Aabha Sharma's Reviews > India
India
by
by

The final Book of Naipaul’s India Trilogy. I’m actually a bit sad to finish it. No matter, they hold up very well to rereads so I shall be to back to book 1 soon.
India’s million mutinies, each caste, clan , religion and region as separate and distinct from each other as different countries. Each group has a clear view of their problems, history and apparent threats but seems blind to the same for the other. Some of the groups highlighted include the scheduled castes, Brahmins, shiv sainiks, Jains, Sikhs, Lucknows regal Muslims, Bombay slum Muslims, Mumbai dons, erstwhile Calcutta boxwallas, naxalites ands Kashmiri muslims. It’s a long book. I’m sure I missed a few. All these groups are really angry. They all feel wronged. They all have a seething rage. Hence the title.
I am so glad he went back to the hotel liward(leeward) to check in the the beloved folks from his previous India trip. That was one of my favorite chapters from that book and the revisit was a sweet moment.
My advice is take your time reading this. Let it sink in, absorb. A lot is packed into the details and between the lines. It’s glorious, gloriously depressing. But in the best way.
India’s million mutinies, each caste, clan , religion and region as separate and distinct from each other as different countries. Each group has a clear view of their problems, history and apparent threats but seems blind to the same for the other. Some of the groups highlighted include the scheduled castes, Brahmins, shiv sainiks, Jains, Sikhs, Lucknows regal Muslims, Bombay slum Muslims, Mumbai dons, erstwhile Calcutta boxwallas, naxalites ands Kashmiri muslims. It’s a long book. I’m sure I missed a few. All these groups are really angry. They all feel wronged. They all have a seething rage. Hence the title.
I am so glad he went back to the hotel liward(leeward) to check in the the beloved folks from his previous India trip. That was one of my favorite chapters from that book and the revisit was a sweet moment.
My advice is take your time reading this. Let it sink in, absorb. A lot is packed into the details and between the lines. It’s glorious, gloriously depressing. But in the best way.
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Quotes Aabha Liked

“It had been hard enough to drive past the area. It was harder to imagine what it was like living there. Yet people lived with the stench and the terrible air, and had careers there. Even lawyers lived there, I was told. Was the smell of excrement only on the periphery, from the iridescent black lake? No; that stench went right through Dharavi. Even more astonishing was to read in a Bombay magazine an article about Papu's suburb of Sion, in which the slum of Dharavi was written about almost as a bohemian feature of the place, something that added spice to humdrum middle-class life. Bombay clearly innoculated its residents in some way.
I had another glimpse of Dharavi some time later, when I was going in a taxi to the domestic airport at Santa Cruz. The taxi-driver - a Muslim from Hyderabad, full of self-respect, nervous about living in Bombay, fearful of sinking, planning to go back home soon, and in the meantime nervously particular about his car and his clothes - the taxi-driver showed the apartment blocks on one side of the airport road where hutment dwellers had been rehoused. In the other direction he showed the marsh on which Dharavi had grown and, away in the distance, the low black line of the famous slum.
Seen from here, Dharavi looked artificial, unnecessary even in Bombay: allowed to exist because, as people said, it was a vote-bank, and hate-bank, something to be drawn upon by many people. All the conflicting currents of Bombay flowed there as well; all the new particularities were heightened there. And yet people lived there, subject to this extra exploitation, because in Bombay, once you had a place to stay, you could make money.”
― India: A Million Mutinies Now
I had another glimpse of Dharavi some time later, when I was going in a taxi to the domestic airport at Santa Cruz. The taxi-driver - a Muslim from Hyderabad, full of self-respect, nervous about living in Bombay, fearful of sinking, planning to go back home soon, and in the meantime nervously particular about his car and his clothes - the taxi-driver showed the apartment blocks on one side of the airport road where hutment dwellers had been rehoused. In the other direction he showed the marsh on which Dharavi had grown and, away in the distance, the low black line of the famous slum.
Seen from here, Dharavi looked artificial, unnecessary even in Bombay: allowed to exist because, as people said, it was a vote-bank, and hate-bank, something to be drawn upon by many people. All the conflicting currents of Bombay flowed there as well; all the new particularities were heightened there. And yet people lived there, subject to this extra exploitation, because in Bombay, once you had a place to stay, you could make money.”
― India: A Million Mutinies Now
Reading Progress
January 26, 2020
– Shelved as:
to-read
January 26, 2020
– Shelved
June 23, 2020
–
Started Reading
July 27, 2020
– Shelved as:
nonfiction
July 27, 2020
–
Finished Reading
March 18, 2023
– Shelved as:
books-i-loved
(Paperback Edition)
March 18, 2023
– Shelved
(Paperback Edition)