Some personal memories of the
Taj:
- My first day at work, ever. I'd joined Procter and Gamble India as an Assistant Brand Manager and was attending a Hoopla, an annual jamboree at the
Taj attended by employees from all over India
- My first job offer, ever. This was from the Indian Hotels Company, the company that owns the
Taj. I heard the story about
"Dogs and Indian not allowed" at their recruitment event
- I met my now parents-in-law at the
Taj. Dinner at the
Golden Dragon is an excellent way of reassuring the girl's parents that their daughter's boyfriend is appropriate. That tactic worked partly because my father-in-law had a long and fulfilling career with the
Tata's. As did my grandfather
- I've had many All Day Breakfasts at the
Sea Lounge, overlooking the Gateway of India. My wife and I'd meet there after work to fortify ourselves for the drive back to the suburbs. Once, while I was working through a three egg
omelette, a member of the staff walked up to me with a shoe polish kit and offered to smarten me up. Were my shoes inappropriately
scuffy? No. A waiter had spilt milk on my shoe and was keen to make amends
- The shoes had also been bought at the
Taj. The shoes were a gift from my father, a pair of black brogues from the excellent Joy Shoes which he'd picked up on a business trip to Bombay
- I splurged Rs. 200 on a funky hand drawn map of Bombay at the
Nalanda book shop. Not to scale, with handwritten labels, and with cool touristy joints like
Cafe Mondegar and
Prithvi Theatre marked out with little sketches. Back in the 90s, Rs. 200 was quite a lot of money for something I didn't need. And funky maps weren't all that common
- I've attended a college reunion at the
Taj Ball Room, organized by the Western India
Stephanians Association. I went in with rock bottom expectations, muttering something to myself about "old
fuddy duddies", and wound up having a rollicking good time.
- I've sung Mohammad Rafi's "
yeh hai Bombay
meri jaan" with gusto if not talent, sitting on a bench outside the
Taj. I'm sure I was accompanied by some equally unmusical
Stephanian friends. Not totally sure if it was the same evening...
- The Brand Equity Quiz regional finals were at the
Taj. I was proudly representing my company after competitive internal trials, and our team was leading the Western India finals with just 3 rounds to go. Then
Derek O'Brien snuck in a scrambled word puzzle that has nothing to do with quizzing. I guess the national finals were not meant to be :(
You get the drift.
The
Taj is not just some aseptic and characterless dormitory near an airport. It's a living part of a great city. I am not a Bombay-
ite. I just happened to live in Bombay for a few years. Yet, the
Taj is tightly woven into the fabric of my life, my memories.
The
Taj will be throb with life again. Bombay will be herself again. This nightmare will pass.