Of course, there is the heat. Or rather the humidity. Our arrival brought the monsoons, which
are refreshing once they fall, but for the day-long build-up, it is sweltering. I try not to think about it too much (or the multiple ice cold showers I crave, but alas, Delhi is in a severe water crisis), but it definitely defines our experience. What's remarkable is that Delhites don't sweat. Ever. Well, that's not true. Today was record humidity, and a Kashmiri woman who runs a school we visited was whining about the heat. But I'm not sure she counts...after all, she's from the Himalayas. This is all brutal to her.Aside from weather, I'm trying to soak up all I can, preferably from the back of a rickshaw where the breeze hits you and you're side-by-side with sidewalk Delhi. We are staying in a posh subdivision of New Delhi. There are security guards, garbage collection, and running water. We're a short walk from Khan Market where we can buy all the fancy salwar kameezes and gourmet coffee we want, and Lodi Gardens, an elaborate Muslim park where locals go to practice yoga and laugh therapy at daybreak. And if you look closely, parrots criss-cross the sky.
I'm finding that the stereotypes of India--especially Delhi--are here somewhere, but this place is so much more than that. Yes, there are sacred cows roaming the streets and children beg for
In the first few days here, I keep coming back to one of the first lines of Midnight's Children, when Saleem insists that he must quickly tell his story--so clearly an allegory for post-independence India--to fight the impending meaningless. He must make meaning out of the experiment that is his life, and the experiment that is democratic India. The ubuntu and the hope that struck me so in South Africa is not as readily accessible here. As Neeti, one of our companions here in Delhi said, "India needs another Gandhi...we need a miracle."