Deccan Chronicle

It’s time Metro chugged into people’s lives, transforme­d them

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stopped, but their parents pulled them away, and finally, an old man contribute­d a dollar.

What shocked everyone the next day was to realise he was playing on a personalis­ed instrument which cost over a million dollars, and that tickets for his concerts cost $150 in the best concert halls in the greatest cities across the world.

A similar experiment in Europe tested general levels of public honesty where under watchful eyes of clandestin­e candid cameras, wallets with a few dollars and a phone number were left in a metro station with wilful carelessne­ss.

Some ignored it, some took the money, some called the number and were invited to a party.

Football star Cristiano Ronaldo took to the streets outside a busy Metro de Madrid station, disguised as a beggar, showing off his skills, but people just ignored him.

The girl whose phone number he asked for must have had a heart attack when he revealed who he was, while the little kid who actually played with him and got a signed ball afterwards, would never forget the day in his life. and men who scripted our past destiny, flora and fauna and artistic renditions depicting a variety of themes.

Former prime minister P.V. Narasimha Rao to Dr Sarojini Naidu, the Nizams of yore, Prof. Jaishanker and many a doyen of Telangana’s struggle for dignity have been caught colourfull­y in a celebratio­n that brings culture and local art together.

This harnessing of the metro rail for purposes beyond urban transporta­tion is a crucial facet of its value to us as a platform that can achieve a lot more, including transforma­tion of people, shaping culture, and influencin­g behaviour, among other things.

The Kolkata Metro, India’s earliest, has failed to catch the attention of the world, having no influence on culture, habits or in transformi­ng urban life.

The largest and busiest, the Delhi Metro, for all its success in the efficient manner in which it was constructe­d, has so far failed to unleash any soft power as a platform of people congregati­on. Neither has Bengaluru, a city otherwise bustling with creativity and social conscienti­ousness.

In each one of these cities we have many issues to highlight, while artistical­ly and culturally, we have an agenda to be a truly global city. The best place for such an initiative would be the new stations, pillars and other spaces of the metro rail.

Imagine if we had a “Celebrity Thursday” where HMR asks citizens of the city to forsake their vehicles and travel on the Metro, and run into a star like Ranveer or Prabhas, P.V. Sindhu or Virat Kohli, K.T. Rama Rao or Kejriwal, or any such celebrity. Imagine, some day, an Aamir Khan, Mahesh Babu or a Junior NTR disguised as a physically handicappe­d person asking for help around the Metro before revealing their identity to see how far people are willing to go to help a complete stranger.

Or, the Sunrisers or Royal Challenger­s spending a few hours on the railway meeting their fans before the next IPL edition.

Imagine a Salman Khan, Daggubati Rana or Akhil Akkineni or Taapsi Pannu or Samantha taking to the Metro asking people to give up their packet of cigarettes or gutka in exchange for a selfie with them and taking a health oath. Imagine topnotch global VCs promising to travel on the Metro for an entire day and asking young start-ups to pitch to them their ideas for funding, on the train, with a promise of a cheque before journey’s end.

Imagine young local musicians being allowed to play on select days on the platform. Or stand-up comedians having a go at making commuters laugh a little at the start or end of a busy, stressful day. Or a surprise gift for commuters who use the stairs instead of the escalator.

The potential to use it to increase not only traffic but awareness on crucial issues, sign up for right causes, promote the arts and local artists and create greater levels of commerce will all be a test for our metro to become a part of our hearts and minds, as much as of our commuting plans. The early start by Hyderabad Metro gives hope to all Indian metro railways to start unleashing their soft power like their global peers and start chugging into our hearts.

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