The Delhi Walla

Mission Delhi – 50 Faces, Around Town

The faces of Delhi.

[Text and photos by Mayank Austen Soofi]

On November 11, 2011, The Times of India carried a news story:

Researchers to preserve city’s oral history
NEW DELHI: Museums have for long recorded the tangible heritage of a city; the bricks and mortar with which the city was built. But can a museum capture the idea of a city, or its memories? Can a museum capture the life of a city in transition? This is precisely what an ambitious new project sets out to do.

In a possible first for India, a group of scholars, academicians and researchers from the Centre for Community Knowledge (CCK) at Ambedkar University Delhi have embarked on the Citizen’s Memory Project, a digital archive of the lives of the people of Delhi and the oral history of the capital.

This is good news, but it’s not a first for India. The Delhi Walla started such an ‘oral history’ project in 2009. It’s called Mission Delhi.

A city is not made by its buildings and bazaars, but by its people. In Mission Delhi, I’m making portraits of one percent of Delhi’s population. To make each portrait, I sit down with a Delhiwalla, take his photos and spend a few hours talking to him, trying to get a sense of this city through his past, present and also through his hopes for the future.

In November 2011, I profiled Mission Delhi‘s 50th portrait. Here are all the 50 faces.

Muhammad Salim, the first portrait

Berenice Ellen, the second portrait

Shankar, the third portrait

Satnam Singh Juneja, the fourth portrait

Mushirul Hasan, the fifth portrait

Pooja, the sixth portrait

Aanchal Malhotra, the seventh portrait

Changa Kumar, the eighth portrait

Rakesh Chandra, the ninth portrait

Sumanta Roy, the 10th portrait

Deen Dayal, the 11th portrait

Muhammad Aslam, the 12th portrait

Syed Haider Raza, the 13th portrait

Sarah Rose, the 14th portrait

Aarti, the 15th portrait

Rachana Rao Umashankar, the 16th portrait

Muhammad Waseem, the 17th portrait

Surinder, the 18th portrait

Ram Swaroop Sharma, the 19th portrait

Kareem Khan, the 20th portrait

Sunita Pandit, the 21st portrait

Salim Javeri, the 22nd portrait

Irene Banias, the 23rd portrait

Nitin Chanana, the 24th portrait

Suresh Shah, the 25th portrait

Noor Bano, the 26th portrait

Rakhshanda Jalil, the 27th portrait

Ajeet Singh Chauhan, the 28th portrait

Naresh Chandra, the 29th portrait

Muhammad Chand, the 30th portrait

Siddhartha Gigoo, the 31st portrait

Ankit Verma, the 32nd portrait

Raghavendra Vanjre, the 33rd portrait

Vijay Kumar, the 34th portrait

Usha Hooda, the 35th portrait

Ajit Phogat, the 36th portrait

Fahad Khan, the 37th portrait

Sakina Mehta, the 38th portrait

Editor, the 39th portrait

Sadia Dehlvi, the 40th portrait

Mritunjay Kumar Tiwari, the 41st portrait

Abhay Singh, the 42nd portrait

Nameless Kapoor, the 43rd portrait

Zubeida Bano, the 44th portrait

Ramlal Thakur, the 45th portrait

A. Husain, the 46th portrait

PM Sahay, the 47th portrait

Shyam Sundar Thapa, the 48th portrait

Dr Ubaidul Aleem, the 49th portrait

Amir Dehlavi, the 50th portrait


Exit mobile version