Mumbai
Mumbai is the capital of
Maharashtra and the economic powerhouse India. It's an exhilarating
city, fuelled by entrepreneurial energy, determination and
dreams. Compared to the torpor of the rest of India, it can
seem like a foreign country. Mumbai is the finance
capital of the nation, the industrial hub of everything
from textiles to petrochemicals, and it's responsible for
half the country's foreign trade. To many visitors, Mumbai
is the glamour of Bollywood cinema, cricket
on the maidans on weekends, bhelpuri on the beach at Chowpatty
and red double-decker buses. While it boasts an impressive
Victoria townscape, a sculptured island cave temple and a
national park that's roamed by wild tigers, the city's formal
attractions pale in comparison to the nonstop theater of its
streets. Sixteen million people from all over India are wedged
into Mumbai and after a short stroll you will feel like you
have rubbed shoulders with and bumped into every single one
of them. The size of the population means the city has enough
social problems to last a lifetime, but its spirit is irrepressible
and it has personality by the bucket load. As the cultural
bridgehead between east and west, whatever happens in the
rest of India tends to happens first in Mumbai, and it usually
happens with the maximum amount of swank and noise. Most visitors
to India gear themselves up to confront poverty, but it's
the extravagant display of wealth in Mumbai that seem shocking.
In many parts of the city flash cars and mobile phones are
as common as street kids or beggars, and Mumbai loves to claim
it has more millionaires than Manhattan. Flush with money,
the city has an established social elite and an entertainment
hungry middle class, which mean diversions are never in short
supply. Mumbai lives and breathes cinema, enjoy a rollicking
nightlife, boasts the best seafood restaurants in South Asia
and has more shops and bazaars than you could ever hope to
explore.

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