Delhi falls silent as the city gets louder
IN THE TIME OF BULK SHOPPING FROM SUPERMARKETS AND HOME DELIVERIES, THE STREET RHYTHM OF THE PHERIWALLAS OR LOCAL VENDORS IS ALSO DISAPPEARING
Despite its constant onslaught on trees, Delhi still has the highest bird population in the world after Nairobi. But there is little appreciation for the birdsong.
The overlit cityscape is hostile to birds and our modern urban living leaves no space for species such as the house sparrow, which has always been part of our household.
Residents of neighbourhoods around the Ridge forests rue how the morning call of peacocks has fallen silent. Today, we hear rock pigeons, which are overfed by compassionate residents for some reason, cooing everywhere. But chirps of other birds are becoming a rarity.
Noise is one of the biggest repellents for birds. Multiple studies conducted across Europe have suggested that birds started singing much earlier in the morning to avoid the urban din, or altogether avoided noisy areas.
Certain species of birds were found to be discordant in an urban setting, singing louder and shriller compared to their counterparts in the woodlands. Besides the noise, the architecture of a city could also play a role in altering bird songs, other researchers found.
Not so long ago, we used to hear frogs croaking from under the bushes in our gardens and neighbourhood parks after a good spell of rain. Now, landscaped gardens have killed the undergrowth that was the habitat for insects, frogs and other small species. Frogs have any way become scarce since Delhi’s ponds and water bodies became real estate and the polluted Yamuna wetlands struggled to support life.
It is not just about the sounds of nature. A city’s residents draw familiarity and comfort from the traditional sounds as well. As R. Murray Schafer, composer, author and the founder of the World Soundscape Project, explained: “The older the sound, the more it is loved; the newer the sound, the more it is feared.”
In the time of bulk shopping from supermarkets and home deliveries, the street rhythm of the pheriwallas or local vendors is also disappearing. Today, many residents won’t even let them into their gated communities citing security concerns.
But not too long ago, the chants of the vendors were integral to Delhi’s soundscape. Gulzar remembered the rhythmic sale pitches — “chairpai bunwa lo... jamun, thande, kale jamun... hapad ke pappad” — in a poem on summer days in Delhi. Writer Maheshwar Dayal documented them in as many as 10 pages in his book ‘Dilli Jo Ek Shahar Hai’.
For many, these memories may now serve only to evoke nostalgia or document a cultural lapse. However, the restoration of hawking rights is also a question of civil rights and the survival of the economically backward. Likewise, a discordant bird or a missing frog is a loud enough warning that our city has become unliveable.
Whatever is silencing those we consider dispensable may well get us soon.