There is something feverish about the way in which Dilliwallahs alienate themselves from their past. It’s evident in the way in which the upwardly mobile middle class abandoned the old city first for Lutyens’s new capital and then for the suburban pleasures of South Delhi’s gated neighbourhoods. As this class moved south, it traded in the schools it used to send its children to, for new ones. When I was in school, everyone I knew went to St. Xavier’s, St. Columba’s, Mater Dei Convent, the Convent of Jesus and Mary, Presentation Convent, Modern School, Delhi Public School and Springdales. Then, suddenly, these places became less desirable as people moved on to schools further south: Sardar Patel Vidyalaya, Shri Ram School and Vasant Valley School, and now the schools du jour are the expensive ‘international’ schools that prep schoolchildren for their NRI futures. That new schools emerged as the city grew is understandable. It’s less clear why the earlier schools, so sought after once, were abandoned entirely by the class that once thronged them.