
While visiting
Bandra last week, I was disgusted by the extreme inequalities in
Mumbai, India. Its
incredible how someone can trample on, spit on, or ignore the extreme suffering of not only a another human being but a fellow country man. How can the filthy rich, oh and I mean filthy, sit in their Malabar Hill mansions,
Bollywood worthy
Bandra condos, or
their exclusively owned gated communities of Hari Andani, without feeling the least bit
of remorse? In order to live with such disregard, one must
dehumanize or make the poor and helpless
invisible. But how can the haves not see entire families of four or more lining the sidewalks; sleeping huddle together with
their children in the middle so as to shelter them from the night breeze? The desperate cries of a destitute baby are so weaken by hunger that they do not reach them, sitting high up in
their penthouses. They avoid walking a few blocks to
their neighborhood train stations, for with personal drivers and AC cars with tinted windows, why would they take public transportation. But as they drive by Bandra Station, how can they ignore the crippled, old and young alike who are starving, begging for
their next meal while rolling in agony in
their own feces? But even when a few, skinny and dirty, wander to
their doorsteps, escaping the eye of a snoozing security guard, they look blankly past them or
shoo them off as you would a dog. The lack of apathy here scares me to death. How can someone look at human suffering in the face of a swollen bellied child
while eating a sandwich and
sneer, moved by disgust rather than
compassion. These Indian inequalities are the most shocking in big cities such as
Mumbai, where millions of dollars apart, people co-exist within a few blocks radius; some sleeping on down pillows and comforters while others on the cold concrete. I will not deny that inequality exists all over the world, in our own countries, but not like this. I consider myself to be well traveled, over 20 countries in all, but never have I seen such pronounced
decadence and despair. I can not help but to feel alarmed. What kind of a world do we live in that allows over 1/4 of the population in India to live on less than $1 a day while rent in a
Bandra condo starts at $1000 per month? And we participate in this
debauchery, acquiring more and more material
possessions; our greed insatiable. I dare you to challenge this unjust social order because living in extremes
benefits no one and in the words of
MLK, an injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.