A grievous attack on Mumbai’s soul
Mayank Chhaya
Reminiscing of the Bombay of the good old fashioned gangsters of the
1980s with any nostalgia may sound gratuitously insulting today.
The worst that the mob bosses then did apart from smuggling gold,
VCRs and some drugs was to occasionally engage in internecine gangland
murders. Crime happened every day but it largely stayed confined to the
underworld. Rarely did it spill over to the streets and fatally co-opt
innocent citizens.
Not that there was anything even remotely uplifting about the
gangsters then, but seeing Mumbai from 16,000 km away stagger in the
face of numbing terror strikes one cannot but think about how
dramatically things have changed. The cold viciousness of terrorists and
their brutally efficient execution make the gangland killings of yore
seem almost benign.
“Apne dhande ka ek usool hai. Aam admi ko chhoone ka nahi hai,”
(There is one cardinal rule of my business. Do not harm the innocent),”
was how Karim Lala, an alleged hatchet man, once described the Bombay
underworld’s code of conduct.
As CNN covered the multiple Mumbai terror strikes for a straight 30
hours almost to the exclusion of any other news since Wednesday morning,
it became clear that the city had been altered forever. Even though it
has had many terror bombings since 1993, there is something insidiously
enduring about this one, especially when one looks at a bunch of
trendily dressed lunatics wielding some AK-47 like bizarre bling bling
and firing randomly.
Among the images that have stayed in my mind is that of a young
terrorist in light khaki cargo pants, blue T-shirt carrying a blue
duffel bag and an AK-47 walking into the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus
(VT) station.
Take the weapon away and the man could well be a wannabe movie star
visiting the city to fulfil his celluloid dreams. That is the whole
point of the new brand of terrorists. They do not even look the part in
a city whose cinema has for long mastered the art of typecasting people.
It is tempting to believe that Mumbai may well reclaim its innocence
of the 1980s despite such a grievous attack on its soul. However, a
realistic assessment in the aftermath of the massacre would suggest
something more disheartening.
IANS
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