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Giran Gaon (Mill Village)





The Call.

In 1982, over 2,00,000 mill workers of Mumbai ignored the sirens of the Mills they worked for and stayed away from work demanding more wages and better working conditions. Led by a charismatic leader named Dr. Datta Samant, the Great Mill Strike of 1982 probably hastened the end of the textile mill era in Mumbai. They set out to change the way they worked, hoping that built-to-last mills will provide employment for generations to come. But by the end of the strike and over the next two decades, the mills died one by one.

What followed the strike was one of the most brutal eras in the history of Mumbai. The escalation of gang wars fought by mobsters who worked for and against the mill workers and owners during and after the strike. The thousands of unemployed and their children in the Giran Gaon belt who became easy prey for the criminal gangs. And the violence reached its climax with the riots of 1992/93.

It's a trait that all cities with significant number of mills share. Ahmedabad has seen its social fabric torn. The Manchester of the South - Coimbatore was rocked by the same intense violence. Manchester itself had its own share of troubles. But luckily, Mumbai has been able to reinvent itself and has adapted itself slowly to a new world. And there's enough money and people to fill the space left by the mills with malls.

See the full series of images: Spinning Stories.


Links:
Interview with Datta Samant
Swadeshi Mills Story in Frontline

Photo Books by Mumbai Paused







Digital photo books with stories from the streets of Mumbai are now available at Footpath Bookshop


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