
As someone who lived in and loved Delhi throughout her college years, and as someone who now lives far away, a lot of this description resonates. Delhi does make you think intensively about inequality, as does India in general. And this is because wealth and poverty are not segregated there. They live side by side. Is this a good thing or a bad thing? Not easy to answer. It's easy to forget poverty living in the suburbs of America. The Bronx and Harlem are less than fifty miles from where I live and yet my little suburb would have no idea of the lives people lead there. The idea of someone poor daring to enter a suburb would be unthinkable. And no visibly rich person would dare drive his or her Mercedes into parts of Harlem or the Bronx. The last time a poor guy drove around my neighborhood trying to sell frozen fish out of the back of his truck (the equivalent to a foodcart man in India), the neighbors called the cops on him. So, I guess you have to choose – a comfortable life in a pristine suburb with the poor pushed far away, or a messy life in a megapolis where you have to accept everything that you see outside your window. No easy choices for the thinking kind.Sharmishtha
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Whoa Marina … that … in a succinct and well written package describes it all PERFECTLY!!!Yes, Yes, Yes and more yeses … lots of resonation here! Am sharing that with my facebook friends …
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