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Greetings from Mumbai, where residents take breathing space where they can find it

Diaa Hadid/NPR

Far-Flung Postcards is a weekly series in which NPR's international team shares moments from their lives and work around the world.

Mumbai is a city of more than 18 million people crammed on a tiny peninsula, and so residents take their breathing space where they can get it.

That's often on promenades, like this one by Carter Road, that gird the Arabian Sea.

On a recent day, I joined what felt like the rest of Mumbai to enjoy the late-afternoon breeze.

While strolling, I saw this gentleman read his newspaper. A worker napped. A mother pushed a pram. A housemaid walked an expensive, tiny dog. A couple canoodled in a corner. A woman wearing a face-veil lifted it to take a photo with another young woman. A musician sang off-key to an audience of one stumbling drunk man.

Mumbai residents deserve more space than the municipality gives. And yet watching the unfurling reel of Mumbai life on one narrow promenade is one of this city's quiet delights.

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Copyright 2026 NPR

Diaa Hadid
Diaa Hadid covers South Asia with a focus on India from NPR's bureau in Mumbai. It's a position she began in October 2023. She arrived there after spending six years in NPR's Islamabad bureau, where she covered Pakistan and Afghanistan.