Behind
the Beautiful Forevers, Katherine Boo, Hamish Hamilton,
2012, pp 254, Rs 499.
There appears to be a
dearth of non-fiction reporting coming out of India. We have our polemicists
and publicists, our activists and orators, our Arundhati Roys and Basharat
Peers, those who write on naxalism and insurgency; we also have our green
warriors who take up cudgels on behalf of environmental degradation and peaceniks
who speak of the absurdity of spending millions on nuclear weaponry; but, sadly,
we seem to have no spokesperson for our teeming urban poor. Vikas Swarup took a
shot with Q and A (which was later
turned into The Slumdog Millionaire on
celluloid) but somehow realism slipped in the crack between fact and fiction, and
the move from text to film ended up exoticising deprivation and disadvantage, and
earning the wrath of Indians who appeared uncomfortable with the notion of
‘selling’ their poverty at the altar of the Oscar Awards.
With a substantial body
of work on disadvantaged people behind her, Katherine Boo tackles the issue of
Mumbai’s slums with sensitivity and skill. Her long years of reporting are
evident in her prose: crisp, concise, insightful yet completely non-partisan.
By opening a window into the everyday lives of those who live on Airport Road,
a sprawling slum beside the Mumbai airport, she gives us a pungent dose of the
stark reality behind the gloss of Shining India. Drawing its name from a brand
of Italian floor tiling that promised ‘Beautiful Forever’, whose advertisement
was plastered along lengths of scaffolding leading up to the international
airport at Mumbai, scaffolding that hid the ugly scab of slums, the book is a
searing indictment of ‘growth’, ‘progress’ and ‘development’. Unless and until
the word ‘inclusive’ is added to all three, Boo seems to be saying, they are
nothing but a chimera.
The defining principle
of the extravagant, opulent, prosperity-driven metropolis of Mumbai that Boo
terms ‘over city’ is MORE; like a forever hungry amoeba, it wants MORE of
everything to feed its illusion of growth. In contrast, slums such as Annawadi,
which survive in the shadow of the airport, are the ‘under city’ forever
grappling with meagre resources, forever on the look-out for a miracle, a
short-cut, a formula that will take them from LESS to MORE. Yet, despite all
odds, in the ‘slumpy plug of slum’ that is Annawadi, home to over 3,000 people
crammed in miserable 300-odd hovels, the air is electric with hope. Everyone
believes that, with a little bit of luck, they can cross the Great Divide from
‘under city’ to ‘over city’. Ceaselessly occupied in inching towards MORE, they
cope not merely with the brutal rigours of poverty but also with ethnic and
racial tensions, differences of caste and religion, as well as greed and
corruption.
Boo writes with
startling directness and empathy of the everyday struggles for survival, the
small joys and sorrows, the petty jealousies that go unreported in the larger
narratives of nation-building projects and policies. For Asha, an upwardly
mobile and politically astute wannabe, Boo notes:
‘She
was a chit in a national game of make-believe, in which many of India’s old
problems – poverty, disease, illiteracy, child labour – were being aggressively
addressed. Meanwhile, corruption and exploitation of the weak by the less weak,
continued with minimal interference.’
Boo builds her story
around Abdul, a teenaged scrap dealer and his family and neighbours, and in the
process asks some tough questions:
‘What
is the infrastructure of opportunity in this society? Whose capabilities are
given wing by the market and a government’s economic and social policy? Whose
capabilities are squandered? By what means might that ribby child grow up to be
less poor?’
For all its increasing
affluence, India -- home to one-third of the world’s poor and one-quarter of
the world’s hunger -- cannot afford to be sanguine about these questions.
Also Read:
1. Q and A
by Vikas Swarup uses the ‘Who wants to be Millionaire’ format to tell arags to
riches story.
2. Shantaram by
Gregory David Roberts is the true-life story of an escaped Australian convict
who carves out a new life in a Bombay slum
3. Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found
by Suketu Mehta is the most comprehensive socio-political portrait of the city.
What is most powerful is that this is not a book about India . . . it is also a book about America and India. Read between the lines and you see that Katherine Boo wants her reader to look at America to see the parallels that connect us. We like to think that America is better off than India. However, we live in the same world; only the names are different. I read about thirty nonfiction books every year; this is the best book I have read in the last twenty years. Thank you Katherine Boo.
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