City Neighborhood – The ‘Illegal’ LNJP Colony, Near 5-Star Lalit Hotel Regions by The Delhi Walla - January 4, 2017January 5, 20173 Life in the invisible city. [Text and photos by Mayank Austen Soofi] The place is like a kaleidoscope—the colours change swiftly. First, you are greeted by a yellow-painted brick wall. It turns pink around the corner. The next door is red. The facing wall is green. The Delhi Walla is not talking of an art installation. This is the LNJP (Lok Nayak Jayaprakash Narayan) Colony, home to vegetable vendors and rickshaw-pullers. Anyone driving down from Connaught Place to Old Delhi can spot LNJP on the right side of the road, a few minutes after passing the five-star Lalit hotel. The colony rises like a jumble of brick structures, royally snubbing conventional architectural aesthetics. I have passed by several times but never ventured in. Reading
City Neighborhood – Batla House, South Delhi Regions by The Delhi Walla - July 18, 2016July 18, 20165 The encounter district. [Text and photos by Mayank Austen Soofi] Some of the lanes leading to his home are so dark that you can’t see your own feet. The Delhi Walla's internal GPS is seriously confused. It’s way beyond midnight. The alleys are deserted, but outside the Surya Light Store we encounter a dozen men dressed in white Pathan suits, chattering away. I’m at Batla House, in south Delhi, with Sauban Ahmad (see top photo), who has gracefully agreed to tell me all about life in this neighbourhood. It is an instant friendship. Earlier that evening, I had bumped into him at the Maktaba Shah Waliullah bookshop on Nafees Road while browsing through titles such as The Ideal Muslim, Key To The Treasure of Jannah
Hauz Khas Series – A House in the Village, Chapter 9 Regions by The Delhi Walla - August 15, 2015August 15, 20151 Life in Delhi’s prettiest neighborhood. [Text by Nina Warglien and Charlotte Liebenow; photos by Mayank Austen Soofi] Note to the reader: This piece is written by two young fashion designers from Europe. Nina Warglien and Charlotte Liebenow live in a monument-facing apartment in Hauz Khas Village. It has been three weeks now since we landed in this challenging city. Until now we have been always telling you the bright side of it. But they say never judge a book from the cover. So we enlighten you by telling about the other side, too. As you may or may not know, here in Delhi all the housekeeping is done by maids. They clean the floor, wash your dishes, wash your clothes, and underwear, too. They
Hauz Khas Series – A House in the Village, Chapter 8 Regions by The Delhi Walla - September 3, 2014September 3, 20141 Life in Delhi’s prettiest neighborhood. [Text and photos by Mayank Austen Soofi] On a humid afternoon recently, Lal Pari, a vegetable vendor’s wife, unhurriedly walks down this tree-lined path to her village. Sometime later she is followed by Madan, a plumber’s teenage son. Next, Madhav, a carpenter, is seen. A few minutes later appears Steven Baker, an academic manager at the British Council. The Hindi-speaking English man, who has been living on and off in Hauz Khas Village for 10 years, says, "Only a very few local people know about this path. Earlier it was jungle, then it became a rough mud track, and just a month ago it was paved with these grey concrete tiles." Indicating the green iron-gates at the
City Regions – Feminism, Rajouri Garden & Lajpat Nagar Regions by The Delhi Walla - March 27, 2014March 27, 20142 Beyond the stereotypes. [Text and photos by Mayank Austen Soofi] A homely Punjabi girl in west Delhi’s Rajouri Garden is dumped by her fiancé hours before the wedding. The shattered girl flies to Europe, becomes her own woman, and returns to west Delhi. This was the plot of the Hindi film, the critically acclaimed Queen. In real life, it turns out, a girl in conservative Rajouri Garden comes into her own in Rajouri Garden itself. Like most girls of this neighbourhood, the happily married 27-year-old Minakshi Kathait grew up having dahi papdi at Atul Chat Corner and buying bright tops at Incense Apparel & Accessory, both popular landmarks in Rajouri Garden’s Main Market. But unlike Queen’s heroine — a type that has been lovingly nurtured
Hauz Khas Series – A House in the Village, Chapter 7 Regions by The Delhi Walla - December 2, 2013December 29, 20173 Life in Delhi’s prettiest neighborhood. [Text and photos by Mayank Austen Soofi] The sun leaves the winter sky. The air empties of all sounds. The lake by the village crystallizes into utter solitude. The Delhi Walla is walking around Hauz Khas lake. Although visible from my roof, it is stirring up feelings only at this close vicinity -- the entire place is drenched in magic. The 14th century ruins of Feroze Shah Tughlaq’s tomb feel like myths in the gathering darkness. The lake’s cold surface is filling up with twilight shades. Two ducks are paddling on its orange blaze. Close by, a woman is standing alone by a shrub. The sky blackens and the partially-sunken boat ceases to be visible. Nothing seems
Hauz Khas Series – A House in the Village, Chapter 6 Life Regions by The Delhi Walla - October 16, 2013December 2, 20133 Life in Delhi’s prettiest neighborhood. [Text and photos by Mayank Austen Soofi] The Delhi Walla has been asked to move out of his rented room in Hauz Khas Village. Ah, these greedy landlords! The rant of every artist/designer/hipster of Hauz Khas Village. Wasn’t it once just another ugly village in south Delhi, notwithstanding its picturesque ruins? Wasn’t it us the long-haired bohemians who made it oh-so-cool? So cool that rents skyrocketed and landlords kicked us out for those willing to pay more (the prime location on the main street could command Rs.1.5 lakh a month). In June 2013, Outlook magazine ran a story, saying: “Greedy owners, big brands and rude money cramp the folksy chic of Hauz Khas Village”. Mange Ram Gochhwal, 55, looks puzzled
Hauz Khas Series – A House in the Village, Chapter 5 Regions by The Delhi Walla - March 16, 2012December 2, 20132 Life in Delhi’s prettiest neighborhood. [Text and photos by Mayank Austen Soofi] My landlord has asked for the phone number of my nearest kin. If I suddenly die, whom would he call to dispose off the body? He produces a form. I fill my particulars: height, weight, birthmark, blood group, the eye color, permanent address... The landlord takes me along the village alleys, past boutiques, fashion houses and cafes. He owns another building where too the rooms are rent out to single people like me. The landlord unlocks a door. The room is empty. Here a tenant killed himself by hanging from a bed sheet. The young man was an engineer from Kerala. His neighbors called the landlord after a foul smell spread through the apartment
Hauz Khas Series – A House in the Village, Chapter 4 Life Regions by The Delhi Walla - November 11, 2011December 2, 20134 Life in Delhi's prettiest neighborhood. [Text and photos by Mayank Austen Soofi] Hauz Khas Village has become a ‘hang out’. Artist types still come but the ageless rich have infiltrated in large numbers. These people look successful, cocky and aggressively happy. They have great bodies and they are plushly underdressed; they speak accented English among themselves and broken Hindi with the auto-rickshaw drivers; their biceps are tattooed with slogans in Hebrew; they always have at least one white friend; they are constantly laughing and screaming and exchanging hugs. They seem to be in a state of permanent vacation. I’m only slightly exaggerating. Recently a new club opened. Three bulky bouncers in black would stand outside; their eyes scanning every visitor. Each time
Hauz Khas Series – A House in the Village, Chapter 3 Life Regions by The Delhi Walla - September 25, 2011December 2, 20134 Life in Delhi’s prettiest neighbourhood. [Text and pictures by Mayank Austen Soofi] Late September morning. The shadows are cold. I enter into a part of the Hauz Khas ruins that is not frequented by tourists. May be they are here. I’m searching for Pappu and Usha, the couple I met the other day while walking towards Green Park. They are daily wage labourers, migrants from Jhansi. Pappu had said that they were living in Hauz Khas ruins. Is that possible? The monument closes at sunset. In the night you don’t find anyone except a love-sick guitarist or a love pair hungry for a French kiss, who manage to slip inside just when the guards get a bit sleepy. No one is supposed to live