
The city in many ways lacks culture; the exact words of my Indian work colleagues were:"...there's nothing to do around here in Gurgaon except for going to one of the malls. And they all really look the same."
Only 20-30 minutes outside of the capital of India, Gurgaon, in many ways represents to me a perfect example of what Thomas L. Friedman examined in his book, The Lexus and the Olive Tree. According to Friedman, the world is currently facing two struggles: the drive for prosperity and development facilitated through globalization, symbolized by the Lexus, and the communal desire to hold on to and retain cultural identity and traditions, symbolized by the olive tree. This idea of the constant struggle of our increasingly globalized world is so apparent in Gurgaon - a city where the demand for new red brick high rise buildings to accommodate the outsourcing needs of multi-national corporations doesn't seem to cease or slow down; where new billboard-plastered shopping malls appear out of nowhere everyday to meet the increasing demands of the Sari-wearing young professionals with now extra disposable income to spend.

I can't help but think about Friedman's two challenges; the demand for young educated women in this emerging economic superpower has pushed the community to abandon some of its most traditional customs. Young women now live away from home for work, sometimes by themselves, sometimes with other young women. Some of these women are yet the same women that follow some of the most traditional Indian customs, such as arranged marriages and the dowry system.
The contrast of tradition and globalization is so apparent in every moment of everyday life here...
