Tuesday, December 06, 2005

"Please do the needful"

Its an Indian term, its an all-encompassing Indian term; its used when you know specifically what you need done (or need to do) and still say, "do the needful"; its also used when you don't really know what needs to be done, but leave it to the better judgement of the other person, and say, "do the needful". I find myself very tempted to use the term at the end of business emails and somehow manage to rephrase.

To satiate my nostalgia and home-sickness, this is a post about my hometown, Bangalore**. Bangalore is now the Showpiece of the Indian Economy. When the Premier of China visited India few months back, he didn't go to the capital Delhi first, or even the finance hub Bombay, he was most intrigued by the goings-on in Bangalore, the IT Capital of India. B'lore is where most of the IT work going to India gets outsourced; where multinationals are setting up shop at a phenomenal rate; where most of the outsourced calls get answered from; the land of the IT giants, Infosys and Wipro; the city that Tom Friedman of the nytimes spent a few months in last year and got the inspiration for his book, "The World is Flat"; the Indian city with the highest hotel rates; the fastest growing city in Asia (and if there's a city growing faster anywhere else in the world, I dont know about it)...but that's not the B'lore I know..

In spite of being born in Madras (now, Chennai), since I grew up in B'lore, I consider myself a Bangalorean. B'lore then was the Garden City of India. A relaxed, laidback town, boasting of very good infrastructure and planning (ironic, eh?), great weather all year through, clean air, and a great bunch of people. It was the land of "solpa adjust madi" (loosely translated, "please adjust") - it would take a lot to hassle a B'lorean. A typical Bangalorean was a simple straight-forward soul, without the slyness associated with the neighboring Tamilian or the Malayali, a happy-go-lucky character enjoying his city. Sadly(?), Bangalore today has more people from other parts of the country and the world than actual Bangaloreans.

Hard to say why the IT boom exploded in B'lore - we don't claim to have the best Engineering institutes in the country, there is no shortage of talented people alright, but its not like we had all the talented people in India concentrated there...then what was the reason? I think it was because of some right political/diplomatic moves by the local/central governments and Messrs. Narayana Murthy & Asim Premi starting up Infosys & Wipro in Bangalore.

Bangalore finds itself at a very crucial juncture now - the way things go for the next 2-3 years could decide where the city is going to head in the long run. Bangalore wasn't planned for this many people, period! The city is choking under the IT boom. It was a case of too much, too fast. It doesn't yet have an International airport and hopes to have one in 2-3 years, public transport is inadequate, roads were not meant to handle the traffic volumes it has to contend with now. I was very impressed with the collaboration between the local govt and the IT biggies, Infosys and Wipro, to come together, and work together, to improve the city. Rarely have I seen the industry be such an active participant in the development of a city. But the local and the central govt have to get their act together in the next 2-3 years. If they miss the chance now, it will just turn into this one big mess!

Infrastructure apart, Bangalore shouldn't forget the softer aspects of a community. It shouldn't go about cutting down trees and forests at a maniacal rate to expand horizontally. Its time for skyscrapers in B'lore - the city needs to grow vertically now..and maintain the greenery that B'lore was once famous for - we don't need another concrete jungle, if we can avoid it. Its amazing to see the greenery in Gotham, for instance. Back then, B'lore was cutting edge with music in India - the indie scene, the big concerts - that hasn't changed, and that's great. I saw a decent interest in theater in India, not to the extent seen in Bombay, but there is potential. Bangalore has never been much of a movie-city - the standard of their local movies suck to be honest and Bangaloreans would rather listen to good rock in a bar, drink some beer, or sip coffee in one of their coffee lounges, than watch a movie in a theater, most afternoons. For a movie buff like me, I would be quite keen to see how this changes in the next 2-3 yrs. I think there is *great* potential for an indie movie market in Bangalore (smart, socially-conscious, very large middle class), both Indian and world films. I would be keen to see if someone really taps into that in the near future.

I want to go back "home" eventually and "home" for me will always be B'lore. But sadly, the Bangalore I have in my mind is but an image, its a thing of the past. B'lore has the best chance for imbibing the best of the west with their inherent goodness; to provide state-of-the-art western lifestyles with the "solpa adjust madi" culture - that would be something great to back to. I will keenly be following from afar how B'lore "progresses" over the next 2-3-4-5 years. Till then, all I have to say is, "please do the needful"

** - A line I liked recently, the Quote of the Day - "when you are unsure where you are going, go back to your roots."

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I think it's only a matter of when and not if Bangalore loses it charm.

As for the people - Just take a drive down any of the roads and you'll see the attitude of the typical 'Bangalorean' - It makes me sick !!

The government apathy is summed up in a comment made by a former prime minister (who is worried for the most part about ragi muddhé) "Bangalore has grown enough". "madthaidivi madthaidivi " is answer that the chief minister has for all infrastructure related queries. Flyovers that take you from one intersection to another 500m down the road are plenty and create a whole lot of other problems. We have a flyover on which traffic crosses over, a cop stands there and directs traffic (IN THE MIDDLE OF A FLYOVER) a result of the excellent foresight the town planning authorities had. Bangalore has 2 traffic signals 55 m apart- a world record !!

A city 3500 m above sea level was flooded by rains. The metro system has been in planning for the better part of 2 decades. The airport constructed has started after a mere 15 years of discussions.

People get robbed in the heart of the city during daylight. Violent crime is on the rise.

Well PK, I will tell you this mate, this city is never gonna be the same and that's that. It's a glorified slum that's what it is !! Ok so you have the high tech industries in the middle of slums but does that make a city in itself??? Like hell it does !!!

Anonymous said...

As long as the "adjust maadi" attitude remains, Bangalore will remain a pretender.

Anonymous said...

umm...if the catch-phrase is "solpa adjust maadi", then why are Bangaloreans struggling to adjust? The inactive government was elected, wasn't it? If it was elected by urbanites, they've got the persons they wanted. If it was the rural population that elected the government, perhaps the former PM is right. It has to be said the affluent people speaking out on blogs don't have the inclination to vote. This remonstration comes from being exposed, through their high-paying jobs to great economies.
And, for the record, Bangalore is not 3500 m above sea level. That's more than 10,000 feet.