
	
	behind the beautiful forevers [sic], 
	Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity;  Katherine Boo; New 
	York, Random House, 2012.
	
	            A concrete wall separates the 
	Mumbai Airport and its accompanying luxury hotels from the slum settlement 
	called Annawadi.  The wall is plastered with advertisements for Italian 
	floor tiles that will remain beautiful forever.  Annawadi, therefore, 
	is behind the beautiful forevers. Katherine Boo, staff writer for 
	The New Yorker, Pulitzer Prize winner, recipient of a MacArthur “Genius” 
	grant and a National Magazine Award for Feature Writing, spent three years 
	getting to know Annawadi and its citizens.  The result is her first book, a 
	superb piece of creative nonfiction, a journalist’s report that is at the 
	same time a profound, compelling novel.
	
	            No urban slum that I have 
	seen—in Detroit, San Salvador, Islamabad, or Cairo—can compare with the 
	fetid squalor of Annawadi.  During the monsoon, “the sewage lake crept 
	forward like a living thing.  Sick water buffalo nosed for food through 
	mounds of wet, devalued garbage, shitting out the consequences of bad 
	choices with a velocity Annawadi water taps had never equaled.”  This sewage 
	lake serves up rats and frogs to be caught for food.  Twice a day 
	Annawadians go to the public taps to draw water.  The public toilets are 
	generally overflowing.  The economic base of the slum is scavenging garbage 
	for saleable items, a highly competitive occupation.  As one young 
	Annawadian described his community:  “Everything around us is roses. . . 
	.And we’re the shit in between.”
	
	            The individuals Boo observed and 
	talked with come alive in her book.  Abdul Husain, sixteen years old—or 
	maybe nineteen, he isn’t sure—is reserved, hard-working, and heroically 
	honest.  He is also, at the beginning of the book, the most successful 
	scavenger.  His family’s situation changes, however, when he and his father 
	are falsely accused of contributing to the suicide of a community 
	prostitute, and must spend time in jail, and later, prison.  The family’s 
	business decreases dramatically.  It is while in custody, however, that 
	Abdul demonstrates his integrity.  Pressured by the authorities to confess 
	to his implication in the suicide, he refuses, despite the prospect of more 
	beatings. Meanwhile, Abdul’s mother, Zehrunisa, frantically tries to raise 
	the bribe required to release Abdul and his father from prison.
	
	            Asha Waghekar is a thirty-nine 
	year old politically ambitious manipulator, as well as a prostitute, who 
	schemes her way toward the position of the community’s slumlord, the chief 
	liaison with the corrupt world outside Annawadi.  Her daughter could be the 
	first Annawadian to graduate from college, such as it is—an institution in 
	which memorizing the summary of a novel earns credit for studying the 
	novel.  Among the young garbage sorters, Sunil, noted for his foul breath, 
	lives day to day expecting luck; Meena, beaten mercilessly by her father and 
	brother, escapes through rat poison, as does Sunjay.
	
	            Perhaps the chief character in 
	the book is blatant Corruption that poisons all institutions: government, 
	security forces, education.   Even Sister Paulette, who runs the Handmaids 
	of the Trinity Children’s Home, sells donated food outside the orphanage.  
	Corruption is most obtrusive in Zehrunisa’s attempts to free her husband, 
	Karam, and Abdul from prison.  Every officer she encounters demands 
	payment.  Abdul comes to understand that “The Indian criminal justice system 
	was a market like garbage. . . .Innocence and guilt could be bought and sold 
	like a kilo of polyurethane bags.”
	
	            The sub-title of this book 
	promises stories of life, death and hope.  The reader finds life and death 
	abundant, but hope?  There is an optimism that somehow rises to the surface 
	of spirits that will not succumb to victimhood.  And there is the 
	skeptic/realist who hears the hollowness of the words.  Boo cites Karam 
	Husain for the epigraph of Part One:  “Everybody talks like this—oh, I will 
	make my child a doctor, a lawyer, and he will make us rich.  It’s vanity, 
	nothing more.  Your little boat goes west and you congratulate yourself, 
	‘What a navigator I am!’  And then the wind blows east.”
	
	            Still, Boo wants her reader to 
	see that the people whose lives she chronicles are neither passive sufferers 
	nor heroic endurers.  They are, like the rest of us, individuals and 
	families trying to make a life where they are planted.  
	
	            Why do I strongly recommend this 
	book to preachers?  Unless you can spend three years in a Mumbai slum, 
	absorb its soul, and share the Word of God from that soul, you need this 
	book.
	
	Pat Chaffee, OP
	
	Racine, Wisconsin
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