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Acts of Leisure - reporting from Mumbai!: msg#00049

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Subject: Acts of Leisure - reporting from Mumbai!




Dear All,
I am sharing some of my recent field visits' and interview experiences on the idea of 'Acts of Leisure'. A lot of my detailed writings are on my blog www.xanga.com/CityBytes and so, I am going to run thru some of the things here.

In the week gone by, I had interesting interviews with people concerning the space of Marine Drive and Nariman Point. One of the residents, Mr. Lalchandani, spoke with a great deal of contempt against people who come from all over the city to use the promenade space. He felt that the sense of belongingness which he had felt at Marine Drive / Nariman Point (MD/NP) is lost. He in fact even wanted 'quality control' for the crowds i.e. people should be restricted from coming to the promenade because they pollute the area, not just in terms of littering, but even in terms of polluting the idea of NP/MD as an 'elite, upper middle class area'. His daughter was of the view that had the Marine Drive Residents' Association been formed way back in '70s and rules strictly enforced, there would have been better quality crowd now! I was both amused and angry on hearing all these views.
Mr. Lalchandani went on to tell me how private security had been employed to protect and guard the streets and lanes between the art deco buildings at MD. He felt that this was needed because the guards were successful in keeping away hawkers and drug peddlars from the lanes. From his tone and opinions, I could make out that he is quite pro-private security.
On the other hand, the same evening, I spoke to Mr. Daswani and he told me that there is no right for the residents of NP/MD to decide who should come here and who should not. He felt that his residents' association had done nothing to claim greater stakes to the promenade.
One of the questions therefore, which I have been exploring through my own work at NP/MD concerns the dyanmics between residents, resident associations and public space. Who is the insider, who is the outsider? What are the limits to public space? I do not have conclusive answers myself. And I find it very intriguing that though we may talk about squatters and slum dwellers as outsiders, a lot of people residing in NP/MD in their flats there have been migrants and refugees themselves. People I have spoken to are Sindhis from Pakistan who came to this city after the partition. I have spoken with Gujaratis who bought flats in this area just as a matter of keeping some property. Then, by what right do we talk of excluding some from accessing space and include some?
The next day, I had another interview with a person uses the NP promenade. Later, while we were sitting and chatting, a guy from the crowd got up and pissed into the sea following which the security guard patrolling the area warned him. After this incident took place, two days later, I spoke with Karan Grover, an architect and a resident of the oval area who told me while is for 'security to maintain the space', he is against security which 'restricts enjoyment of the space'. He spoke to me how security comes in as a result of population growth and crowding. While he said this, I realized that actually, in a city, we operate by signs. The security guard has certain ideas. stereotypes and heuristics if I may say so, about 'who' is a 'miscreant', what he looks like, his mannerisms, etc. I think we operate by the same images and heuristics of a migrant, of hawkers, etc. And I guess the media plays its prominent role in perpetuating these.
The last dynamic that I have now become conscious of is the act of 'privatizing' essential services. In Mumbai, water supply and distribution is likely to be privatized soon enough. At quite a few public spaces, we have water fountains for people in the city. And I am remotely thinking of the implications of these acts of privatization on acts of leisure.
Cheers,
Zainab





Zainab Bawa
Mumbai
www.xanga.com/CityBytes

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