The water had a slight greenish tint to it when held to the light, and it was an easy reminder how we take for granted the simple things.
The new section of Hyderbad is approximately 15 years old with amazing offices for both pharmaceuticals and technology companies including Pfizer, Norvartis, Broadcom, Oracle and IBM. The grass at my hotel is cut by hand with a pair of sheers and a an olympic length pool with a swim up bar. The amount of water used just to water the grass is fought for in the countryside. The new Hydrabad is amazing and comparable to many of cities in Europe.
If I stayed in my hotel and only travelled to the office, I wouldn't realize the rest of Hydrabad. The Westin provides a seclusion for westerners preventing them from see both the poverty and the beauty of India. My driver was impressed at my willingness to explore Hydrabad for two days straight. He said, there are many westerners that only travel to the hotel and office.
Old Hydrabad is a heavily Muslim area, and they are fighting the expansion of technology into the old city. Men commonly pee on the streets and goats run wild climbing the mountains of rubble and garbage scouring for food. During Muslim religious festivals, the goats are rounded up and sold for sacrifice. Meat is sold in open air markets, hanging in the 107 degree heat.
It's easy to say just damn when looking at these things, but to the people of Hyderabad, this is their way of life, and they don't know any difference. Men and children work hand in hand crafting goods, selling wares and other manual tasks.
| Child selling cotton candy on the streets. |
| Man carrying food up to the top of the fort. |
Labor is cheap, and people fight for jobs. Losing your job can put you in a poverty rarely experienced in the United States. Vendors sale sticks to build shanty towns that litter the landscape often mixed with trash and rubble.
Riding in the car often gave me a detached feeling from the outside as I watched the movie play in a panoramic theatre. Srinivas was an excellent driver in a city where driving laws are rarely obeyed, but amazingly, traffic flows well. During my second day, Srinivas made to interesting remarks. The first is that he would not have taken us on a tour of the old city on Friday. Friday is usually a rioting day for the Muslims in the old city. Many Muslims are not educated and live in the poverty of the old city, but they work hard at selling their cheap knockoffs on the streets. Many times, the break from the Mosque on Fridays to riot only to return to normal by Saturday. The second thing he mentioned is that getting into a wreck could cause a driver to be beaten by a mob if there was an injury. The old city lived by a different set of laws.
From all this, I've seen the beauty in Hyderabad. Once, the diamond capitol of India, remants of it's wealth still remain. For almost 300 years, Persian kings ruled Hydrabad in a time of prosperity rivaling other medieval cities such as Florence. I wanted to close this post with a contrasting picture of one of the royal palaces in Hyderabad to give a sense of what this once great culture accomplished.
In the few days I've been here I have come to appreciate the clash of old and new as well as the hints at both past greatness and a promising future.
