Friday, November 30, 2007

Himesh of Hyderabad

I met a person last week in Hyderabad… the person who drove the car that came to pick me up at the airport – was with me till late night when he dropped me off at the hotel.

I don’t remember his name, but let me call him Himesh – he had a stubble, tight jeans, tight t-shirt, open jacket and a cap pulled down over his forehead. All that he didn’t do compared to his more famous likeness was go “oooooo” when he missed traffic lights…And hence Himesh.

Himesh was a man with attitude. Spoke halting, heavily accented English but insisted on listening to a radio station that has the RJs speaking predominantly English and plays English songs. At the airport he held the name board fairly apologetically and as inconspicuously as possible. He drove like he was Haikkonen Himesh. At the hotel he got into a fracas with the doorman who apparently referred to him disrespectfully and asked him not to stop in front of the main door. Of course, he took the tip that I proffered, but with such a supercilious air that I felt fairly apologetic about the quantum of the tip (which was quite substantial if I may add)…

Why was he Himesh? Why the attitude? Why the permanent disgruntlement? And he seemed fairly typical of the new generation of Hyderabadis (going by the few people I met). From my previous experiences with Hyderabadis, dating to about a few years back, they have always been very courteous, very at peace with themselves…

Drawing a rough parallel, this change is fairly evident in native Bangaloris (or is it Bengaloorians) too over the last few years. The one common change in these two cities over the last few years is the huge growth in the IT/ITES segments in them. And the consequent increase in salary levels among a largely expatriate work force with largely foreign skill sets. Is this the reason? Possibly it is. There seems to be a distinct class divide now among the Have-a-BPO/IT-jobs and Have-not-a-BPO/IT-jobs. The majority of the former, are typically from outside the city, have high proficiency in English, high salaries and conspicuously extravagant spending habits. The latter meanwhile can only look and envy. (Almost like the metros of yore where the divide was with respect to having a secure Government/Bank job…)

This theory seems to be borne out of the rising crime rates in these cities (crimes committed not for survival, but for spending money) and the increasing linguistic xenophobia (look at any movie and more often than not there is the mandatory comedy track deriding the linguistic foreigner – Indian or otherwise).

I believe, unless we address the cantankerous Himesh-es along with infrastructure and the like, while on the path to development, we will have unrest and chaos which may soon become unmanageable.

Is it reservation that is the answer? I don’t think so – it will only perpetuate this like the hydra-headed caste system being propagated in reality by the system of caste-based reservation. Is it low-cost quality education? Maybe it is, but it is too late for this generation of job-seekers. Maybe it is generation of entrepreneurial opportunities for today’s Himeshes… I don’t know. I bet most of us don’t. But we better find out fast… The first step to that is to not get blinded by the splendor of the non-Himeshes’ success stories and accept the existence of the Himeshes.

Till then, Himesh will continue to exist in a state of growing discontent dreaming Walter Mitty’s dreams I’m sure… I sure as hell hope that he doesn’t stop dreaming and get into action-mode… but I guess he will at some point.

5 comments:

Deepanjan Ghosh said...
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Deepanjan Ghosh said...

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Anonymous said...

You couldn't have have written a truer Hymn(esh) to disenchantment. Superb insight! I actually witnessed the disastrous effects of this envy and disenchantment in South Africa. SA is the Himesh crisis magnified... The country with the highest per capita income in the African continent having the highest crime rates in the world....40% unemployment and most of the wealth in the hands of a few whites....reservations and quota systems growing and a staggering divide between the haves and have-nots. In Johannesburg we saw houses with security company stickers warning of "Armed Response" to attempts at theft and six inches of barbed wire scaling the walls...the country leads in Carjackings, Rape, Burglary and Murder...as the Blacks with low literacy and lower employment are going on a rampage of primitive "grab and get" theft...spurred by envy and hatred. This country has witnessed the amazing phenomenon of seemingly pointless killings....that is robbing a person and then making sure he's killed in a painful manner....envy not need...hatred, not starvation motivates a lot of these crimes. Pray and hope the Himesh's here stick to grumbles, mumbles and nasal noises.

Rambler said...

I can totally relate to the guy you described as Himesh... also I think the reason is the dividde between the haves & the have nots... but I dont think Himesh sees himslef as a have not, But he sounds more like a person - who thinks he is too good for what he is doing, and smarter than most people around him, and probably the frustration is more for that reason.

Perhaps, he believes that he is made for better things in life or better, he is already better than most people around him - thus the "stylish" dressing as well as the anger on being treated a certain way.

I think your Himesh has more of an air of superiority... or at least inferiority that has been channelised so well that it ceases to remain so.

Ooopsmommy said...

I like Himesh. period.

guess the one thing that we have in common is xxl cargo pants..lol.