"Aao aao suno apni bhavishyavani, suno apni aage ki kahani…" His voice, like a mystical chant, echoes through the evening chaos of Juhu Beach. In the backdrop of the setting sun on this vibrant beach in suburban Mumbai, Uday Kumar, about 27, is inviting people to come and listen to some soothsaying.
He is no self-made astrologer, no chirologist, no tarot card reader with a rose-ringed parakeet. Instead, he stands there with a small, roughly foot-long robot wrapped in decorative lights, sitting on a mysterious black box that stands on a four feet tall foldable table. “It’s called Jyotish Computer Live story,” he says, introducing this reporter to the robot.
The gizmo can analyse the individual's vibrations, he explains, handing over the headphones connected to the machine to an intrigued customer who has just walked up to him. After a brief pause, a feminine voice, speaking in Hindi, will unravel secrets that the future holds. All for 30 rupees.
Uday is the lone custodian of this technological marvel he inherited from his uncle Ram Chandar, who had moved to Mumbai from his Gendha hamlet in Bihar some decades ago (and was known as Raju in the city). Each time his uncle returned home he brought with him stories of the city. “Chacha [paternal uncle] told us that he has got an ajooba [a strange thing] that can tell the future, and that is how he is making money. Many laughed and thought it was some joke. I was fascinated!” recalls Uday. Raju had introduced his 11-year-old nephew to the wonders of city life as well as that of the machine.















