Patrice Riemens on Fri, 21 Aug 1998 19:26:56 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> Calcutta, or the city 'at the edge of forever' |
(This is a - slightly edited - translation of a forthcoming article in the "Geografenkrant," a Dutch geographical journal) -------------------------------------------------------------------------- "We are in the thick of the sprawling city of Calcutta, and I am one of around ten million people living in this city. This is a city which is loved and hated. Kipling called it "the city of dreadful night". Lord Clive, the founder of British India, called it "the most wicked place in the universe". Nehru called it the city of processions, of political manifestations", and Guenther Grass called it "God's excrement"; and you, Reinhard Hauff, you have probably survived the first shock and have started liking Calcutta." (Filmaker Mrinal Sen in conversation with his German collegue Reinard Hauff in the latter's film "10 Days in Calcutta" (1987). CALCUTTA, OR THE CITY "AT THE EDGE OF FOREVER" There is a passage in Satjayit Ray's film "Pratidwandi" ("The Adversary", 1970) when the young hero, drowsy and sweating on his way to the upteenth purposeless job interview, periliously hangs on the platform of an overcrowded double-decker bus (a "RTX", like in London). Seeing the film in the early nineties in "Nandan", Calcutta's art house, one mostly notices that the bus is not overcrowded by any current standard, and that the broad boulevards of the city are uncongested and spiky clean. Almost thirty years after the film was shot, RTXs, and their successors, unweldy double-decker truck combines, have vanished from the streets, and so would seem the municipal cleaning lorries. The question as to how far urban dilapidation, Calcutta's hallmark for the past decades, can be pushed remains unanswered. But then, it is the perfectly wrong one. This is may be why film and fiction provide the best approach to a city whose mythical reputation ("Oh Calcutta...") seems to preclude any necessity to get acquainted with the real thing on locale, as any attempt to do so looks dicey, pointless, or futile by advance. Thus, a good introduction to the Calcutta atmosphere is another Satjayit Ray masterpiece, "Mahanagar" ("The Big City, 1963), where, as the credits scroll by, the camera focuses on the trolley of a tram-car following its haphazard course along the disjointed electric line. With a regular monotony enhanced by a dull tabla beat, a spark or a flame fuses, while on both sides, the ornated, monumental facades of banks, offices and other institutions pass by against the background of a brewing thunderstorm. The reference to Calcutta's fame as "the grandest city built by Europeans outside Europe" could not be starker. Which unriddles in one stroke the aura of horror in which Calcutta is held in the Western mind. It is not so much the - usually exagerated - reports about abysmal poverty, shocking filthiness, disgraceful overcrowding, and the complete collapse of the urban infrastructure, not to mention the near-legendary agonizing destitutes at every street corner (mercifully whisked of just-in-time to one of Saint Mother Theresa death-camps) which rattle the senses, but the uncannily familiar cityscape where all European architectural styles can be found, from Palladian Baroque to pre-post modern Bauhaus. Knowing this, for Calcutta to have been often described in terms of a post-nuclear, rather than of a terminally dilapidated Indian, or "Third World" city, comes no longer as a surprise. But after having served for more than three decades as Doomsday Urban capital of the World, Calcutta now gladly has handed on the torch to younger mega-cities such as Manilla, Sao Paolo or Mexico-City which are plunging into the accelerating downward spiral of urban immiseration that comes with the globalazing trends their elites have so blissfuly embraced. In India too, the concept of "Brazilianisation" is making furore in the real of urban developments. This term encapsulates, among other things, the growing gap between rich and poor, the tendency of the former to go for conspicuous consumption of "international" goodies and the adoption of a life-style inspired by television soap-series. It mostly comes to symbolise the intense desire of the (newly) propertied classes to sever all links with the poor, whose destitution, jealousy, or even mere presence, they have come to loath and fear. This is the sort of developments Calcutta, in her very typical way, is paying lip-service to, but is not partaking in any substantial measure. Sale of self-contained condominiums on the road to Dum-Dum airport is a no-goer. The mighty rich still have themselves conveyed in chaufeured Hindustan "Ambassadors" ("Ambies", in Calcutta parlance), a sparsely redisigned, massively under-engineered remake of the Morris Oxford of 1957 vintage. (It is still being manufactured, and even being exported - to London!). Public utilities like telephone and electricity will fail at any given moment, and this totally irrespective of neigboorhoud. In fact, a look at the municipal ground plans learns that there is not one single "ward" (district) in the city that is is entirely free of "bustees" (slums). Calcutta remains for sure the most singular of the five Indian "metros". This latter term is the appelation of the five largest Indian cities: Bangalore; Delhi-New Delhi, Mumbai ( ex-Bombay), and "Chennai", the allegedly more authentic name of Madras (by the same token, Calcutta should at least be re-spelled "Kolkatah": heaven forbids!). Bangalore is the cadet of this set. A computer technology driven push -highly unstable, it would appear - has propelled this former retirement heaven for high ranking civil and military officers into a chao-dynamic glas, steel and concrete edge city without proper center., its lush gardens gone, and its mellow, faintly European climate, thoroughly chocked to death by the exhausts of innumerable scooters. Bangalore represents the ideal to which all other metros aspire, but for the fact that they are terminally weighted down by their culpable past in the "License-Permit-Quota Raj" of the first fifty "self ustained" years of Indian independance. This applies to Delhi/New Delhi, which despites its all-out expansion cis-Jamuna or otherwise, still eludes true urban character, whereas Madras/Chennai seems satisfied with its status as capital of the mildly unserious Tamili lands. And where globalisation is alleged to hold the key to the future, Bombay's - sorry Mumbai's - delirious claims to a Sassanian certification as "Global City", surely must stretch credulity to its outer limits...and far beyond. Calcutta, on the other hand, being in the grips of a near permanent recession since the late forties, sticks to its by now almost fossile 'second wave" economic activities, and has little truck with the Central government's policies of "opening up" the Indian economy. The West Bengal administration may pay some lip service to the wooing of foreign investors, but for Mr Keith Wilson, CEO of Bata, and the nearest equivalent of Bill Gates in the world of shoe manufacture, old fashioned "marxist-leninist" trade unionism is still alife and kicking: the other day, he was stabbed in the hand while visiting his restive domain in Batanagar. Meanwhile, but for a few delusive billboard and the stray, probably disfunctioning cellular phone, globalisation at street level is yet anywhere to be witnessed. Calcutta still basks in its exceptionalism, in which a propension for culture and a disinclination for things material remain paramount values. The entrance to this reality is again being provided by fiction. Amitav Ghosh's vaguely SciFi novel "the Calcutta Chromosome" (1997) is a fine mix of orientalist religion, malaria research in the previous century, and IT in the next one, but is foremost a peregrination through the arcanes of a contemporary, yet indefinable Calcutta. French filmaker Nicolas Klotz took the same approach in "La Nuit Bengali" (1988), his reinterpretation of Mircea Eliade's novel "Maitreyi". The story is set in the forties, yet was filmed in full exteriors, with trams, "ambies" and handriksha's moving in and out of the screen without cinemagoers noticing any anachronism. An expedient conclusion, already made by anthropologist Claude Levi-Strauss in the late forties, is that time has stood still in Calcutta. In "Les tristes tropiques", Levi-Strauss details how travels in far-away, "backward", or "primitive" places, is a dispolacement in time rather than in distance. In part, this does indeed seem to hold for Calcutta. To take just one example, Calcutta's tramway system, the last of its sort in Asia, cannot be described otherwise than as an extensive working transport museum. To the keen observer, however, the time trip may be rather described as one leading back to the future, and we willl shortly return to that. But presently, another recurrent theme in the Calcutta lore is that of the mystery. Many writings about Calcutta view the city as an enigma, and try to prize open its alleged code. This is the line in John Hutnyk's enquiry into the motives of young, Western "backpackers" to engage in voluntary work in Calcutta's high-profile charitative sector. "The Rumour of Calcutta" is for sure an appropriate title, since the city is.indeed...rumoured, to exist by virtue of "adda", the in no way pejorative Bengali appelation for gossip. It is remarkable , despite all that separates them, that both the novelist's personnages, and the anthropologist's informants talk in terms of a "cypher". "Everyone thinks that Calcutta is saying something. That it is a message, a sign, and all we need is to crack the code." One would rather not advise "Suzie", Hutnyk's informant, to look into Ghosh's novel for an answer. It is there allright, but the outcome as a notch too reminiscent of Gabriel Garcia Marquez's ending of "Hundred Years of Solitude" for psychological sanity. Thus, since we have to do with what one author has elegantly termed "an enigma enclosed in a mystery" (or the other way round), we are making no further progress, a realistic Calcutta experience by all means, but this aside. There always remains, however, a questionning about the questionners, or to recast our problem: in Calcutta, who is "everybody"? This points us back to "The Grandest City built by Europeans outside Europe". Calcutta may be the most European-looking city in India, it is at the same time the least "Western". This paradox may be explained by historical developments. There is a shared opinion in Calcutta that something went grieviously wrong with the city's past: it should never have taken place. The core question is: why did Calcutta had to relinquish its primacy? The ever cursed Viceroy (Governor General) Lord Curzon, after partitioning Bengal in 1905 (it became East Pakistan after 1947, and finally Bangla Desh), had the capital of India moved to Delhi, a measure implemented in 1912 (whereupon New Delhi was build & finalised by 1927). Economically, the ageing first and second wave industries, and a silting up harbour were no longer competitive against Bombay and the West Coast of India by the early seventies. By the 1981 census, Bombay was also beating its rival on its speciality: masses of people, and had become India's number one popultaion centre. Calcutta also payed the highest toll for "Partition" in 1947. As the country was carved up, it lost its natural hinterland in East Bengal, but had to admit and assimilate millions of refugees, something that happened again when Bangla Desh was born amidst gruesome violence in 1971. The consequence of this "injustice of History" is a pervasive denial reaction, which lends that peculiarly 'surealistic" flavor to working and living in Calcutta. Basically, Calcutta flaunts its cultural and artistic superiority to the rest of the nation, and declines to join the pack. The local variant of the communist party of India (dubbed "Marxist") has been in power for the past twenty-five years. A myriad of coffee houses, always packed, humm with discussions about Derrida or the Venice Biennale - or with the purr of aging gentlemen dozing under their favorite paper, "The Statesman". This oldest English daily in India is still printed and distributed from its centrally located palatial premises, sports a scarcely believable staff to readers ratio of 1 to 1000, beside maintaining an in-house cycle repair shop, an own laundry, and a company restaurant dishing out quite creditable Chicken Marengo. Calcutta's aversion of currently fashionable globalising trends find its origin in a long history of contraryness. Calcutta was the craddle of the Indian independance movement, way back in the previous century, and the opposition against British rule was always several notches more violent than in the rest of the country. The undisputed historical hero of Calcutta - Tagore and Lenin sharing a good second place - Subhas Chandra Bose (aka "Netaji", an epitheton beter left untranslated), considered the Mahatma a whimp, and liaised with the nazis and the Japanese during WWII. As the world-wide student protest movement of the late sixties took a true revolutionnary turn in Calcutta (traffic constables were ruthlessly shot from their platforms), the international business community called it a day. The last "managing agencies", holding companies of sorts born out of the left-overs of the East India Company, which were in British hands were sold of to Marwari businessmen, while the Central governemnt in New Delhi choose to turn its back on Calcutta, branding it as a "dying city". Calcutta's negative image may well be even stronger in India, where it is based on alleged facts, than outside, where it is mainly folkloric. But in the meanwhile the international community, and especially the then fledgeling but fast expanding "development industry" caught up with the ground level realities in Calcutta. It did not like what it saw, and serious concern arose about "the city which looked predestined to be the first to go down under the weight of its own misery" (Geoffrey Moorhouse). An international panel of town planners was send on locale. They reported back that " they have not seen human degradation on a comparable scale in any city of the world. This is the matter of one of the greatest urban concentration in existence rapidly approaching the point of breakdown..." The most worrying part was a possible "domino effect" among other large world cities: "If the final breakdown is to take place, it would be a disaster for mankind of a more sinister sort than any disaster of flood and famine. It would be a confession of failure..." (Frederic Thomas, quoting a report from the end-sixties). The calamitous tune was set and apocalypse was the keynote. But by 1971 the newly created "Calcutta Municipal Development Authority" (CMDA), banked up with near dicatorial powers and high-spirited expertise from the Ford Foundation, embarked on a massive and truly ambitious restructuration programme. Twnty-five years later, progress has been substantial, whether in the field of sanitation, drinking water supply, basic food distribution, primary health care, schools and public transportation. Taken as a whole, slums in Calcutta, pace Pilkarna ("City of Joy") of cinematic fame, are in beter shape than their equivalents in Bombay or in other Indian cities, was it only because the government is prevented from not caring about them. Contrarily to the other metros whose governing bodies are mostly harbouring wet dreams about a techno-cybernetic future, where the "problem" of poverty has somehow been solved (presumably by doing away with the poor), Calcutta has never denied the existence of destitution in its midst. It has even taken the title of Lapierre's book and Joffe's film as a title to fame cum touristic manifesto. And even Mother Theresa has by now been annexed into the official iconography of the city. But what about a little Calcutta experience? Best is to leave the material deprivation, of people, animals, buildings, public places, and public transport alone, and to open one's ears to the rumour of the city. Which goes in many tongues. While Bombay goes wild in an orgy of "Maharashrtra-isation", and wishes to abolish English, the very language of globalisation it pretends to embrace - even changing its own name into the unwieldy "Mumbai" in the process - Calcutta holds to its own, bizare linguistic protocols. Over half the inhabitants don"t even speak the supposedly local lingo. Bengali may be the language of culture and politics, and culture and politics are paramount in Calcutta, but serious business is conducted in other tongues. Bengali (also known as "the French of India") is first and foremost the language of the "Bhadralok" the local equivalent of the Polish 'slatsha" (i.e. a plethoric, impoverished, and ineffective gentry). Members of that class, even when fallen on hard times, are not reputed to gladly engage in such ghastly occupations as running businesses, or plain wage-earning. Marwari, a caste of business people hailing from far away Rajasthan, speak a Hindi of sorts. They own between them nearly all companies making a profit (the West Bengal government "operate" the remainder, hundreds upon hundreds of so-called 'sick units", turning out any kind of produce in the jute, transport, or manufacture sectors, including that of "Indian Made Foreign Liquor"). Managers, professionals and traders generally speak English. Artisans, riksha-pulers, and other "coolies" speak the language of the neigbouring states where they come from, generally Orissa or Bihar. While these "vernaculars" are on the rise in other parts of India, often as result of regional and/or religious fundamentalist fervour, English remains Calcutta's lingua franca of sorts, where it even has proletarian roots, especially among the slowly vanishing caste of "Anglo-Indians", so touchingly portrayed in Aparna Sen's film "36, Chowringhee Lane" (1991). Calcutta's cosmopolitan substrate may be historic, it nevertheless remains very real. Strolling in the old center of town, one may so encounter an Armenian quarter, a couple of synagogues, or even a Greek Orthodox church. The latter towers above Kalighat tram depot (opposite Mother Theresa most famous "mourroir", obligingly mentioned as exit destination in Kalighat Underground Station). Its parish consists of less than ten souls, but the Greek government decided to endow it lavishly a few years ago: it has been comprehensively restaured and equipped with all modern worship amenities (There are also 20.000 Greek Orthodox christians in the tribal belt arounfd Arambol, 80 miles north of Calcutta, the avatars of a somewhat excentric missionary effort in the late twenties. They too benefit from the gentle, if somewhat haphazard, ministration of the State Church governing body in far-away Athens). Calcutta's Chinese district - the only real Chinatown in India - is alas a shadow of its former self. There is one temple left, a few traditional shops, two soja-sauce factories, and the ghost palace "Nanking", once one of the pooshest establishments East of Suez. The India-China war of 1962 and the rhetoric excesses of Maoism did a lot of damage to the community, which scattered all over the subcontinent (it seems that India's best Chinese restaurants is now to be found in a small town in Gujarat). Nowadays, the Calcutta Chinese, still some 30.000 in number, have regrouped in Tangra, a drab industrial district to the East of the city. This environment of heavilly polluting tanneries is quite in line with Calcutta's horrendous reputation of ecological collapse, but behind high walls or in the deep recesses of factories built as miniature fortresses, wealthy famillies inhabit true Ming palaces. And culinary afficionados have now for long found their way through muddy and unwelcoming blind alleys, where authentic Chinese fare is served behind unprepossessing facades - at five star hotels rates. All this cannot hide that Calcutta's contemporary fame remains firmly encapsuled in the term decay. Decay in Calcutta is as pervasive as it is indefinable. It seemd to be so much engrained in the nature of the city, that the authors of the only - and very commendable - Western travel guide on Calcutta have elevated it into an "art form" (Insight Guides, 1992). But then tourism to Calcutta is next impossible to accomodate in any known category, save may be the extremist, post-modern ones like "ultimate" or "ultra-hip". The trickle of "ordinary" tourists is of course substantially augmented by the inflow of charity visitors. Beside the occasional VVIp flown in for a "significant" encounter with Mother Theresa (Lady Di was one of the last, and now both are dead, Calcutta's PR industry is somewhat in a cleft stick), there will be hundreds of young Western volunterrs at any given time busying themselves at the Little Sisters of Charity's establishments or in Dr Jack Preger's street clinic. Outsiders and "profesionals" are contemptuous of these activities. But the fact is that Calcutta must be one of the last places in the so-called developing world where idealistic but inexperienced youth from the North can get to something, now that "development aid" has turned into a huge inward-looking closed shop bureaucracy. Charity volunteers share a small, centrally located district of the "White Town" with the floatsam of India-going scene for which Calcutta" main attraction is its tolerance and the ever-availability of affordable and firrst-rate 'substances". Sudder Street is the main artery of this fully-contained backpackers ghetto, where the hospitality trade bears names such as "Blue Sky" (cafe); "Rambo" (beer-bar); "Paragon", "Maria" or "Modern Lodge" (hotels). This latter establishment - home base to Hutnyk's "participant observation" research drive - is the most famaous of them all, and even maintains a full-fledged web-site. More often than not Indian customers are unwelcome in these guest-houses so that the Westerners can enjoy a "home away from home", escape the crowds outside to be among themselves and generally relax according to their own life-style between two days of hard toil amongst the poorest of the poor. Save for the walk or shared taxi trip to their occupations, the temporary inhabitants of this remarkable little district maintain next to no linkage with the rest of the city as a whole. And this results in the stray "foreign tourist" having the run of a city of 14 million inhabitants almost to her/himself: but for the above-mentionned "travellers", there live less "mzungus" in Calcutta that in your average Tanzanian district headquarters. In order to penetrate to some extent Calcutta's fascinating specificity a longer stay is however a prerequisite. Besides securing appropriate quarters - Sudder Street area will definitely not fit the bill - it is important to flush out the mist of catastrophism in one's head. Calcutta itself has abandonned this inclination long time ago, if ever it seriously had it at all: a few years back there were huge municipal bill-boards over road intersections with the slogan "Calcutta is for Ever!". Before long, the accidental tourist will come to share Frederic Thomas's assertion that to-day's Calcutta is, in the words of Kipling, "a city above pretense". It mainly denotes an attitude among citizens and authorities which is closer to realism than to fatalism. And which might well point us a possible road within what some authors have already called "modernity beyond repair". That is the only pragmatic approach to the global metropolitan crisis in an age that is, as a whole, increasingly taking the character istics of the "Third World" as we knew it. In this fast approaching future, there might be an alternative to "Brazil" after all. It is called "Bengalisation". Literature and URLs: HardWired: Geoofrey Moorhouse's classic: 'Calcutta', London/Basingstoke, Penguin 1971 Paul Vattin et all 'Calcutta': Insight Guides: Singapore, 1992. Ashok Mitra Calcutta Diary: Calcutta, 1985 circa John Hutnyk The Rumour of Calcutta: London, Zed, 1996; Frederic Thomas Elegies on a City beyond Pretense: New York, EastGate, 1997. Amitav Ghosh's The Calcutta Chromosome: New York, Avon Books, 1997. Wired tout court: Check out the "official site of West Bengal" at: www.westbengal.com/calcutta first. Don"t forget to look at "links" Enjoy Trevor's Fisher's hilarious "backpacker tourist" site after that: http://www.rophy.demon.co.uk/index.htm The Statesman (daily): www.thestatesman.org John Hutnyk's site (great on Bhangra music also!): was at uni Manchester, but apparently gone 404! ------------------ (translated by patrice Riemens) (3985 w) ------------------ For copyright & other reasons, this piece is not intended for publication in the forthcoming (?) Nettime/zkp5 "Bible". --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl