Wednesday, July 31, 2013

A Tribute to Potholes



This is in response to Bachi Karkaria’s editorial - ‘Living with Astro-cities’ where she says, ‘Give them this day their daily bribes and forgive them their pothole’. It appeared in the editorial page of Times of India on the 25th of July.  I found this line intriguing, shocking and disturbing
This sentence made me think of my own predicament in Mumbai. The potholes in Mumbai impede citizens walking on the roads. Those with legs can somehow manoeuvre and find their way to safety. Can you imagine what happens to people on wheelchairs, those with injuries and those with crutches? Such people become prisoners in their own homes.
Millions of disabled people are homebound because of a lack of toilets and lack of accessible roads.
Being a disabled citizen of the city of Mumbai, this intrigues me as I have to suffer the potholes on a daily basis. We want to be at par with the best in the world. We want our streets to be like the ones in London. Well here is the thing: the streets of London are accessible and disabled friendly. If you want to begin becoming a global city, you can begin by doing this simple thing of making your city disabled friendly.
The other day I was talking to a friend from Germany and apparently her office was redesigned so that more disabled people can access it. Why can’t Indians do the same? When I was working in one of the top companies of India, they had no room and no intention to even put a grab bar in the toilet for me or the other disabled people who visited the company.
My mother was interviewing a British disabled MP at the House of Commons last month regarding how accessible the toilets were in the country. She told us that despite many of these buildings being heritage structures that do not permit too many changes it was still intelligently modified to suit the needs of people with disability.
In May I fell off an escalator at Westside store in Kala Ghoda because the section of woman’s wear was not accessible for someone like me on a wheelchair. I hurt myself badly and I was lucky that it wasn’t worse. This incident led to a giant accessibility campaign to make Mumbai more disabled friendly.
A meeting was held at Azad Maidan where Celebrities such as Nagesh Kukonoor and Dia Mirza among many others were present. Kukunoor said, “In India, 15 per cent of the population is differently-abled. Every staging like this is a rock in its own bucket. If you do not have a show of strength no one will listen to you.”
Dia said, “Movies can be used as a medium to create awareness amongst the masses but to make a change, certainly something more has to be done. The civic authorities are the ones who can bring in the change. Along with major issues that we are talking about here, there are certain smaller issues that can be resolved like pavements and public toilets. The municipal corporation can make these changes which would initiate a change.” 
The Adapt Right Group that initiated this campaign, is waiting to see whether the prominent shops, schools, museums, cinema halls, colleges and other public buildings are made wheelchair friendly. However, it has been three months since the campaign but not much has been done by the administration besides agreeing to our demands whenever we approached them. Sadly, this lip-service is the reason why even after 66 years of Indian independence, the disabled people in this country are not yet free.
At present because of lack of Access, disabled people are imprisoned in their own homes. There is no room for a wheelchair. If we go out on our own, negative comments are hurled at us as if we don’t belong here, as if we are aliens, so we disabled people are forced to stay at home. Outings are not for us! Only for Normal people! 
Yes we want to be at par with the West, but to do that we need to provide for all our citizens-even disabled members.

The lack of awareness is pathetic and sensitisation about disabled people is urgently needed. The government is hardly aware of our needs and rights as citizens. The government needs to see us to count us citizens and to give us accessibility. But how can we be visible if we cannot have access. It is a perfect catch 22