developing any lasting love or longing for their city. New was beyond my reach, what was "out there.'' Delhi was just a dull seat of government, heavily laden with a bu- This desire for the city was created largely by Bombay cinema. reaucratic ethos, and Madras was too culturally and linguistically re- Nearly everyone I knew in Patna loved Hindi films. Young women mote. Although far away, it was Bombay that held the promise of wore clothes and styled their hair according to their favorite hero- exciting newness and unlimited possibilities. It reached out across ines. The neighborhood toughs copied the flashy clothes of film vil- the physical and cultural distance to stir desires and kindle imagi- lains, even memorizing and mouthing their dialogues, such as a line nations. Even my father was not immune to Bombay's magnetism. attributed to the actor Ajit instructing his sideluck: "Robert, Usko When he built the family house in Hazaribagh, the facade was mod- Hamlet wala poison de do; to be se not to be ho jayega" (Robert, give eled on the Marine Drive Art Deco apartment buildings that he had him Hamlet's poison: from "to be" he will become "not to be"). No seen in photographs. one knew which film this was from, or indeed if it was from a film The Bombay tabloid Blitz epitomized the city's mischievously at all. Ajit's villainous characters were so ridiculously overdrawn that modern spirit. The only one of its kind in India at the time, this pro- he attracted a campy following that would often invent dialogues. vocative weekly unabashedly presented itself as the voice of the cit- Then there were Patna's own Dev Anand brothers, all three of whom izenry, excoriating officialdom with over-the-top reports and arti- styled their hair with a puff, in the manner of their film-star idol. cles. Adopting the loud and brash character of its larger-than-life Emulating their hero, they wore their shirt collars raised rakishly Parsi editor, Russi Karanjia, the tabloid was identified with the city. and walked in the actor's signature zigzag fashion-trouser legs flap- So was Behram Contractor, known by his pen name Busybee, who ping, upper body swaying, and arms swinging across the body. Like wrote his popular and characteristically witty "Round and About" many others, I remember the comedian Johnny Walker crooning in columns, first in the Evening News of India and subsequently in Mohammed Rafi's voice, "Yeh hai Bambai meri jaan" (It's Bombay, Mid-Day, before eventually settling on Afternoon Courier and Des- Darling) to the tune of "Oh My Darling, Clementine:' in CID (1956). patch, a tabloid he founded and edited. Poking gentle fun at every- Hindi cinema stood for Bombay, even if the city appeared only one while offending no one, Busybee became known and loved as a fleetingly on-screen, and then too as a corrupt and soulless opposite classic Bombay figure-at home in its metropolitan chaos while re- of the simplicity and warmth of the village. I understand now that maining alive to the absurdities of its everyday life. Similarly playfully underlying our fascination with Bombay was the desire for modern critical was Gangadhar Gadgil. Trained as an economist, he wrote 4 Chapter 1 The Mythic City 5 Weekly lived up to its promise, featuring stories with photographs that showcased modern life. Whether they were accounts of dance bands, cabaret acts, architecture, cinema, and art or famous mur- der cases, exposes of brothels, illegal gambling, or the manufacture of illicit liquor in the Prohibition era, the magazine covered them all with lavish illustrations. The popular glossy women's magazine Femina, which started publication in 1959, featured mainly articles on style, health and beauty, relationships, and celebrities. Its vibrant pages flaunted the latest trends in clothes, cosmetics, and home fur- nishings. Its splashy coverage and proud sponsorship of the annu- al Miss India contest paraded Bombay's trendy fashion sense. Ad- dressed as it was to the English-reading public, there was no doubt b about Femina's elitism. But this only added verve to Bombay's image as a place of high style. 1.1. Marlo's Bombay. Source: illustrated Weekly of Ind~aO, ctober 18, 1970. Philip Knightley, the Australian journalist, writes of the excite- ment of the Bombay of the early 1960~H.~e arrived in the city on a voyage from Britain via Basra, intending to lay over only until a ship both in Marathi and in English with equal facility and prolificacy, was ready to sail to his home country. But he stayed for two years, his satirical eye alighting on an eclectic choice of subjects-from an working for a literary journal. Unaware that the journal was funded encounter with pickpockets in the city to the experience of traveling by the CIA-a fact he discovered only years later-Knightley ended in its crowded trains to the obsessions and practices of tea drinking up playing an unwitting role in a Cold War cloak-and-dagger drama in B~mbay.~ when the KGB also tried to recruit him. In retrospect, he saw the And then there was Mario Miranda, whose cartoons on the pages international espionage angle as part of Bombay's dynamic milieu. of the Illustrated Weekly of India leaped out at you with their wit and "Everyone seemed to be on the move," he remembers, "even though biting commentary. He gave us memorable city figures-Miss Fon- they did not know where to? seca, the buxom Anglo-Indian secretary; the office clerk Godbole; Harry Roskolenko, an American writer who also made his way to the corrupt and rotund politician Bundaldass; the seductive actress the Island City in the sixties, thought that Bombay was the world's Miss Rajni Nimbupani; and the Catholic girl Petrification Pereira. most open city after Tokyo. What he meant by "open" is manifest Using the cartoon form, Mario's pictorial illustrations were works of in the title of his book. Bombay after Dark is a racy travel account art that depicted Bombay's mongrel and chaotic world with humor that he published under the pen name Allen V. Ross. The book de- and acute observations. scribes his sexual romp through Bombay, including the experience The Illustrated Weekly, which featured Mario's art, and Femina, of a young college student "pressing her rubbery young body against both owned by the Times group, were two widely circulated mag- mine" in a temple during a religious celebration and of his "water azines that also disseminated the city's metropolitan image. The 6 Chapter 1 The Mythic City 7 circus" with an Anglo-Indian woman in the Arabian Sea.6 Though impressions were powerfully amplified by the lyrics of several film he finds that vice and commerce are "natural handmaidens," the songs penned by progressive poets that inveighed against the un- book is not a judgmental account of the flesh trade but a celebration just social order. So, while Johnny Walker romps on the breathtak- of "a man's city, sensual and open to pleasure.'' Bombay by Night, a ing Marine Drive in the film CID, sweet-talking his girlfriend in the book published a decade later by the Blitz crime reporter Captain F. voice of playback singer Mohammed Rafi, the song warns of the per- D. Colaabavala, adopts a shocked tone, but it too offers a titillating, ils that await the unwary in Bombay and offers a biting critique of the voyeuristic account of Bombay as a haven for erotic pleasure. While industrial city's soullessness: "Kahin building, Kahin tramen, Kahin purporting to expose vice, the book invites you to do a little "un- motor, Kahin mill, milta hai yahan sub kuch, ek milta nahin dil, in- dercover research in "Bombay after Dark," promising that no mat- saan ka hai nahin namo-nishan" (In this city of buildings and trams, ter what your desire, taste, or mood, you will find what you want in motorcars and mills, everything is available except a heart and hu- India's commercial capital, "where the history of commerce is often manity). Though the song speaks of a callous city habitat in vivid and written on the bedsprings."' richly textured lyrics, it also offers hope. Johnny Walker's girlfriend Such accounts of sex and vice sketched a free-spirited city, a pal- responds to his evocation of Bombay's capriciousness and contra- ace of pleasures. A photograph published in newspapers and maga- dictions by rewording the song's idiomatic refrain. In place of "Ai dil zines in 1974 served only to reconfirm the city's freewheeling spir- hai mushlul jeena yahan" (It is hard to survive here), she sings 'Xi dil it. It showed a woman strealung on a busy Bombay street in broad hai aasaan jeena yahan, sun0 Mister, sun0 Bandhu, Yeh hai Bombay daylight. The nude photograph attracted much attention because the meri jaan" (0g entlemen, 0 my friends, living here is easy, it's Bom- woman was Protima Bedi, a glamorous model and the wife of the bay, darling). She does not deny his sentiments about hypocrisy and handsome model and rising film star Kabir Bedi. The fashionable injustice in the city but counters them with an optimistic one of her couple was frequently in the news. In her posthumously published own. There is a sense of confidence and optimism, even appreciation memoir, Bedi acknowledged that the nude photograph was genuine, for the city, despite its conflicts and contradictions. References to the but she alleged that it had been taken while she was walking naked Hindi-speaking "Bandhu" (friend) and the English-speaking "Mis- ter" suggest a feeling of belonging in Bombay's socially and linguisti- on a beach in Goa and was then superimposed on a Bombay street cally mongrel world. to produce the sensational copy. A rival account is that the streaking was staged to gain publicity for the launch of Cine Blitz, a new film Ironically, even as the song celebrated Bombay's mongrel world, a political movement for the creation of the linguistic province of maga~ineW.~h atever the truth, no one questioned the photograph's Maharashtra, including the fabled city, was heating up. This was fol- authenticity because it played into Protima Bedi's image as a model lowed by the rise of the Bal Thackeray-led Shiv Sena, a nativist party with a swinging lifestyle. The shocking picture also contributed to named after Shivaji, the seventeenth-century Maratha warrior. The Bombay's mythology as a city with an uninhibited and audacious Sends growing influence signaled the eclipse of the radical aspira- ethos, a place where the "iron cage" of the dull routines-the familiar tions that socialist lyricists expressed. The challenge came not just and regular-of modern life was shaken loose with the energy and from the Sena's right-wing populism but also from political stir- excitement of transgression. rings among the formerly "untouchable" castes. The strong protests If films, newspapers, and magazines broadcast Bombay in glam- orous, sunny hues, they also narrated tales of its dark side. These against centuries-old caste discrimination included the rejection of 8 Chapter 1 The Mythic City 9

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A place of spectacle and ruin, Mumbai exemplifies the cosmopolitan metropolis. It is not just a big city but also a soaring vision of modern urban life. Millions from India and beyond, of different ethnicities, languages, and religions, have washed up on its shores, bringing with them their desires
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.