首页
登录
职称英语
Passage One Among the great cities of the world, Kolkata (formerly spelt
Passage One Among the great cities of the world, Kolkata (formerly spelt
游客
2023-11-24
24
管理
问题
Passage One
Among the great cities of the world, Kolkata (formerly spelt as Calcutta), the capital of India’s West Bengal, and the home of nearly 15 million people, is often mentioned as the only one that still has a large fleet of hand-pulled rickshaws.
Rickshaws are not there to haul around tourists. It’s the people in the lanes who most regularly use rickshaws—not the poor but people who are just a notch above the poor. They are people who tend to travel short distances, through lanes that are sometimes inaccessible to even the most daring taxi driver. An older woman with marketing to do, for instance, can arrive in a rickshaw, have the rickshaw puller wait until she comes back from various stalls to load her purchases, and then be taken home. People in the lanes use rickshaws as a 24-hour ambulance service. Proprietors of cafes or corner stores send rickshaws to collect their supplies. The rickshaw pullers told me their steadiest customers are school children. Middle-class families contract with a puller to take a child to school and pick him up; the puller essentially becomes a family retainer.
From June to September Kolkata can get torrential rains. During my stay it once rained for about 48 hours. Entire neighborhoods couldn’t be reached by motorized vehicles, and the newspapers showed pictures of rickshaws being pulled through water that was up to the pullers’ waists. When it’s raining, the normal customer base for rickshaw pullers expands greatly, as does the price of a journey. A writer in Kolkata told me, "When it rains, even the governor takes rickshaws. "
While I was in Kolkata, a magazine called India Today published its annual ranking of Indian states, according to such measurements as prosperity and infrastructure. Among India’s 20 largest states,Bihar finished dead last, as it has for four of the past five years. Bihar, a few hundred miles north of Kolkata, is where the vast majority of rickshaw pullers come from. Once in Kolkata, they sleep on the street or in their rickshaws or in a dera—a combination of garage and repair shop and dormitory managed by someone called a sardar. For sleeping privileges in a dera, pullers pay 100 rupees (about $2. 50) a month, which sounds like a pretty good deal until you’ve visited a dera. They gross between 100 and 150 rupees a day, out of which they have to pay 20 rupees for the use of the rickshaw and an occasional 75 or more for a payoff if a policeman stops them for, say, crossing a street where rickshaws are prohibited. A 2003 study found that rickshaw pullers are near the bottom of Kolkata occupations in income, doing better than only the beggars. For someone without land or education, that still beats trying to make a living in Bihar.
There are people in Kolkata, particularly educated and politically aware people, who will not ride in a rickshaw, because they are offended by the idea of being pulled by another human being or because they consider it not the sort of thing people of their station do or because they regard the hand-pulled rickshaw as a relic of colonialism. Ironically, some of those people are not enthusiastic about banning rickshaws. The editor of the editorial pages of Kolkata’s Telegraph—Rudrangshu Mukherjee, a former academic who still writes history books—told me, for instance, that he sees humanitarian considerations as coming down on the side of keeping hand-pulled rickshaws on the road. "I refuse to be carried by another human being myself," he said, "but I question whether we have the right to take away their livelihood. " Rickshaw supporters point out that when it comes to demeaning occupations, rickshaw pullers are hardly unique in Kolkata.
When I asked one rickshaw puller if he thought the government’s plan to rid the city of rickshaws was based on a genuine interest in his welfare, he smiled, with a quick shake of his head—a gesture I interpreted to mean, " If you are so na?ve as to ask such a question, I will answer it, but it is not worth wasting words on. " Some rickshaw pullers I met were resigned to the imminent end of their livelihood and pin their hopes on being offered something in its place. As migrant workers, they don’t have the political clout enjoyed by, say, Kolkata’s sidewalk hawkers, who, after supposedly being scaled back at the beginning of the modernization drive, still clog the sidewalks, selling absolutely everything—or, as I found during the 48 hours of rain, absolutely everything but umbrellas. "The government was the government of the poor people," one sardar told me. "Now they shake hands with the capitalists and try to get rid of poor people. "
But others in Kolkata believe that rickshaws will simply be confined more strictly to certain neighborhoods, out of the view of World Bank traffic consultants and California investment delegations—or that they will be allowed to die out naturally as they’re supplanted by more modern conveyances. Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee, after all, is not the first high West Bengal official to say that rickshaws would be off the streets of Kolkata in a matter of months. Similar statements have been made as far back as 1976. The ban decreed by Bhattacharjee has been delayed by a court case and by a widely held belief that some retraining or social security settlement ought to be offered to rickshaw drivers. It may also have been delayed by a quiet reluctance to give up something that has been part of the fabric of the city for more than a century. Kolkata, a resident told me, "has difficulty letting go. " One day a city official handed me a report from the municipal government laying out options for how rickshaw pullers might be rehabilitated.
"Which option has been chosen?" I asked, noting that the report was dated almost exactly a year before my visit.
"That hasn’t been decided," he said.
"When will it be decided?"
"That hasn’t been decided," he said. [br] We can infer from the passage that some educated and politically aware people________.
选项
A、hold mixed feelings towards rickshaws
B、strongly support the ban on rickshaws
C、call for humanitarian actions for rickshaw pullers
D、keep quiet on the issue of banning rickshaws
答案
A
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3214765.html
相关试题推荐
PASSAGEFIVEIndirecttaxesanddirecttaxes.第3段第1句明确指出,任何税制基本上都可以分为直接税和间接税,题目中的m
PASSAGEFOUR[br]WhatdidMr.Galili’smovingfromAmsterdamtoGroningenturn
PASSAGETHREE[br]HowcanKentWalker’sattitudetowardstheresultoftheauct
PASSAGETWOContent.第4段中作者讲述了自己角色转换的过程以及对此的感受,从倒数第2句的awondrousbeginning(一个奇妙的开头
PASSAGEONE[br]WhatcanbeinferredfromradicalIslamicpartiesinlocalelec
PASSAGETHREE[br]WhatwastheappearanceofBEATLESregardedas?Anoutstanding
PASSAGETWO[br]WhatwasStephen’sfeelingstowardsMaggie?Intenselove.倒数第2段第3
PASSAGEONE[br]Accordingtothelastparagraph,whatneedstobesettled?Theu
PASSAGEFOURHeshowspityaboutit.从原文最后三段作者对那不勒斯曾经的辉煌和那不勒斯现在的没落的对比,可以体会出作者对这一城市
PASSAGETHREE[br]Whatdoes"atrioofcrises"(thesecondparagraph)mean?Crises
随机试题
Inrecentyears,moreandmoreforeignersareinvolvedintheteachingprogr
文字图层中的文字信息哪些可以进行修改和编辑:
报考导游人员资格证考试的考生至少要具有()及以上学历。A.高中、中专业 B.大
属于变电站消防设施维护项目的是()(A)应急广播系统(B)应急照明和疏散指示
历史文化名城的申报条件中,“在所报的历史文化名城保护范围内还应当有2个以上的历史
最早确立“刑律统类”编纂方式的封建成文法典是( )。 A.《大中刑统》 B
淡泊,不是不思进取,不是________,不是没有追求,而是以纯美的灵魂对待生活
下列关于建设工程监理含义的表述中,正确的是()。A.建设工程监理与政府主管部门的
图示电路中电流源,RL=R2=1Ω,L=0.5H,C=0.5F。当负载ZL为多少
我国多数企业和建设项目的指挥或管理机构,习惯用()来描述每一个工作部门的工作任务
最新回复
(
0
)