Next Stop, Squalor
Is poverty tourism "poorism," they call it exploration or exploitation?
- By John Lancaster
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2007, Subscribe
The Dharavi squatter settlement in Mumbai is often described as the biggest slum in Asia. It sits between two rail lines in the northern part of the city, on a creek that once sustained a thriving fishery. The creek is now a sump of sewage and industrial waste, and the air above Dharavi is foul.
By one estimate, the slum is home to 10,000 small factories, almost all of them illegal and unregulated. The factories provide sustenance of a sort to the million or so people who are thought to live in Dharavi, which at 432 acres is barely half the size of New York City's Central Park. There is no discernible garbage pickup, and only one toilet for every 1,440 people. It is a vision of urban hell.
It is also one of India's newest tourist attractions. Since January of last year, a young British entrepreneur, Christopher Way, and his Indian business partner, Krishna Poojari, have been selling walking tours of Dharavi as if it were Jerusalem's walled city or the byways of Dickens' London. There seems to be a market for this sort of thing: almost every day during the recent December holidays, small groups of foreign travelers, accompanied by Poojari or another guide, tramped through Dharavi's fetid alleys in a stoic quest for...What? Enlightenment? Authenticity? The three-hour excursions are slated for mention in a forthcoming Lonely Planet guide, and they cost about $6.75 a head—more if you want to go to Dharavi by air-conditioned car.
Poverty tourism—sometimes known as "poorism"—did not originate in Mumbai (formerly Bombay). For years, tour operators have been escorting foreign visitors through Rio de Janeiro's infamous favelas, with their drug gangs and ocean views, and the vast townships outside Cape Town and Johannesburg, where tourists are invited to mix with South Africans at one of the illicit beer halls known as shebeens. A nonprofit group in New Delhi charges tourists for guided walks through the railway station, to raise money for the street children who haunt its platforms.
But the Dharavi tours have been especially controversial. In a lengthy report last September, the Indian English-language Times Now television channel attacked them as an exercise in voyeurism and a sleazy bid to "cash in on the Ôpoor-India' image." That report was followed by a panel discussion in which the moderator all but accused Poojari of crimes against humanity. "If you were living in Dharavi, in that slum, would you like a foreign tourist coming and walking all over you?" he sputtered. "This kind of slum tourism, it is a clear invasion of somebody's privacy....You are treating humans like animals." A tourism official on the panel called the tour operators "parasites [who] need to be investigated and put behind bars," and a state lawmaker has threatened to shut them down.
The critics, it seemed, had claimed the moral high ground. But could they hold it?
One sunny morning this past December, I met Christopher Way at Leopold's Café, a popular backpackers' hangout in Mumbai's bustling Colaba district. At 31, he is boyish and bespectacled, with a thatch of tousled brown hair and a thoughtful, unassuming manner. Over glasses of freshly squeezed mango juice, he told me that he grew up near Birmingham, England, and after graduation from Birmingham University, set off on a path to become a chartered accountant. But Way was afflicted with chronic wanderlust. In 2002, he visited Mumbai and liked the city so much that he stayed five months, volunteering as an English teacher and cricket coach in a local elementary school. He subsequently took an extended holiday in Rio, where he signed up for one of the favela tours. Although frustrated by the guide's lack of knowledge about the shantytown, Way says he found the experience fascinating. It occurred to him that he might be able to do something similar in Mumbai.
As many as half of that city's 18 million or so residents live in squatter settlements, so there was no shortage of potential venues. But Dharavi, as the largest and most established of Mumbai's slums, was the obvious choice. Way's idea was to showcase the settlement's economic underpinnings in a way that would challenge stereotypes about the poor. "We're trying to dispel the myth that people there sit around doing nothing, that they're criminals," he said after we had walked across the street to his office, a grubby, windowless space barely big enough for his desk and laptop computer. "We show it for what it is—a place where people are working hard, struggling to make a living and doing it in an honest way."
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Comments (9)
Last year, I completed a junior mid-term project at my school. The assignment was to pick out a Smithsonian magazine at the library, choose an article, and write a research paper about it. Luckily, I found this article. John, your writing is absolutely captivating. Thank you for doing what you do!
Posted by Alissa on February 1,2013 | 12:32 PM
Fascinating article John. Thank you very much. Your journalistic skills are something I hope to achieve one day. I spent three months in India and spotted the Dharavi slum tour in the Lonely Planet. Needless to say, I didn't go, it seemed to make a theme park out of a serious situation. If Westerners want to experience the slums, then it should only be if they are willing to volunteer and get their hands dirty. Certainly not sitting from an air conditioned vehicle or peering through doorways in an invasive museum-like fashion.
Posted by Kiri Bowers on October 16,2012 | 04:22 PM
People in the states are terrified of losing their jobs, their way of life. There are terrified of becoming poor. But if you go visit the poor, and see poverty for what it is, maybe you won't be so terrified. The US is becoming poorer and poorer each year. If you go visit a "poor" country, maybe you can envision what the future is for the US. Maybe you can learn how to make it as a poor person. How do you live without running water, without electricity, without washer/dryers/frigerator/lights. Maybe you can plan for your future with the knowledge that you may make less money in the future. i spoke with an ethopian once, i asked him what was the biggest difference between the states and Ethopia. He said women say home and cook, its thanksgiving every day. there is someone always home, there is no mcdonalds/wendy/taco bell, and fewer shops/malls/outlets. and you don't need the shops either. He prefers ethiopia. women can stay home and watch their children and not have to rely on child care services. Much like what it was like in the US in the 1950's when women stayed home to raise families. so, in the end, you should not be afraid of becoming poorer. Mexico is a poorer country than the US. But they have everything the US has. Airports, Trains, Cars,Highway, electricity, houses, farms, universities, ect.... So, just because the US is in decline, doesn't mean you have to be afraid.
Posted by alma vasquez on April 11,2012 | 10:53 AM
I had exactly the experience described in your article. When my wife and I were working in Nairobi we were invited by a volunteer with the Missionaries of Charity to spend the day assisting the residents of Kibera, one of the largest and poorest slums in Africa--a day described in my blog post "Father George, Poverty Tourism, and the Slums of Kibera." (otherguysdime.wordpress.com) It was a difficult and emotional experience but an informative one, especially for a traveler like myself who had never before been outside the developed world, and I am glad I went. I think we were the only visitors there.
However today, tourists by the thousands are snapping photos of shanty towns from tour buses, and purchasing "slum souvenirs" to show to the folks back home. This form of "poorism" as you call it is a controversial topic angering many government officials--so much so wealthy tourists who are flocking to poor neighborhoods.
I am not saying that you should not go, but you really need to balance the learning experience that you and your family will have with the possibility of exploitation of some of the neediest members of society.
Posted by G. Michael Schneider on July 1,2010 | 11:48 AM
You might do your research with a charity evaluation site like http://www.charitynavigator.org. I was satisfied with their tools to evaluate where to donate funds in a manner consistent with my desired philanthropy.
Posted by Ken on February 11,2010 | 12:48 PM
Unlike Amanda, I feel that this type of tour is beneficial. If you want to know what a town, or state or country is really like you do not look to it's afluent...you look at it's backbone...which unfortunatly is usually it's poor. We have become so immune to televised visuals, it would do us all good to have reality smack us in the face...so that we can all contribute to the welfare of our own communities and to the wellbeing of our world with a heart thats dedicated to the cause, not just because it's a "nobel" undertaking that improves our social image.
Posted by Kathy on February 15,2009 | 09:28 AM
In response to Michael, and to Jodi Pavlovich: Reality Tours has started a small education centre for people in Dharavi. http://realitytoursandtravel.com/communitycentre.html , so you could donate to that. According to the article in the Hindustan Times (halfway down the site linked above), the education centre costs 42,000 INR/month to run. (They use -and are looking for- volunteer teachers, but also rent the space, and pay their local teacher and watchman, both of whom live in Dhavari.) If you're interested, Reality Tours also publishes its accounts online. See the NGOs link http://realitytoursandtravel.com/ngos.html from their main website. (They've been running at a loss. One of the owners has not drawn any salary yet, and the other did likewise for the first year.) The education centre's run in conjunction with a Non-Governmental Organization called MESCO, but I'm not certain how/if you could target your donation specifically for Dharavi-related work. Link to MESCO from the NGO link above. -Hope this helps. I haven't been on their tour yet, but hope to when I'm in Mumbai in December.
Posted by Bookchen on November 2,2008 | 09:06 AM
Its businesses manufacture a variety of products—plastics, pottery, bluejeans, leather goods—and generate an estimated $665 million in annual revenue. In other words, Dharavi is not just a slum, it is also a node on the global economy. My question would be, how is the $665 million in annual revenue being spent?
Posted by Katherine on April 14,2008 | 02:17 PM
Will someone answer Michael?? I also would like to know.
Posted by Jodi Pavlovich on February 3,2008 | 08:58 PM
poorism is stupid. people arent animals and the poor places arent zoos. the only thing keeping you from poverty is a very thin line. you're rejoicing in someone else's troubles.
Posted by amanda on January 5,2008 | 09:58 AM
Is there a reliable organization who will accept donations to help people in Dharavi. $10.00 a month seems small compared to what we get. Can you guide us in the right direction. Thank you.
Posted by Michael on November 25,2007 | 01:18 AM