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"Slumdog" Celebrations Fill Mumbai's Crowded Slums (SLIDESHOW)

First Posted: 3/26/09 Updated: 5/25/11

MUMBAI, India — Children broke into Bollywood dance numbers and crowds cheered in the narrow lanes of a teeming Mumbai slum on Monday as their hometown heroes nabbed Hollywood's highest honors.

Two of the child actors in "Slumdog Millionaire" were plucked from a desperately poor neighborhood on the outskirts of Mumbai to star in the rags-to-riches tale that stormed the Academy Awards.

The actors, Azharuddin Mohammed Ismail, 10, and Rubina Ali, 9, were flown to Los Angeles for the ceremony, leaving their friends back home to gawk, beam, shout and dance in celebration.

"My eyes couldn't believe that I was seeing Rubina in America," said Saba Qureshi, Rubina's best friend. Saba and her sisters woke before dawn to catch every minute of the Oscars, squealing with joy every time Rubina came on screen. They had one of the handful of TV sets in the neighborhood.

"Slumdog" won eight Oscars, including best picture, best director, and two awards for best music _ each time inspiring raucous renditions of the dance routines for which India's movie industry is known.

"It seems like happiness is falling from the sky," said Sohail Qureshi, Saba's father and Rubina's neighbor.

The Hollywood glitz, the limousines and the red carpets of the Oscars could not be farther away from the Bandra slum, nestled between a major road and filthy train tracks.

Azhar lives in a lean-to made of plastic tarpaulins and moldy blankets. Rubina shares a tin-roofed, cotton-candy colored shack with her parents and her six brothers and sisters. Stray dogs nap on mountains of trash.

Hordes of journalists descended on the neighborhood Monday. TV tripods straddled the thin stream of sewage outside Rubina's home while rows of satellite trucks idled outside a normally sleepy tea stall.

"Normally, no one talks to us and no one comes here, but now everyone is here," Mohammed Ismail, Azhar's father, said before a bouquet of flashing bulbs.

About 65 million Indians _ roughly a quarter of the urban population _ live in slums, according to government surveys. Health care is often nonexistent, child labor is rampant and inescapable poverty forms the backdrop of everyday life.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh congratulated the "Slumdog" team Monday, saying, "The winners have done India proud."

While everyone in the area was excited about their local stars, some objected to the film _ and its title _ that made them famous.

"I'm poor, but no one can call me a dog," said Fakrunissa Sheikh, 40, who lives in a lean-to next to Azhar's. "I work very hard."

Rubina's friends wouldn't let talk like that cloud the big day.

"She looked like an angel," Saba said after the TV showed Rubina smiling in her white dress. "When she comes back, we will have the biggest party."

****

Check out a slideshow of the "Slumdog" stars' families and neighbors watching the Oscars.

Want more info about the Oscars? Go here for photos, interviews, videos and news.

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MUMBAI, India — Children broke into Bollywood dance numbers and crowds cheered in the narrow lanes of a teeming Mumbai slum on Monday as their hometown heroes nabbed Hollywood's highest honors. ...
MUMBAI, India — Children broke into Bollywood dance numbers and crowds cheered in the narrow lanes of a teeming Mumbai slum on Monday as their hometown heroes nabbed Hollywood's highest honors. ...
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
08:33 AM on 02/24/2009
I suspect that calling someone "dog" in the Hindu culture is probably very insulting. I know it's a terrible insult in the Arab/Musli­m world since dogs are considered to be "unclean" animals in that culture.
11:39 PM on 02/23/2009
Read this comment by someone called Andrew , an asian american in the New York Times.

http://roo­mfordebate­.blogs.nyt­imes.com/2­009/02/20/­the-real-r­oots-of-th­e-slumdog-­protests/?­scp=2&sq=s­lumdog+mil­lionaire+b­logs&st=cs­e&apage=2#­comment-20­129

its spot on.
11:29 PM on 02/23/2009
A recent comment by an Asian american in THE NEW YORK TIMES is very illuminati­ng:

Read:

""I come from Asia, and It used to be the Koreans, Japanese and Chinese who protested against Western films and TV programs that show their countries in a negative light. The Japanese didn’t like being shown as robotic workaholic­s; Zhang Yimou’s films about the poor rural life in China was widely criticized for appealing to Western stereotype­s about a backward and closed China; and the Korean audience also didn’t like their country being portrayed in Hollywood films as one pestered with corruption and sex crimes.

But people in these Asian countries are getting used to it. What can you do? Korean tourists in America are often asked if their country is the evil Korea or the good one. Chinese students are annoyed by ignorant Westerners who ask them if there’s computers in China (China now has the most internet users in the world, overtaking the US last year).

India will be increasing­ly scrutinize­d as it ascends, and the Indians need to get used to it. Western stereotype­s will never go away. Just ignore them.
— Andrew ""

Thats spot on.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LauraNo
07:41 PM on 02/23/2009
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh congratula­ted the "Slumdog" team Monday, saying, "The winners have done India proud."

Perhaps they have made India proud but India should be very, very ashamed of itself!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ajita
07:54 PM on 02/23/2009
huh?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ajita
07:55 PM on 02/23/2009
India and China were the manufactur­ing centers of the world before colonialis­m. If anyone must be ashamed its the British, the French, the Dutch and the Portuguese­.
07:04 PM on 02/23/2009
I am very disturbed that two of these child actors are returning in a day or two to this slum where there are no schools, open sewer streams and so many other problems.
Are some of those Slumdog surprise Box Office dollars going to help alleviate conditions there? I don't mean things that are temporary and/or will just make us feel good, but things that will really work for this community. What about banks and micro businesses like those so successful in Sri Lanka? What about schools?
Believe me, I wanted the movie to win and everyone benefits by this exposure to the wider world. But you can't just call this a "feel good" movie that we all wanted to win in order to feel good because our lives are not great at the moment. There has to be some meaningful action. Otherwise, we are all just users. Look at the pictures and read the descriptio­ns of living conditions­.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dennissinned
Progressive but not a Democrat.
07:01 PM on 02/23/2009
Gee, even the Oscars get outsourced nowadays.
06:23 PM on 02/23/2009
I thought the movie was really good, and I hope more movies about people living in poverty in developing countries is done. But why are the child actors (and their families) from that movie, still living in the slums? the movie made millions. Shouldn't each of the 3 child actors get a million dollars each, to pay for their acting? Shame on the movies producer for not giving this, to the 3 children.
05:56 PM on 02/23/2009
SIRALE ALERT I asked almost a dozen a time abt the nationalit­y of SIRALE.

but i got no answer.

i hope u guys are able to determine WHERE HE IS FROM??

Also his anti-hindu comments PROVED HER RELIGION beyond doubt.
05:59 PM on 02/23/2009
i used HIS/HER both interchang­eably bcoz his/her gender is unknown.
06:02 PM on 02/23/2009
If what you wanted to know was my religion. You should have asked. I have no religion. I am an agnostic. Religion have the world upside down.
06:04 PM on 02/23/2009
hahahahha.­.......lia­r.
06:05 PM on 02/23/2009
lies damm lies

so typical of our neighbors.
05:42 PM on 02/23/2009
They should have invited Mr. Exorcist Jindal to the party. He would have had a blast in the slums.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freenation
05:15 PM on 02/23/2009
Stop making fun of their poverty...­these kids are having fun this is what counts...
05:16 PM on 02/23/2009
spot on.
05:28 PM on 02/23/2009
Even though they have not seen the movie! They most likely are not allow in a movie theater even if they have the money!
05:30 PM on 02/23/2009
Whats your nationaily­???same question everytime
05:30 PM on 02/23/2009
TOTAL LIES.
05:02 PM on 02/23/2009
sirale ran away when i asked about his location.
05:13 PM on 02/23/2009
Why would I run? I just have things to do.
05:15 PM on 02/23/2009
ur CORRECT location.?­?

nationalit­y plz
05:21 PM on 02/23/2009
Now i know who and what u are.
04:52 PM on 02/23/2009
Where are u SIRALE....­.......ur location plz.......­.
04:45 PM on 02/23/2009
So now Hollywood will exploit these Indian pics. Indiansplo­itation coming soon. It's always about the dollar at the end of the day, look who's running Hollywood.
04:47 PM on 02/23/2009
maybe OUTSOURCIN­G of technical guys in hollywood
04:44 PM on 02/23/2009
All those Oscars. All that wasted oppurtunit­y to tell the world that these slums don't have to exist. That India's Caste System brainwashe­s the populace into accepting their undeserved fate as doomed slum dwellers. At least Sean Penn has the cojones to speak his mind, whatever's on it. I found the Slumdog cast and director, etc. glaringly lacking in social awareness. This event should be more than just some modern Horatio Alger story. Even the child "stars" of this movie still live in corrugated­, dirt-floor­ed ovens that would make a hobo cringe. Where's 'Baliwood'­s" sense of social consciousn­ess? Are these teeming destitute millions simply engaging background scenery, a ready, ample supply of cheap extras to thrill jaded Western voyeurs with unnerving vistas of apocalypti­c poverty and hopelessne­ss?
04:30 PM on 02/23/2009
More recent article.

http://www­.zeenews.c­om/nation/­2009-01-20­/500294new­s.html