Saturday, May 31, 2008

Random thoughts peeping into the streets of Mumbai…

It was barely a couple of years ago. Newspapers and news channels flashed news about a Readers’ Digest survey which proclaimed Mumbai to be the rudest city in the world (ranked 36th). And then, of course followed the opposing versions and refutes by the Mumbaikars. Honestly, at that time I believed Mumbai was indeed the rudest city in the world on a relative scale. I presumed, a worldwide reputed magazine publisher ought to have dispensed adequate efforts on R&D and the survey must have been backed up by evidences.

But a one-off incident on a typical weekday, on my way to the office gripped my attention. The Mumbai Indian within me woke up and then my random thoughts pondered over ‘the rudest city’ chapter of June 2006…

The incident goes something like this:
There was this old lady in my bus waiting impatiently to buy a ticket with a Rs.100 note. The TC refuses to give her the ticket and tells her to produce a lower denomination note. An argument ensues and she gets even more impatient each time. Both of them ran out of change and therefore out of options. Finally the TC even suggests that she travel ticket-less on the pretext that being an old lady, she could get away with some excuse if got caught. But she was getting all the more tensed. Finally, becoming aware of the apprehension of the old lady, another lady bought the Rs.10 ticket for her. The old lady could only repay Rs.2 but the smile and relief on her face articulated her gratitude all the more. Rather than being passive and unresponsive, the lady did show her concern towards her and thus her involvement. This was just a simple episode of the routine daily life series. Not so important yet so significant an event to make an impact on one’s life.

These are human responsiveness to circumstances. The crisis situations during the Mumbai floods of 26th July 2005 and the Mumbai train bombings of 11th July 2006 also have highlighted the healthier face of humanity that Mumbai displayed. I am not stating that Mumbaikars are the ‘helpful’ and ‘rising to the occasion’ lot of people and that deeming Mumbai as the rudest city should be condemned. The incident could have occurred anywhere in the world. But terming one city as rude vis-à-vis another should be validated.

In fact, Mumbai has its share of grey shades too. The displeasure expressed by Yuvraj Singh (captain of the Kings XI Punjab team) after their victory over the Mumbai Indians in Mumbai during an IPL match corroborates the fact. Cheering and rooting for the home team is but natural, but what would you call slamming, reproving every move of the non-home team? I had witnessed the Mumbai Indians versus Kolkata Knight Riders match at Wankhede. The other team had to only settle with the boos and cat-calls of the crowd. Shoaib Akhtar gets Tendulkar out and what he gets to hear is a series of foul and offensive terms from the roaring mob. All he could do is turn to the crowd and give a helpless expression of ‘Isn’t that what I’m supposed to be doing? Isn’t that what I’m getting paid for?’ It was indeed a sad sight. My heart reached out to them. But it was a mere hundred like me against thirty thousands.

And now somehow, with the Mumbai Indians not having qualified for the semi-finals, hopefully we can expect a neutral crowd, a good match and the best team winning, keeping in view that both the semi-finals and the final are going to be played in Mumbai.

On the other hand, the Bangalore crowd seems most matured. Chennai, Hyderabad, Jaipur too are sporting enough. But the Eden Gardens, Kolkata crowd bears some resemblance to Mumbai’s. Mumbai too like Kolkata, is highly fanatical and obsessive as far as the State is concerned, evident from the latest MNS’s and Shiv Sena’s ‘Mumbai aamchi aahe’ and ‘Vada-Pav’ moves respectively in Mumbai. Actually, the ‘Vada Pav’ is, a great initiative – converting Mumbai’s roadside stalls into a business chain a la McDonald’s. Imagine the amount of employment it would generate for an aam aadmi, or rather for a marathi manoos considering the MNS’s orders to grant jobs equally to all (read Maharashtrians).

It so happens that the Readers’ Digest survey declared New York as the politest city followed by Zurich and Toronto. But as far as my knowledge goes and also from hearsay, Japan is one of the politest countries in the world. But Tokyo or any of the other cities, did not find a place anywhere on the list. Ironically, Asia was termed to be the rudest continent. ‘Asians lacked courtesy’! Courtesy has only one definition irrespective of the region, though they don’t realise that the gestures and expressions tend to differ.

According to news reports, the magazine sent its undercover reporters to 36 cities in 35 countries in the world. The parameters for the survey were:
  • whether the people kept the door open for the reporters while entering a building;
  • whether the salespeople in a store thanked the reporters on a purchase;
  • and whether they were helped in collecting flying papers when they intentionally dropped a folder full of papers at a crowded place.
These might seem necessary but not sufficient enough parameters of judgement. There should be clear-cut judgement factors tailored to the region-wise customs and mannerisms being followed. It somehow doesn’t define itself as an ‘inclusive’ sample when the population is the entire world comprising 195 countries. It doesn’t cover half the population considering 1 city represents 1 country. It may also be termed uneven - it included 2 cities from Canada (see list alongside - courtesy:Readers' Digest). It may have been a convenience sampling. And there is no stated theory to verify how the sample is an actual representation of the population.

So irrespective of the nature of the sample, one has no say on the inference of a survey. Moreover, the magazine overtly stated that the survey was unscientific. Tagging Mumbai, or for that matter any city as the rudest city is acceptable provided the findings can be substantiated by an efficient and effective sample frame. Such unsought-for steps in the name of surveys are only avoidable rather than creating rift between cities, countries and continents.

14 comments:

Nikesh said...

seems tht u wer deeply hurt by the ranking of mumbai as 1 of d rudest city...

ne waz...ppl who live here knws best how d city is. v dont require ne external agency to judge d city so v shud not b bothered abt d report...
however d report vl malign d city's fame.
wot i feel is tht mumbai is 1 of d gr8est city to live in...
der hv been few incidences wid me which proves it...

Vivek said...

Surveys have always freaked me out, especially when they purport to represent the general thread of things on the basis of a mere string of data. Invariably, they are always off the mark, and subjective surveys like this one are even more so.

Rudeness, like politeness, as you so very quaintly have put it, are relative to the locale. What may be socially acceptable in some part of the world may be absolutely taboo in another. Why, this distinction is limited not just to continents or countries, but even to cities and suburbs. What may pass off as cool in Colaba would be frowned upon in Girgaum. Les regles politesse in a place like Madras may be interpreted as downright snobbish behaviour in Delhi, and so on.
I always found this to be the best answer to any such survey and to those who are hurt by its results: No one can hurt you unless you want them to.
If someone is hurt, it is because they also feel, in some corner of their heart, that the survey may have hit upon a semblance of the truth. We are neither omniscient nor omnipresent to know everything about our locality, but we still harbour a delusion we do, and that something like this could happen disorients us enormously.

En fin, Mumbai is a nice place to be; it has its share of rude people and its share of polite people, and its share of simply unconcerned people. That is the case with every city, every locale, every country. People don't like being rude; they just happen to be so at a given time.

P.S. have updated my blog as well. would appreciate your comments on it.

A Mangled Soul said...

Going beyond cities, i sadly feel that in todays world, we are steadily drifting apart from one another with that Red Shift from Polite to unconcerned. And from unconcerned to downright rude.

An unassuming statement from Neeraj that will continue to haunt me for ever - 'Hum apni samvedna kho chuke hain...'

By god, may i please please be proven wrong, for everybody's sake.

MD said...

People curse Mumbai and its people like hell when it comes to rudeness and blah, but if u really want to appreciate Mumbai, live out of Mumbai-in any other city, and u will realize the true worth of the "City of Dreams". Having lived in (and cursed) the people, traffic and trains of mumbai, and then having spent two years outside it, I have realised the value of the city. Anyone who wants to curse mumbai and its people should first try and stay in some other city for a reasonable period of time, and then compare. They will surely agree with me.

Aarti Ramanan said...

thanks Nike, Vivek, Vinay, Mayu...

Vivek,
nice point. gestures can vary witin cities across suburbs too...

Mayu,
i totally agree with u. I missed Mumbai when i was away frm it. bt that i feel was homesickness...

Vinod Raghavan said...

I guess surveys are for those who just don't have any intelligent work to do & donno how to make efficient use of their time.The surveyors & analysts & other people may be making good use of their brains but i cant understand the man who thought about having such a useless survey.We always hear about 'there was this survey & so n so thing was stated..who cares man..as long as its not relevant to the general public as a whole(we always have surveys where some sections of the society or some particular kind of people are targeted, it's ok to disregard the results & not analyze them.the only kind of surveys which need to be given any importance are those which cater to the local masses & whose results bring any sort of relevance to the prevailing truth at that time.This is another problem with big surveys..they just become outdated by the time results are generated.Lastly, any reliance on a handful of events to estimate behaviour or any trait of people is just so much undeserving to the sample people given the fact that a sample always undermines the population.

Excellent analysis & connection of thoughts..but please forget about surveys..atleast those like this!

dashingkris said...

Hmmm...This i would say is quite a subjective. Some will agree, some won’t. But I feel we are missing out on one important factor. How kind people are to outsiders. U and me may feel people are kind, cos we also being Mumbaiites, we are one of them, and to a certain extent, the language, the way of talking all this might sync. But maybe not to a person from outside Mumbai. For eg, people from the North find Mumbaiites rude. So think about what Foreigners might be going thru..the rickshaw wallas, the cab drivers...though they might not exactly be rude while exploiting, all this definitely adds on to being rude.
Also,

As far as my experience goes, people outside (atleast in US) are tooo polite to everyone.

Anyway, are you celebrating the anniversary of the survey??? y a blog on this after an year!!!

Neeraj said...

I think it is a ridiculous idea to attempt to define a city's character.

Mumbai has far too many people for any single truth to be universal about the behavior of her people.

Let's try to be good to each other. Random acts of kindness go a long way... try and make a stranger feel good about humanity today. hows that for a plan?

P.S.: as regards Mumbai cheering for Mumbai Indians, I love them. :)
Of course we could do without swearing at the opposition. But everything isn't perfect, is it?

Aarti Ramanan said...

Thx Vinod, Krishna, Neeraj.

Vinod,
nice point. the surveys shouldnt be over-researched that its results are known after the right time.
This has happened with many a brands and products who havent been able get back at competition because of too much time spent on the research, by which time the craze for the product is no more..

Krishna,
not necessary all westerners are polite. I have also seen otherwise. In fact, I've found Asians nice.

Neeraj,
nice thought. 'Make a stranger feel good about humanity today.'

Aarti Ramanan said...

Kris,
I am in fact celebrating the anniversary of my blog :)

the_jackal said...

Guess I agree with most of the views in the blog & the replies... just a little curious about the way 'Rudeness' is defined.... my mind goes back to the horrific twin stabbings at the Gateway of India last year... Most of the crowd assembled there remained mere spectators while there was one or two brave guys who took charge and helped out the injured girls...

This is a classic dilemma..Would one term Mumbai as rude based on the inaction of the crowd or helpful based on the actions of the two men????

The bottomline I think is that such surveys are primarily for entertainment value ( involving huge amounts of subjectivity and unscientific assumptions) and should definitely not be taken seriously!!

Anonymous said...

hmmm...nice...Thought provoking...Like you said,initially even I thought RD must have done a good bit of research before publishing this survey...But the points they seem to have considered are definitely NOT all-encompassing or exhaustive.This is true for any survey,for that matter.

As for Yuvi's comments,although am a Mumbai Indian fan,I do agree with him. We can definitely support the home team without being rude to the opponent team's players. After all, we do cheer some of them when they play for India. In a way, IPL has only increased people's sense of "regionalism" than uniting them in cricket.

- Maya

aditya said...

I think there is one generalization that holds true - Do not generalize. It is very difficult to predict the overall nature/culture of a city based upon a few people.
As regards IPL, yes, the reaction of the locals was very immature and ugly. (all orchestrated by the marketing companies)
Personally, Mumbai is home for me and it is a wonderful place! As Johnny Walker sang: "Ae dil hai mushkil jeena yahan, zara hatke, zara bachke, yeh hai Bambai meri jaan!!!"

Aarti Ramanan said...

Thx Rajesh, Mayo, Adi...