And the two shall never meet

India has always been a land of extremes. After 16 years of reforms, India has the most billionaires of any nation in Asia, another 100,000 millionaires and a growing middle class estimated to be anything between 200 million and 250 millioin. But 700 million Indians still live on less than $2 a day. Amelia Gentleman has the story for the International Herald Tribune.

There is a kind woman who parks her car near my gate once a day to distribute parcels of rice, neatly wrapped in newspaper, to the wild and possibly rabid dogs who roam the quiet street in this rich part of central Delhi. She caresses them and addresses them by name. One mangy yellow, malevolent animal she calls Bruno.

It is an act of generosity that I still find confusing. Around the corner, sitting by the traffic lights, is a family of four, which receives no rice parcels. The mother, Sayari, is bony thin, and the children’s matted hair has a dull orange tint, a sign of the malnutrition affecting nearly half of all under-fives in India.

Sayari, who goes by only one name, has spent most of her life selling flowers (bracelets made of jasmine, bunches of wilting roses) at this junction. Unable to make a living in his Rajasthan village, where there was neither work nor water, her father brought her here when she was a baby, about 25 years ago.

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