Essays from INDIA: Nehru Nagar
Nehru Nagar, originally an area cordoned off for leprosy sufferers, is the only slum area in Vile Parle, Mumbai – a suburb near to the airport and train station. Jobs are abundant in the area, due to the numerous construction sites, and it has experienced vast development in the last few years.
"The first time I came to Nehru Nagar was in 1975," says Veenod of Vimala Dermatological Centre, "and there were just a few hundred leprosy patients that we were taking care of, living in rudimental huts. Now it houses 50000 people, coming from all over India; they have electricity, paved alleys, brick and cement houses and all sorts of shops and activities."
Like all the other slums in Mumbai, Nehru Nagar is scheduled for demolition, but the inhabitants don't necessarily want to move into the buildings that the government is building for them. Even though Nehru Nagar is still poor and overpopulated, its residents consider it their home where they have everything they need.
Albertina d'Urso with her work "Nehru Nagar" was among the DEEPER PRESPECTIVE PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE YEAR nominees at the International Photography Awards 2010. A selection of this work was projected at the Lincoln Center in New York during the Eight Annual Lucie Awards and was included in the 2010 IPA Annual book.
Published in Foto8 and in 100 Eyes magazine, issue: HOME.