Pune stood second in the “quality of life” category, while Ahmedabad was placed third. This was the result of a survey, and we must discount surveys as not being an effective tool to measure quality.
However, I must add my two bits here because I am delighted with the results. To me, Surat is the most interesting city in India. It would be so even if it weren’t the place I called home for most of my life.
It was a city before Bombay and New Delhi and Madras and Calcutta and Bangalore existed. It wasn’t designed by outsiders and it had an urban culture developed by its citizens, much of which it retains today.
Surat was already a big city when, in 1608, the British first landed in India. They came hoping to trade and were given a licence to set up a warehouse (called ‘factory’) by a drug-addled Jahangir. From here, they began the adventure that climaxed two centuries later with their taking Delhi from the Marathas.
Writer Khaled Ahmed says that Surat’s importance came from it being India’s only west-facing port. It was the place from where the Mughals — who did not control the land route — and their harem departed for Hajj. But it was also always the most important city for the empire outside the capital because of its traders’ ability to generate customs revenue and bring in gold. After the English Restoration, Bombay came to the possession of Charles II as dowry and this little transaction transformed India and world history. The British held on to this little corner with zeal and would not be dislodged. The teetotaller Aurangzeb disliked Europeans but had to defer to British power because their ships controlled the passage to Makkah.
The decline of Surat as a port happened at the same time as the rise of Bombay. Some believe this was because the river Tapti silted over, its banks no longer able to berth large ships. Though the Bombay harbour was superior, however, the city was, at that point, only a collection of villages. There were no proper mercantile castes to manage British trade. And so, the British encouraged the migration of Surat’s merchants — Hindu, Muslim and Parsi — to the city, creating what is still India’s only proper urban space, South Bombay.
As Bombay rose, Surat declined, but for a short period. Regeneration is built into its genetic code. Its capacity for producing fine business minds is undiminished (Ratan Tata was born here). It is Gujarat’s only city of proper diversity, where the lower classes have street space. It is for this reason the one city where a decent meal may be easily found for those who eat meat, in what is otherwise an oppressively vegetarian state.
The Surti in caricature is for other Gujaratis, a person who enjoys the good things of life. I can testify that this caricature is true.
Ahmedabad and Baroda are India’s two most communally violent cities. Given this, it is quite remarkable that Surat should be so different from them, inclusive and for most of its history, peaceful. Why is this so? I have my theories of caste and religious inclusion, but these are not the result of academic investigation. In another country, such a city, rich with history and culture, would have been ethnographed and biographed dozens of times. Scholars and journalists would have examined its character and its contributions to transforming South Asia.
Unfortunately, that is not our way. Anyway, no point whining about that here. I left Surat in 1994 because there is little work available there unless you want to be part of a business. It has, like Ahmedabad, no significant white collar middle class even today. English is not the first language of its middle class. Those excited by this survey should have a look at these cities to know all aspects of Gujarat’s mercantile culture and the urban spaces it produces.
Personally speaking, I do not think either Surat or Ahmedabad or indeed Pune are better to live and work in than Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai or Bangalore. However, I can without embarrassment or exaggeration call Surat India’s most interesting city.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 14th, 2013.
COMMENTS (31)
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Surat was a stinking city before the PLAGUE hit it a couple of decades ago.it was after that that the local administration activated its resources and transformed the city to its present state. it also indicates what can be achieved through sincerity and sheer will power. sadly most of the cities in india are stinking with crumbling infrastructure and poor plannings
@Dushmann: Sorry for your interpretation of History.The conquest of South East Asians was Brahmin influenced..You can see this by the spread of Sanskrit and the language's influence even today in the languages of Malaysia,Cambodia.Thailand,Indonesia and other nations.Even today the coronation of the Kings of Thailand is done by resident Brahmin priests.If traders had colonized these nations they would have used their local languages like Tamil or Oriya.It was not be so.It as Sanskrit.
@Lala Gee:"Indian people didn’t have the kind of courage and temperament required for expeditions to foreign lands."
...And you were threatened of domination by these folks and sought a separate country to safeguard your interests... And you still feel that these folks would devour Kashmir and Pakistan... I guess you guys suffer from schrizophenia or some personality disorder....
If this comments section is any indication, young middle class of this land are masters in naivete and butchery of history.
Ancients didn't trade internationally - Just refer to piles of Greek and Roman records dating back to 5th century BC moaning about the amount of gold they are sending to India in return for spices/silk etc. Pakistanis, who have a section of silk route passing through their country and several ancient cities on the roads to north, should know it even better. Ancients lacked courage and were scared of going international - this takes the cake. We should not impose our notions of modern nations on them. Natural frontiers like mountain ranges were more of "boundaries". Imagine a king in 3rd century BC controlling lands from somewhere in current Afghanistan to southern tip of India, WITHOUT modern technology. That would have been easily one of the biggest kingdoms in the world, if not the biggest. Does anyone really think that they did so without fighting? Ancients didn't have naval technology: Even if you don't know about the Chola/Pandya/Chera kingdoms of South India, how exactly did all these ancient temples of south-east Asia turn up?I understand that ignoring some aspects of history and concentrating on some others is an inevitable part of "nation" building. But butchering it is a recipe for disaster, aka, lack of identity.
@Fed Up Indian: I did not make it clear in my first statement however I mentioned "sailed" to clarify that I refereed to Indians not using sea route that authors suggested Mughals used for Haj pilgrimage.
@DA: The Mauryan empire map does not contain any foreign lands except small part of Iran. Rest of it was India.
@kdp: I am not sure Mughals or any contemporary Indian ever left India to see (forget explore) other lands. Except for early migration of Indians to spread Buddhism to eastern countries no Indian ever sailed west until after British rule started. (To the best of my recollection of Indian History I learned)
India has significant history of Maritime trade and even naval power though mostly restricted to southeast asia. Many King's in peninsular India had navies and occasionally established empires in South-East Asia. These Kings were not typical Brahmin or Khshtriyas(?) so probably ignored by Indian historians, and also by pro western and pro Muslims writers for obvious reasons. The ancient Indian naval activity slowly decreased, one reason could be that Brahmin laws declared, crossing sea is a grave sin. Still some trading communities continued with the sea trade. Mughals used go to Hajj from Surat port, but probably their Ships had to pay toll to Europeans, because by that time Western powers had dominated the sea. (Mughals/Turks were barbaric tribes from central asia who had never before even seen the sea, so navy was neglected). Then Shivaji declared himself a sovereign king. He raided Surat, because it was main port in mughal territory and the money was used to raise navy. Now Marathas claimed sovereignty over stretch of sea along western coast, started collecting tax, established small trade with middle east and built forts in sea (in addition to numerous forts that existed since very ancient times). After that for decades there were numerous clashes in the sea. First the Europians called them pirates and resisted, later they accepted Shivaji as a King. Shivaji's son Sambhaji personally took part in naval battles. After Sambhaji was killed and his heirs either killed, arrested or exiled, various Maratha sardars kept fighting on their own. Out of these, the legendary Kanhoji Angre revived the navy. He too was initially labelled as pirate and later accepted as king of Konkan. It is because of him that Andaman is in Indian union, he used it as base to raid European ships going to Indonesia, which was later passed on to British and then to Republic of India. British and Portuguese once even joined hands against him but he successfully repelled the attack by their joint naval fleet. Also read about Rani Chennamma.
http://indiannavy.nic.in/about-indian-navy/early-history http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indianmaritimehistory
No meat dishes .... then i prefered to go to lucnow, dehli, hyderabad, sikanderabad, mysore but no ahmedabad.
@DA Ji :
@Lala Gee “The fact remains that the Indian people didn’t have the kind of courage and temperament required for expeditions to foreign lands”
Maybe they did not teach you indian history
Not only Indian History is not taught in Pakistan but whatever History is taught in Pakistan is totally distorted! . Cheers
Surat is not the only west facing port.Much older,more vibrant and far more well known from the days of Rome was Calicut from which the word Calico comes.It was one of the most active ports for the spice trade,so surat being the only west facing port is wrong.It was also in this area that Vasco da gama landed in his search for the spice route
"English is not the first language of its middle class." I can understand your frustration. The days are gone when just the ability to read write English used to fetch good salary, now you need to work on some other skills as well.
@kdp: Actually there was a good deal of to and fro between India and South East Asia, including the Indo-Chinese peninsula.
@Lala Gee "The fact remains that the Indian people didn’t have the kind of courage and temperament required for expeditions to foreign lands"
Maybe they did not teach you indian history... pl check the extent of maurya empire
.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maurya_Empire
Pl check extent of south indian empire chola dynasty. They had the world's best navy at that times http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South-EastAsiacampaignofRajendraCholaI
Dude are u serious ,,surat is growing so fast....it is known for diamond cutting..
@Fed Up Indian:
"The most widely accepted reason for their migration was the invasion of the Ghaznavis who forced these unfortunate people off their ancestral lands because they were ‘kafirs’".
Fail to understand why only a handful of 'Kafirs' were made to leave while hundreds of millions were allowed to stay. Any deliberations?
@kdp:
"Except for early migration of Indians to spread Buddhism to eastern countries no Indian ever sailed west until after British rule started."
Even that was a forced migration of Buddhists due to oppression of Hindu kings and Brahmins. The fact remains that the Indian people didn't have the kind of courage and temperament required for expeditions to foreign lands.
As a South Indian what I remember is that it is the city where 'plague' spread quite some years ago. If the city is now known for "cleanliness", as the author quotes some statistics to prove, it should definitely be after the city's sanitation has been overhauled, which the author should have highlighted. Merely writing about a city as 'interesting' on one's whim doesn't serve any purpose.
One of the parameters that all cities were judged by was cleanliness and Surat came out on top. In 2011 based on the census, it was the 2 nd fastedt growing city(in population terms. 19 short years back it wasn't this way. Surat was in the news for the worst possible reason- it had an outbreak of plague. 10 people died and 50 became very sick but it led to international humiliation for Suratis not to mention a panic whereby 300000 people left the city within 2 days.
The humiliated and determined Suratis decided to fight back and wipe out this humiliation and look how they succeeded.
@aakar Learn the difference between past tense and present tense. There have been no communal riots in Gujarat in the last 11 years - not even in Ahmedabad or Vadodara
Here are the other Indian cities ranked by "quality of life" in the same report: Surat (1), Pune (2), Ahmedabad (3), Mumbai (4), Chennai (5), Kolkata (6), Jaipur (7), Hyderabad (8), Bangalore (9), Delhi (10), and Kanpur (11).
Not 20 years ago this city made world headlines because it was struck by the plague. Today it is in a major economic powerhouse of Gujarat with a very high per capita income. Sorry that I do not have the date broken out by religion if that is what you want to focus on, Mr. Patel. You may not attribute Surat's turnaround to good governance Mr Patel, but do enjoy its fruits nevertheless. It is for one and all.
Agreeing with Mahakaalchakra,Surat has been diamond cutting centre of India,even in Mughals time,Surat todays stands parallel with Brussels in Diamond cutting and polishing,the wirk is world class. Living in Zimbabwe, I know lot of Zimbabwe'S raw diamond lands in Surat for finishing.
Where on earth do you get your information? Ratan Tata was born in Bombay. . By the way, someone above has mentioned:
There was an entire group of people who left India in the Middle Ages and are colloquially known in Europe today as the Gypsies. The most widely accepted reason for their migration was the invasion of the Ghaznavis who forced these unfortunate people off their ancestral lands because they were 'kafirs'.
@author In your enthusiasm for Surat you have forgotten the role played by Kutch and Malabar in west facing trade historically. More over how did you gloss over the horrific communal violence of 1993, when Muslims were massacred in Surat too along with Mumbai? The city had dgenerated so mch that even the dreaded Plague visited it in 1994. Luckily it got an upright administrator who rejuvenated it. SK Mumbai
"Rant, rant, rant, rant...God I don't like India, somebody in Pakistan, please help me!" This is what I hear whenever I try to read Mr Patel's 'bakwaas' in the ET.
You wrote about Surat but did not talk about its another world-class achievement of Gujarati enterprenuers. By all counts, Surat, mid-size city in Gujarat, is the round tripping centre for gold jewellery and cut and polished diamonds. Diamantiares in the world's biggest diamond cutting and polishing centre in Surat are upbeat with the export of polished diamonds increasing by 28 per cent in February-2013 to $3.5 billion. India's net cut and polished diamond exports for 2012 totaled US$17 billion, according to figures from the Gems and Jewelery Export Promotion Council.
Surat will become like Karachi. You will get swamped by migrants like from backward states who do not know the ABCDs of civilized life and who will destroy the city. Karachi should have had a Green card system or something like restrictions on migration to cities like China. We know the backward states in Pakistan and you know the backward states in India. The paradise that once was Karachi is lost and so will Surat eventually.
No work at Surat .....That's news for me............some people who behave like intellectuals won't find good job any where.........
"It was the place from where the Mughals — who did not control the land route — and their harem departed for Hajj." I am not sure Mughals or any contemporary Indian ever left India to see (forget explore) other lands. Except for early migration of Indians to spread Buddhism to eastern countries no Indian ever sailed west until after British rule started. (To the best of my recollection of Indian History I learned)
I have seen surati peoples more open and busniss minded than others in Gujrat state...