Thursday, July 28, 2005

True Spirit

26th July 2005 – Mumbai, the financial capital of India was hit by a cyclone and the city witnessed almost 944mm of rainfall in less than 24 hours. The city has suffered serious damage both in life and property; army has been called upon for help. Normalcy will take time.

But what makes me write this blog, it’s the true spirit of Mumbai that the world always talked about and yesterday I witnessed it myself.

A time of disaster in India means extra moneymaking time for the corrupt and taking sadist advantage of the situation, but Mumbai witnessed heroes rise.

The rains was so severe that the Local trains stopped (the heart of Mumbai travel), busses stopped, taxis and auto stopped and most of the personal vehicles lay stranded in more than 10s of kilometers of jam. More than 100 of thousands of people took the roads on foot with more than 4 feet of water.

My office is 32 kilometers from my home and it took me 2 auto rickshaws, 1 taxi ride, 2 truck rides and a 10 km walk to reach home in more than 5 hours. But I consider myself lucky as some had to suffer more.

What failed?

Government failed miserably, I would say India should again go back to the status of under developed country. Mumbai had no disaster management service. People lay stranded for more than 36 hours, 1000s become homeless, 100s died and only thing that one got to hear in media was -

Police blames municipal corporation, municipal corporation blames the fire brigade department, fire brigade department blamed it on the Navy and the cost guard, they in turn blamed it on the failure of the mobile networks.

So you can see this is what we are best at, I am sorry not the people, let me rephrase this

“So you can see this is what are MINISTERS and LEADERS are good at, eating away the money and at time of questioning blame it on each other”. It’s so sad.

What did not fail and will never ever fail?

It’s the people. No one was there except the people and citizens of Mumbai for each other. Shopkeepers served tea and gave free food to the stranded; truck drivers and taxis gave free rides to people, travelers held each other and became support for one another. The true spirit of Mumbai and its people filled up the air.

I will never ever in my life will forget this day, as this day I realized the country is not of its leaders but of its people, a company is not of its bosses but of its employees and instead of me wasting time cursing our corrupt leaders, I should utilize it by helping the needy and praising the Heroes, praising all those unknown faces who came to the rescue with a single motive of serving humanity, god bless them all.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Mumbai Rains and 26/7

Hi Sumit. You can call me kerry. Thats good enough for now. I have gone through your blog and am overtly impresed with your thought process. Your writing skills are so good that I can literally touch your mind and soul.

I hope to meet you someday over a drink and have long philosophical discussions.

I love Mumbai. I have lived there all my life. I have seen 26/7 with my own eyes. And as you said some other people's experiences were more horrible. I had to walk through some 8 kms of knee-deep water and did the other things what a normal Mumbaikar would have done that day.

What impressed me was the spirit of Mumbai. A city reputed to have a heart of steel and mortar, came out on that day and extended a hand to anybody and everybody who needed it.

All issues of caste creed just bit the dust. A city stood up when the whole infrastructure failed. That was expected. We have seen quite a lot of failures so I did not mind it.

But what happened after that was what hit me more. The infrastructure did not improve. The officials did not respond. The roads and drains were the same. And I lost hope.

It was then that I decided that I would not want to live in this city any more. I did not want my son to grow up in this environment. So I quit, took up a job and am here in your city.

I am not a quitter. There is no place for a person like me in "that" city. The decision was tough. I had to leave my childhood behind, my friends, my favourite pubs and come here to live a life of anonymity.

I dont miss all that anymore. What I miss is the pace of the city, the passion the city has. Maybe one day I will be able to make that difference to this city.