Updated On: 10 March, 2024 07:03 AM IST | Mumbai | Christalle Fernandes
Mumbra or Malabar Hill, every woman needs a break. And Sabah Khan’s newly-opened safe space is giving the women and children of Mumbra something they’ve never had—a place of personal leisure and camaraderie

Guftagu, envisioned by social worker Sabah Khan with the support of Farhat Ali and Rashmi Divekar, is a space for the women and young people of Mumbra to meet and find community. Pics/Anurag Ahire
Having a place like this has been a dream since I gained feminist consciousness,” Sabah Khan tells us, as we walk into the compact and newly-opened Guftagu, a space nestled between the cheek-by-jowl buildings of Mumbra’s Old Nasheman Colony. A tall glass of deep red kokum soda with swirling mint leaves is offered to us. “Every woman who comes here is served chai or a cold drink. This is a welcoming space for them,” says the social worker. Titles in Urdu pack a bookshelf in a corner near the door, while ludo, jenga, and chess are close at hand. A small blackboard announces the week’s upcoming events.
“When a woman is stressed, where does she go?” Khan asks rhetorically, “Here, she has a few moments to herself.” Khan’s dream to host a space for women to get away from the drudgery of domestic service and caretaking goes back 25 years, when she worked with feminist collective MASUM after a Masters in social work. “Eight to nine of us used to hang out together, every day after work, and wonder—where are the spaces for women?” In 2003, she took a break and worked at Indigo Deli for three years. It was to understand the work required to run a co-working and hangout space.