The day began with a
conversation with my two maids, both of who happened to land up at more or less
the same time today. They’re friends and neighbours often looking out for each
other- in fact I found one through the other. The conversation initiator was
the rain. It has been raining incessantly for the last few days. Its like the
monsoon decided to make a comeback with a vengeance. Not that I’m complaining.
This city needs all the water it can get and more. As do the farmers tending to
their fields, I suppose. Anyway, there was a fresh bout of furious rain in the
morning right about the time that they turned up. Anita, the cook looked out of
the window and commented on it. On how hard and relentlessly its been raining,
and how the building compound, especially at the back, is waterlogged. I nodded
absent-mindedly. My window opens out to the back of building compound, and the
view is thankfully mostly green (and beautiful), and if you look down from the
balcony or the window, you can see the empty brown patch that some residents
use for parking. I’ve been noting the build up of the water in this small brown
patch. It often turns into a tiny pond, as it did this morning, until the earth
soaks up the water.
But I digress. All the
romance of the rain went straight of the window when I heard what she said
next. She mentioned how the water had come into their house and upto the
ankles, wetting everything. Couldn’t sleep the whole night, she said, because
everything is wet, you know, even the mattress, all the while smiling ear to
ear. It never fails to amaze me. It’s not the first time that I’ve heard
something like this of course, but it just seems so incredible that people can
live like that and talk about it so nonchalantly, even happily. She spoke of
the water seeping in from the ground. (All this ‘reclaimed’ land in Mumbai! I
live on it, and I’m not blind to its repercussions. The city is bursting at the
seams, and anyone with half a mind can see it. But the builder-politician nexus
will not allow any corrective measures. So land will continue to get reclaimed,
buildings will continue to come up, slums too for the people in the high rises
need their maids and their guards and their delivery boys and their drivers.)
Then she spoke of the water
coming in from above, and went on to explain that her husband, being stocky,
can’t climb up properly and put the plastic sheet on the roof. Besides the day
they had to buy the plastic sheet, he was at work and she was entrusted with
the task of buying it, and she got the wrong size, correct length wise, but
short breadth wise; so now they’re stuck with a roof that only provides part
protection and the water keeps coming in. Animatedly they exchanged notes about
their husbands, how Vibha’s knows how to build a house, and has build enough of
a good rapport at work so that whenever he needs it, labour is easy to find.
Like last year when the roof of her house came crashing down. Fortunately Anita
was around then though Vibha was at work, and she took in Vibha’s kids and
called to inform her (yes, they have cellphones!). Vibha was shocked, how could
my house just fall like that? But her enterprising husband came with a bunch of
men from work, and they put it up again within an hour. My house is also
bigger, Vibha said proudly, and drier because it’s at a higher level, so the
water takes much longer to seep through. And it has four layers of thick
plastic as roofing, so the water doesn’t come in. They went on to speak of some
unruly relatives, and how friends are so much more precious in times of need,
and of demolition drives, when everyone comes to everyone’s rescue though some
neighbours do take advantage and steal. Mostly it is the Corporation workers
though. They take away all good stuff, the utensils, the gas cylinder even the
bamboo poles used to make houses. All this accompanied with much smiling and
giggling.
It had something of a
humbling effect, this ‘girly’ conversation with my maids. It reminded me of how
petty I can sometimes be in my concerns. It reminded me of the resilience of
people, especially the poor in this country and I suppose in the world, and
their ability to smile and be happy in situations that seem so hopeless to me.
I wondered about my own ‘armchair intellectualism’, and its usefulness, if any.
I wondered about the order of things- how it’s always been and will always
continue to be (so why despair over it?)
And having gone through the
motion of pondering over such questions, no wiser in the end than at the start,
I sat down and wrote this post.
Meanwhile, it continues to
rain.
1 comment:
the resilience of the poor...and the fact that because they know they have no choice, they choose to be reasonably happy with it. that bothers me no end...lack of choice for better living....what happens when they see they can have better but are being denied it because no one up there cares? will there be a mass realisation like that or will it be status quo for a long long time...we armchair intellectuals and general observers have an interesting life ahead :)
Post a Comment