Thursday, March 18, 2010

Dharavi - a three hour 100 degree walk through the `slumdog` slum

Notice the mosque with its stately minarets in the midst of the rubble.
There are also Hindi and other churches in the slum, as well as medical
clinics, and other services







We went on a harrowing, sometimes heart-breaking tour of the Dharavi slum in Mumbai today. It was a guided tour, with proceeds going to a most joyous school, which we visited at the end. Over one million people live in an area roughly the size of Central Park, which they say makes this the densest "city" in the world. Most of the slums--that hold half of Bombay's people--are much smaller.
It was better and worse than we expected. Single room dwellings line both sides of tiny back streets, with kitchens and bedrooms coexisting in roughly 100 square feet or so, with up to ten people in each. Most of the alleys/streets were about three feet wide, and everything anyone uses, eats, drinks, etc., is hauled in on your back. The dwellings have no electricity or plumbing. There are community toilets--unplumbed. You must bring water when you use them. There are both open (and some closed) drains and sewers, all of which drain into a large channel at the edge of Dharavi (which empties into the Arabian Sea about two miles "downstream").

There are central water sites scattered throughout Dharavi--everyone must go get the water for their family. You fill metal buckets with drinking water and bring them to your place. You also own a large barrel near the waterspout--this is for your family baths and washing (because a barrel would take up too much room in a 100 square foot dwelling with eight people inside).

As depressing and hopeless as it seemed, there are a few signs of hope. there is an increasingly large recycling industry, processing recyclable waste from other parts of Mumbai. There are something like 15,000 single-room factories there. Some of them are doing incredibly toxic operations right among the living quarters.

We toured plastic, paper, and even metal recycling factories. Factories doesn't do it justice--we saw an aluminum recycling operation in a high ceilinged room, maybe 20 x 30 feet. It had two forges. After people had washed aluminum cans (beer, Coke, etc.), they were dried, and then fed into buckets in forges. When melted, the aluminum was poured into molds that created six pound aluminum ingots. These are transported--like everything else--via someone's back--out to the highway and sold back to the canneries, breweries, and soda plants that made them in the first place. And the cycle begins again...

I think you can see some apartment buildings in the photos above. These are on the edge of Dharavi, and are built on razed slum dwellings. Because of these illegal mini-factories, some people are actually able to move into small apartments. Our tour guide claimed that in ten years those apartments would cover what was the slum. That is hard to believe. These apartments remind me of some of the worst projects in Bed Sty or Harlem in NYC in the 70`s. Nonetheless, they are an exponential leap from the slum rooms. However, they are a hard sell too--in the slums, there is no rent, no electric or water or sewer bill. You don`t buy paint or light bulbs. The 100 rupees (two or three dollars) you make in recycling, tanning leather, or sewing don`t go very far outside the slum.

And despite the disease, the smell, the rubble, and grinding poverty, there was some hope--we saw children in a Muslim school joyously shouting their numbers from 1 to 100 (in English of course). We saw many smiles, and some laughter. Many kids shook our hands and wanted to say hello. Most adults ignored us, but many would smile and joke. The other slums have no work available, and hard and dirty as the work is, it gave the people in Dharavi some sort of leg up. There were doctors around.

As terrible as things are, there is at least a shred of hope. I don't know what we can do to help the people of Dharavi, but I hope we somehow can. There are possibilities and some glimmer of hope if they can just get a little more help. Let's face it--their money comes from being seriously exploited by companies manufacturing without health and safety regulation, no taxation (this is almost all underground) and paying wages one fifth of what they would pay in other places. Isn't there some kind of middle ground for benevolent capitalists...or is that an oxymoron?

---o0o--

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya - the old name was easier for a westerner!

The Buddha


Ganesh

Painting of a challenge

Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya

On Wednesday a few hours after arriving, and about four hours sleep, we lit out. I wanted to see the former Prince of Wales museum, now called the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya. It is a gorgeous old museum, with a stragely eclectic collection, spanning incredible Buddhist and Hindi sculpture and miniature paintings, an extensive collection of Chinese porcelain and jade (boring), and even a few galleries of western paintings by the like of William Gainsborough, Titian and Rubens' school, and even a painting of Lanky Abe Lincoln!

The museum has around 50,000 items from ancient Indian history and objects from elsewhere (Like Abe Lincoln). The museum is more or less divided into three parts: Art (largely western paiting), Archaeology and Natural History. The museum has thousands of Indus Valley Civilization artfacts, and other relics from ancient India from the time of the Guptas and Mauryas. As always, we were most interested in the archaeological artifacts--mostly scupltures, and the like. What we loved most were the ancient scupltures of Buddha and the various Hindu deities.

Since it was a holiday, the place was filled with Indians and only a small handful of tourists. One thing I found really heart-warming and amazing about Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya was how joyous and relaxed it was. The guards were smiling, and there was much talking and laughter--quite a contrast to our more staid and library-like museums. I bought a camera permit for a few dollars which allowed me to take all the photographs I wanted. I'll share as many as I can.

After much walking around town, we stopped for beers at the famous Leopold's (140 years old, a site where Indians, Africans, and Brit, German, and America tourists eat and drink together). Leopolds was the site of a terroist attack in 2008. You are wanded and your bags are checked before you enter. The beer and mint lime-ade was cold and cheap. Later Tuesday night, we had an awesoe vegetarian thalli, nan, and mineral water dinner down the street.

Back at the hotel, we chilled, drank much water, and fell out. I got in a few chapters of Rick Stieves Travel As A Political Act.
---o0o---

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Bombay calling! Getting there

We left Seattle at around 2pm Sunday.  We arrived in Bombay sometime around 3:30 am Tuesday. It took about 24 hours to get here on a Boeing 777...ten hours to Seoul Korea and a couple of hours there, then a nine hour trip from Seoul to Mumbai-Bombay. 

At the airport we took a wild ride (note: they are all wild rides!) to our hotel.  You ride through the famous slumdog slum, dodging may pope dog and other cars and taxis, beeping the horn whenever you near another vehicle or person.  There were maybe thirty red lights on the way; we did not stop for one.  More about traffic here later.  I wonder if any gringo is crazy enough to actually rent a car...


I walked around outside at 5am, and discovered literally dozens of people on our block, sleeping beside their stands or their trike-rickshaws.  As I discovered later, they mostly arise around 7 am, and begin their day.  More soon!  jack
---o0o---

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Travelogue --On the road and in the air to Southern India

The Ellora Caves, which, of course, will be a focus of our archaeological explorations.




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On Tuesday, All This Is That again becomes a travelogue for a couple of weeks, as I travel to India to visit Mumbai, Udaipur, Aurangabad, and Pune.  Some of my favorite posts on ATIT comes from my trips to NYC, Mexico, Great Britain, Florida, Turkey, and Greece. 

I'll try to start writing and posting photos Tuesday.  As always, I hope to rope in guest editors.  As always Pablo, will be providing political commentary...
---o0o---

Nigel Godrich’s "Basement Tapes"















Thanks to Ian Rodia for this awesome music link.  Ian found uber-producer Nigel Godrich’s ‘Basement’ recordings where he records random bands live in his studio; later episodes are at Bob Clearmountain’s studio.  There are a lot of interesting bands and artists that you probably know.  But, what is incredible is the sound--obviously not overdubbed or fiddled with a lot.  Everybody sounds great!  Even people of whom I;m not a huge fan. Here's a link to Godrich's website.  He is probably best known for his work with Radiohead.  He also scored recently with his work with Paul McCartney--a lot of people this was Maccas best solo work since his first album.
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Saturday, March 13, 2010

Video: 2012 - The Election

Thanks to Dr. Stephen Clarke-Willson for this clip. The folks at All This Is That (and at the President Sarah Palin blog) keep warning the "it can't happen here" folks that this could actually happen in your lifetime!


---o0o---

Friday, March 12, 2010

Thursday, March 11, 2010

My favorite Jim Morrison story: The Miami Incident


You probably remember the "Miami Incident" if you were listening to music back in 1969.  If you weren't, you may have heard about it.  My friend Frank Curran was at a Doors show in Seattle sometime later, when someone yelled "play Miami!", and Morrison unloaded on Seattle (as I also heard Jimi Hendrix do in his last hometown show).

The "Miami Incident" landed Morrison in serious hot water with the FBI and the courts.  On March 1, 1969, he gave a controversial performance at a Doors concert in Miami, Florida, and was later charged with public drunkenness, and various other crimes.  He was specifically accused of exposing himself   to the crowd, and was eventually convicted of "indecent exposure," a misdemeanor, and not the felonies he was initially charged with.  He was sentenced to serve time.  But he never served it; he moved to Paris and died at the age of 27.
One night, Morrison was out with a bunch of people, and his friend Tom Baker started goading him (it was getting hostile):

"Tell us now, Mr. Jim Morrison, rock star. Tell us what happened in Miami."

Morrison glared at Baker, and drained his drink.

"Come on, Jim, tell us once and for all."

"Well," Jim Morrison said in a quiet voice, "I wanted to see what it looked like in the spotlight."

The crowd burst out laughing, spraying the bar with their drinks and Jim grinned proudly.
---o0o---

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

The steaming pile in D.C. is almost up to Obama's Adam's Apple:::::BHO catches fire again

By Pablo Fanque
All This Is That National Affairs Correspondent

It has become abundantly clear that the Republicans and the Tea Party People think they have found the winning issue in their quest to return to power.  From chairman Michael Steele to windbag Mitch McConnell, the GOP have said that they will hold the Democrats feet to the fire for passing health care reform come November.

Essentially the Republicans intend to campaign on their twisted belief that there is nothing wrong with the way insurance companies do business.  In fact, the GOP seems to say, we probably need to cut them even more leeway.  [Ed's note:  how's that free-enterprisey stuff workin' for ya?] This is a fight that Obama is nowhere near ready to give up.  In fact, in the last few days he seems to have caught fire again--giving impassioned speeches (as opposed to those rather cooler, cerebral ones that dominated his first year as President.  He has held two large rallies outside Washington this week.  He's twisting arms, rallying the troops and making one more push to settle this insanity for once, and for all. 


Mr. Obama said this week, and rightfully so, that his health care plan incorporates the best ideas of Democrats and Republicans, and that it strikes a middle ground between government-run health care, and a system dominated by insurance companies.


"So I don't believe we should give either the government or the insurance companies more control over health care in America. I want to give you more control over health care in America."
 As an old friend once wrote in a poem "Go, you sumbitch!, go!"
---o0o---

jack brummet drawing: Faces No. 146

I drew this in a meeting yesterday in San Francisco. Hardly any of the figures represent people who attended the meeting. 

Faces No. 146, by Jack Brummet - Click to enlarge
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The Hawk--Ronnie Hawkins--performs Bo Diddly's great "Who Do You Love?" at his ex-employee's The Band's final performance

The Hawk a/k/a Ronnie Hawkins, performs Bo Diddly's great "Who Do You Love?" at his ex-employee's--The Band's--final performance on Thanksgiving night, 1976.  Great tune, great performance. 


---o0o---

Tuesday, March 09, 2010

The Dilemma: which bath?

























In my hotel room at the St. Regis in San Francisco (in SoMa), after 12 hours of meetings, I am "free" until 8 AM, after I get through 47 emails. I am staring at this actually quite hilarious, card, thinking, "OK, should I just go ahead and expense this $1,650 bath?" Do you think anyone would notice? Or should I be parsimonious and just do the the Krug Champagne and truffles bath for a mere $525?
---o0o---