Open-and-shut case for city kids
Sir Pheroze and Lady Flora discuss the lack of safe, open public spaces, especially for its children who continue to be denied of such basic facilities
Our sutradhaars, Lady Flora and Sir Pheroze, discuss the lack of safe, open spaces for Mumbai’s children. ILLUSTRATION/UDAY MOHITE
Lady Flora realised something was amiss when Sir Pheroze suggested they meet by the steps of the Asiatic Society of Mumbai, for their midnight stroll, instead of one of the usual addas. She spotted him from a mile, given that the crowd had long gone. “All well, Pheroze?” she enquired, keen to know about his decision. “I am better now, thank you. Yesterday was an unexpectedly tiring day. The great grandniece was in town, and an accompanying family member suggested we have a picnic all the way in the Borivli National Park. I didn’t realise how exhausting it would turn out to be. When I suggested Malabar Hill Forest Walkway, which is also amidst nature, the counter-argument was that they wanted to experience real “open spaces”,” he sighed, using his fingers to gesture the inverted commas. He was upset that his legal background couldn’t win this round.
“But it must have been worth the trek? To sit literally in the lap of nature. We are lucky to have a national park within the city’s........
