Regina Leader-Post

HELP FOR INDIA’S STRANDED

Bollywood actor, Michelin-starred chef come to the aid of jobless millions stuck in cities

- ROLI SRIVASTAVA

MUMBAI It was past midnight when tailor Faruk Mansoori, his last savings exhausted by the coronaviru­s lockdown, made up his mind to cycle from Mumbai to his village 1,500 kilometres away.

In a last-ditch cry for help, his friend tweeted actor Sonu Sood after seeing pictures on Facebook of the Bollywood star with migrant workers boarding a bus. Minutes later, Sood replied — promising that Mansoori would be going home by bus, not bike.

“I was desperate to leave as I had no money to pay my rent. I can’t praise Sonu ‘bhai’ (brother) enough,” Mansoori said by phone, still six hours drive away from his village in Uttar Pradesh state.

Sood, who often plays the villain in films and is known for his sixpack abs, has emerged as an unlikely hero among India’s stranded migrants during the coronaviru­s lockdown, helping thousands of them reach home on buses, trains and planes.

Millions of migrant workers, stuck without work or money in the cities, have walked hundreds of miles to get to their home villages. Many have died on the way in a string of accidents or from exhaustion.

Following outrage over their plight, authoritie­s laid on hundreds of trains to ferry them home, but migrants have been struggling to get seats on the overstretc­hed services.

But among countless charitable initiative­s to feed the workers and get them home, Sood and well-known Michelin-starred chef Vikas Khanna — who is running a massive food aid program — have become go-to helplines for migrants in need.

“The trigger for me were the images of migrants walking with their children on these endless journeys. I imagined a father telling his child home was not far when they had to walk hundreds of miles,” Sood said.

About 20,000 migrants have already left on buses, but “there are many more on the list,” he said.

The actor’s project, Ghar Bhejo (send them home), which he started with restaurate­ur friend Niti Goel, quickly turned his Twitter timeline into a stream of desperate appeals.

A friend, K.K. Mookhey, helped them set up a helpline and the online registrati­on of migrants. Within four days, 40,000 people were signed up, Mookhey said.

Sood, who initially raised funds among family and friends before drawing support from farther afield, said it had been “the most important time in my life.”

“I thought I would help a few hundreds, then I thought a few thousands and then I thought I would help everyone ... this is my duty now.”

On the other side of the world, holed up under lockdown in his New York home, Indian chef Khanna has turned his talents to helping ensure food supplies reach

Indian orphanages, old people’s homes and stranded migrants.

His efforts got off to a rough start when he was cheated of the money he wired to a grain wholesaler for thousands of kilos of lentils and rice to be supplied to a home for the elderly.

His mother got him back on track, he said.

“She told me that we trained you to feed people and not to make videos and Tiktoks,” Khanna said by phone from New York.

Working in partnershi­p with India’s National Disaster Response Force (NDRF), he has since helped deliver more than eight million meals in two months.

“The best part of the job is that people in orphanages and old age homes want to see your face on video calls,” Khanna said, who is personally answering thank-you messages on Twitter.

Donations have flooded in, with fuel distributo­rs and grain companies offering money and their infrastruc­ture to help get food to needy people in various parts of the country.

For India’s NDRF, help from famous names such as Sood and Khanna is welcome.

“It is a marriage of distress-management brands,” said Satya Narayan Pradhan, NDRF’S director general. “COVID -19 has taught us that the only approach that works is having all hands on deck.”

 ?? ADNAN ABIDI/REUTERS ?? The pandemic has trapped millions of Indian workers in cities, far from their home villages. Now, an actor, a chef and relief agencies are teaming up to ease the crisis.
ADNAN ABIDI/REUTERS The pandemic has trapped millions of Indian workers in cities, far from their home villages. Now, an actor, a chef and relief agencies are teaming up to ease the crisis.
 ?? AMIT DAVE/REUTERS ?? Indian authoritie­s have added hundreds of trains to help stranded workers return to their villages, but the response has been unable to meet the extraordin­ary demand created by the pandemic.
AMIT DAVE/REUTERS Indian authoritie­s have added hundreds of trains to help stranded workers return to their villages, but the response has been unable to meet the extraordin­ary demand created by the pandemic.

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