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A passage to India in the heart of Paris
Walk into Paris’ Strasbourg Saint-Denis neighbourhood, and you’ll think you’re in East London or Queens. This cosmopolitan and trendy neighbourhood also houses Passage Brady, Paris’ ‘Little India’.
The Strasbourg Saint-Denis area, north of Central Paris, is one of the most cosmopolitan and trendy spots in the French capital
The Strasbourg Saint-Denis neighbourhood, once disreputable, has become one of Paris’s most cosmopolitan (in other words, ‘trendy’) areas.
A visitor would hardly think oneself in Paris – the energy here is more like what one would expect in East London or in Queens, New York.
On the rue du Faubourg Saint-Denis, a telephone shop selling sim cards to foreigners stands next to a popular cafe.
A wine shop is next door, followed by a Turkish soup outlet. Just opposite, a Chinese take-away and Italian pizza place.
Every ten metres, delicious smells waft through the air – Syrian cuisine, Corsican cheese, and even vegan kebabs… at Strasbourg Saint-Denis, the world unravels inside your nostrils…
Dress like a Maharajah for 12 euros.
A passage to India
Walking on, one may nearly miss a little passage at the rue du Faubourg Saint Denis.
The Passage Brady, built in 1828, was designated as a French historical monument in 2002.
Today, it is better known as Paris’s ‘Little India’.
Inside the passage, both sides are lined with Indian restaurants, spice shops and salons offering Indian beauty treatments.
An Indian immigrant tells his story
RFI spoke to Umesh Bhatt – an Indian immigrant who has been working in a restaurant in Passage Brady for nearly 30 years.
“I came to France in 1980, when I was 18,” Umesh recalls.
“Before, I used to work as a cook in a five-star hotel in Delhi.
“A fellow I knew in the hotel worked for Air France. [He] always used [to] run around with a bunch of passports in his hand. Visas to go to France.”
Umesh Bhatt emigrated to France in 1980.
Umesh beams.
“Soon, with the right paperwork, I succeeded in obtaining one for myself”.
Asked about his years in Passage Brady, Umesh talks about how the area was before.
“Before 2001, this area was dangerous. Prostitution and drugs everywhere. That’s all gone now.”
As he speaks, a group of tourists is led on a guided tour.
“As you know,” the guide explains. “What we call ‘Indian’ in France is not really from India. Most shops here are owned by people from Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka or from Mauritius.”
Guided tours are a common sight in Paris’ ‘Little India’
Evidently, in the heart of Paris’ trendy and cosmopolitan Strasbourg Saint-Denis area, political divisions and squabbles are not uncommon.
But at the end of the day, the enormous cultural diversity of the neighbourhood makes the little differences seem insignificant.
This story was originally published by RFI English.
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