JASMINE-scented incense mingles with the aroma of saffron. Three generations of the Jung family have assembled for Iftar—the ritual breaking of the roza or fast—at Hameed Manzil, the family home in Old Delhi. The house is on the bustling main street of Daryaganj or ‘river ghat’. Today, the Yamuna has changed course, and what flows instead is a constant stream of traffic. The fact that Ramzan and the recent Navratras have coincided after 32 years is not lost on the Jungs. As long-time residents of the old city—Hameed Manzil has been home to Nawab Zafar Jung and his family for more than a century—Hindus have always been neighbours. Iftar and Id-Milan are occasions when the family entertains their Hindu friends. This Iftar is no different. Even as the Nawab breaks his fast with Zam-Zam, or holy water from Mecca, the doorbell rings. It’s Romesh Bhandari, the former governor of Uttar Pradesh. Greetings follow, and the tehzeeb—etiquette— is like a scene from a ’60s Bollywood Muslim social. Sakina Begum, the 82-year-old matriarch, genially presides over the scene. Draped in black silk and pearls, she is the de facto hostess. ‘‘Only de facto,’’ she stresses in a delightful blend of impeccable English and chaste Urdu. ‘‘My responsibilities are over, my children are all settled.’’ However, she runs a guesthouse on the first floor of Hameed Manzil. The polished veneer of old world charm belies the fact this is a family in step with the new millennium. Zafar Jung’s daughter-in-law, Ursala, is an MBA graduate. Two nieces are barristers educated in London, and another works with the World Bank in Washington.