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June 6, 1997

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A Ganesh Nadar

A smile amidst all that squalor and filth Dharavi -- where the national language is Tamil

In the movie, Enter the Dragon, one of the heroes says, "Slums are the same the world over -- they stink." But that's not what makes Dharavi unique. Dharavi is unique because its size makes it the largest in Asia. Also, unlike other slums which are generally residential, Dharavi has a large number of cottage industries.

Dharavi's main population consists of Tamilians who've migrated to Bombay from their home state. These Tamilians have imported their village atmosphere into their new place of residence. Dharavi is a closed society. Even the non-Tamilians have learnt to speak Tamil to survive here. There are some Tamilians who have been here for years and still don't know a single word of Hindi. They don't need to know. They live and work in Dharavi where the national language is Tamil.

We knew it would be difficult to get through to the villagers of Dharavi without a local person. So we tagged along with an autorickshaw driver and a local hotelier. Without them, the residents wouldn't trust us.

The streets, as expected, were filthy. We saw a goat atop a derelict car that was quietly rusting outside the equally shoddy police station. Garbage rose in mounds everywhere. There were a lot of toilets and, yet, there was excreta all over the place.

We had come to visit the industries and the first place we saw was a chevda (snack) making unit. One man was kneading the atta (dough). Another man was frying it in a huge cauldron of boiling hot oil. The shop had no windows, it was extremely hot and dirty, yet the workers were smiling.

Our next stop was a godown. It also was windowless. Women were cleaning channa (gram). The men were roasting it. The method used for roasting was crude, but effective.

We saw a boy bathing on the road, near a small pump. He kept pumping the water into a bucket. In a petty shop, a cat posed on a row of bottles.

We saw a weirdo who looked like he was dressed for a horror movie. When we tried to photograph him, he told us to get lost.

In a small room, we watched a group of people making shoes. This room, too, was windowless. But, at least, it had a fan. To compensate for the lack of space, they had install a strong shelf all around the room. Young boys sat on these shelves and worked. An old man sat on the floor and applied the finishing touches.

Young girls are employed in the task of making rakhis (girls tie rakhis to the wrists of their brothers on a special festive day). The designs are intricate and the girls work patiently.

In the goldsmith's shop, they hadn't started work yet.

We saw an amazing iron workshop in the heart of Dharavi. Like the others, this room was also windowless. Yet, one shaft of sunlight managed to get in. There are no engineers in this workshop where huge wheels, to be used in handloom mills, were being made. They were actually melting iron, pouring it into a dye, pressing it by walking on it and then removing the completed product. How they could achieve a temperature high enough to melt iron is something that still boggles me! As far as they were concerned, they just did it.

The bakery was huge and the ovens, simply gigantic. People were kneading dough. Some were rolling it. Others were cutting it. Some were loading the ovens, others were unloading it. Above the ovens, on one side, we could see some beds. I think these people sleep here. They looked happy despite the heat.

Paanwallas are a part of Bombay. You can find them on almost every street. In Dharavi, we found a paanwalli who had yet to reach her teens. She made us a tasty paan, which was cheap too.

Another man was making chappatis on hot coal. On the road.

The kite-making industries in Dharavi is probably the cleanest there. People were sitting calmly and pasting together sticks and colourful paper.

Dharavi has a lot of chikki (a sweet made of jaggery and nuts) and banana chip factories, too.

They get no subsidies, they get no bank loans and, yet, they are doing well. You only realise how well when you ask them how much property they own back home or how much dowry they shelled out for their daughter's marriage.

Dharavi is the place to go if you want a government rubber stamp or a university certificate. This is the place where you get tickets, under an assumed name, for any south-bound train. This is where you contact an underworld hitman or get the cheapest prostitutes. None of these facilities, of course, were available to us.

We had spent three-and-a-half backbreaking hours in Dharavi. The sun was getting hotter. We decided to call it a day.

Photographs: Jewella Miranda

Washing clothes



No space to play



Cleaning the sewer with his bare hands



Making chewda



The young lad enjoys his open air bath



The little shoemaker



Making rakhis



Making huge wheels with primitive techniques



Fresh bread available here



The little paanwali who's not yet a teenager



Hot chappatis off the street



Kite-making



A cat reclines over bottles of sweets



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A Ganesh Nadar

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