Man Bites ‘Slumdog’

Don't let the movie mislead you: there are no fairy-tale endings for
most of India's street kids. I was one of them myself.

Sudip Mazumdar
NEWSWEEK
 From the magazine issue dated Mar 2, 2009

On the way to see "Slumdog Millionaire" in Kolkata, I had my cabdriver
pass through the slum district of Tangra. I lived there more than 35
years ago, when I was in my late teens, but the place has barely
changed. The cab threaded a maze of narrow lanes between shacks built
from black plastic and corrugated metal. Scrawny men sat outside,
chewing tobacco and spitting into the dirt. Naked children defecated in
the open, and women lined up at the public taps to fetch water in
battered plastic jerry cans. Everything smelled of garbage and human
waste. I noticed only one difference from the 1960s: a few huts had
color TVs.

I still ask myself how I finally broke out. Jamal, the slumdog in Danny
Boyle's award-winning movie, did it the traditional cinematic way, via
true love, guts and good luck. People keep praising the film's
"realistic" depiction of slum life in India. But it's no such thing.
Slum life is a cage. It robs you of confidence in the face of the rich
and the advantaged. It steals your pride, deadens your ambition, limits
your imagination and psychologically cripples you whenever you step
outside the comfort zone of your own neighborhood. Most people in the
slums never achieve a fairy-tale ending.

I was luckier than Jamal in this way: I was no orphan. My parents came
from relatively prosperous families in East Bengal (now Bangladesh), but
the newlywed couple lost practically everything in the sectarian riots
that led up to India's independence. They fled to Patna, the capital of
northeastern India's Bihar state, where I was born a few years later.
The first of my five sisters was born there in a rat-infested hut one
rainy night when I was 3. My father was out of town, working as a
construction laborer 100 miles away. My mother sent me with my
6-year-old brother to fetch the midwife, an opium-smoking illiterate.
The baby was born before we got back, so the midwife just cut the
umbilical cord with a razor blade and left. My mother spent the rest of
the night trying to find a spot where the roof wouldn't leak on the newborn.

My parents got us out of the slums three years later. My father landed a
job as a petty clerk with a construction firm that was building a dam,
and we found a home. It was only a single rented room, but it was better
than anything we had in Patna. I went to school nearby. Sometimes a
teacher dozed off in class, and a few of us would sneak out the window
to steal ripe guavas from a nearby orchard. If we got caught we could
count on being caned in front of our classmates. Sometimes it would peel
the skin off our backs. By my early teens I was running with a local
gang. Membership was my source of confidence, security and excitement.
We stole from shopkeepers and farmers, extorted money from truckers and
fought against rivals for turf. Many of my pals came from broken
families with drunken fathers or abusive stepmothers. Their big dream
was to get a job—any job—with the dam-building firm.

Those days ended abruptly when we challenged a rival gang whose members
had teased some girls on our turf. Both sides suffered serious injuries
before police arrived to break it up. My parents didn't try to stop me
from fleeing town. I made my way to Ranchi, a small city then in
southern Bihar. I took on a new name and holed up in a squalid
neighborhood. A local tough guy befriended me. He and his partners liked
to waylay travelers at night. He always kept me away from his holdups,
but he fed me when I had no other food. I also fell in with a group of
radical leftists. I didn't care much about ideology, but they offered
the sense of belonging I used to get from my old street gang. I spent
the next five years moving from one slum to another, always a step ahead
of the police. For money I took odd jobs like peddling newspapers and
washing cars.

I might have spent the rest of my life in the slums or in prison if not
for books. By the time I was 6, my parents had taught me to read and
write Bengali. Literature gave me a special refuge. With Jack London (in
translation) I could be a brave adventurer, and with Jules Verne I could
tour the world. I worked my way up to Balzac, Hemingway and Dostoevsky.
I finally began teaching myself English with the help of borrowed
children's books and a stolen Oxford dictionary. For pronunciation I
listened to Voice of America broadcasts and the BBC World Service on a
stolen transistor radio. I would get so frustrated I sometimes broke
into sobs.

I started hanging around the offices of an English weekly newspaper in
Ranchi. Its publisher and editor, an idealistic lawyer-cum-journalist
named N. N. Sengupta, hired me as a copy boy and proofreader for the
equivalent of about $4 a month. It was there that I met Dilip Ganguly, a
dogged and ambitious reporter who was visiting from New Delhi. He came
to know that I was living in a slum, suffering from duodenal ulcers. One
night he dropped by the office after work and found me visibly ill. He
invited me to New Delhi. I said goodbye to my slum friends the next day
and headed for the city with him.

In New Delhi I practiced my English on anyone who would listen. I
eventually landed an unpaid internship at a small English-language
daily. I was delirious with joy. I spent all my waking hours at the
paper, and after six months I got a paying job. I moved up from there to
bigger newspapers and better assignments. While touring America on a
fellowship, I dropped in at NEWSWEEK and soon was hired. That was 25
years ago.

My home now is a modest rented apartment in a gated community in New
Delhi. I try to keep in touch with friends from the past. Some are dead;
others are alcoholics, and a few have even made good lives for
themselves. I've met former slum dwellers who broke out of the cage
against odds that were far worse than I faced. Still, most slum dwellers
never escape. Neither do their kids. No one wants to watch a movie about
that. "Slumdog" was a hit because it throbs with excitement, hope and
positive energy. But remember an ugly fact: slums exist, in large part,
because they're allowed to exist. Slumdogs aren't the only ones whose
minds need to be opened up.

URL: http://www.newsweek.com/id/185798

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