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"Slumdog" could bring fortune

It'll be fascinating to see where this Best Picture Oscar takes Mumbai -- India's largest city and financial capital. At the very least, the success of Slumdog Millionaire will provide a short-term tourism boost. Expedia is already promoting an Oscar vacation package to Mumbai and Dharavi, the massive slum depicted in the film. But wait, there's more.

(Children in Mumbai celebrate the Slumdog victory)

In a recent speech, India's Home Minister P Chidambaram said the movie should inspire banks to make loans to budding entrepreneurs in slums:

"A slum like Dharavi in Mumbai is humming with business ideas and innovations and we have to reach to such people also."

The way the slum is depicted in the film isn't - surprise, surprise - 100% accurate, but probably captures the essence of it. Here's a compelling first-person account published yesterday in the Canadian magazine Maisonneuve. The writer and his wife recently took a tour of Dharavi with Reality Tours and Travel. The company aims to dispel myths about slums, like perhaps the ones depicted in the movie.

A slum, the tour guide begins, "is anything built on government-owned land without permission." That includes, for example, high-rise apartment buildings. The tour guide also points out that slumdog is a made-up word and isn't used in India. At the film's premiere in Mumbai, there was this sign:

"I am not a slumdog. I am the future of India."

One aspect of the movie that does seem to be accurate is begging as a career. From the same article:

Then there is the case of professional beggars. Mumbai can likely claim the most successful, some of whom are estimated to be worth over Rs 300,000,000 (approx $6,000,000 USD) with houses in posh neighborhoods.

Could be something of an urban myth, but if it's anywhere close to the truth, it's astounding. Then again, if you've spent any time in cities like Mumbai, you know how aggressive and unrelenting the begging can be. I'm sure there are begging syndicates, and I'm sure they make a killing.

But let's hope begging is not the future for Mumbai. It sounds like a city with great potential, a city of great opportunity. A brighter future also sounds a ways off. The terrorist attacks in November were a setback. But perhaps this Academy Award will bring something positive.

David's picture
David - Feb 26, 2009

Scott,

Mumbai as a city is already big enough and important enough to be impacted by the success of the movie. It's trivial success and tourism as it is accounts for a negligible portion of its GDP. There's so much more to the city than Dharavi -- come explore and be enthralled.

Adam's picture
Adam - Feb 23, 2009

This is all because of new love affair of U.S with India. Back in 80s when India was a poddle of USSR, it was depicted as a place where people eat monkey brain in India Jones movie and now it has been given 8 oscar.
There is a new capitalism plan and India is a poster child of creating a rival against China for the sake of US interest. The country whose 70 % population lives on poverty level can't have any future and potential. It is just a market for cheap labor and sell some stuff from West.