While the majority of residents of gated communities across India may not exactly share Anita’s lifestyle or her husband’s career path, what they do share is a gathering sense of self-confidence about the place of Indian culture and ‘achievements’ in the world. The new Indian middle-classes – Anita seems to imply – are neither dazzled by ersatz Wests nor incapable of tabulating its ‘actual’ value. …Indian identities need not (any longer) struggle to resolve a crisis introduced by the encounter with the West; the West is just one way of making sense of the world, an idea that now exist alongside contemporary Indianness, rather than as a threat to the latter.
There is now a new social and economic elite that has an increasingly direct relationship with the corporate sector in order to achieve ‘social’ objectives [as compared to the older Nehruvian elites].... Hence, at Victoria Park enclave in DLF City, the rainwater-harvesting scheme is sponsored by the Coca-Cola Company, whereas new forms of leisure practised at religious theme parks... and multiplex cinemas presage a change in the patterns of middle-class cultural consumption. Indeed, in advertisements for gated communities ‘corporate feel’ is a significant factor in the selling of new lifestyles....[and] …a significant context of [contemporary urban transformations] relates... to …perceptions of the ‘effectiveness’’ of private capital in ‘getting things done’….
But there are also other kinds of people in New Gurgaon and early mornings and late evenings offer the best vantage points for observing others who also constitute this locality. Between 5 to 7 am each morning, the streets around Victoria Park swarm with women and men who do not live within the gates: women walking briskly in groups and singly, clutching plastic bags, others riding in rickshaws, and, men with small cloth bags, some containing food and others small implements. This crowd appears almost magically between the above hours, making its way towards the high rise of the gated enclaves from tight clusters of single and double story tenement housing that can be seen from the sky scrapers.
These are the maids, servants, chauffeurs, and trades and other workers who reside in rented accommodation in some of the original villages that ring the condominium spaces. The women in rickshaws are maids being ‘driven’ to work by their rickshaw-driver husbands. The workers – from Bihar, West Bengal, and, some say, Bangladesh – live in tiny, ill-lit rooms located in spaces with potholed roads, open drains, and a variety of small-scale industrial workshops. As they make their way to the boom gates – and the immaculately maintained premises – of different residential enclaves, the women must produce identity cards that are examined by the guards at the gates, whereas the men are mostly allowed to pass without much fuss. By 7 am, the streets are empty of women in cheap, shiny sarees, and men in shiny trousers and shirts of fading colour.
The private guards who regulate the entry of maids (and also visitors) to the complex also follow a routine. Every morning, around 7, a ‘supervisor’ arrives on a motorcycle to initiate a ‘changing of guards’ that begins with a military style drill: those taking up duty for the day line up in formation, salute, and undergo ‘inspection’. They then disperse to take up positions, relieving the night-guards. Around the same time, many of the residents are being driven to offices as the working day, especially for those working in MNCs, begins early. There are also school children boarding buses – many of which sport ‘International’ or ‘Global’ as part of the name of the institutions painted on their sides—to begin their day.
The quiet of the day is punctured in late evening by another set of rhythms that define space. The lawns within Victoria Park are filled up with four sets of residents: young children, teenagers in mixed groups, older women sitting together on park benches, and live-in maids shepherding infants. Office workers – both men and women (there is a high proportion of working women) – have not yet returned from work, and the infants appear to be glad to be out of the house, being entertained by the maids. Those maids who work as daily – rather than ‘live-in’ – workers make a quiet exit from the complex, melting into the darkness, their persons occasionally checked by the guards to make sure they are not carrying out any goods ‘illegally’.