The Hamilton Spectator

Girl bikes father across India, inspiring a nation

- JEFFREY GETTLEMAN AND SUHASINI RAJ

She was a 15-yearold with a simple mission: bring papa home.

Jyoti Kumari and her dad had nearly no money, no transport, and their village was halfway across India. And her dad, an out-of-work migrant labourer, was injured and could barely walk. So Jyoti told her dad: Let me take you home. He thought the idea was crazy but went along with it. She then jumped on a $20 purple bike bought with the last of their savings. With her dad perched on the rear, she pedalled from the outskirts of New Delhi to their home village, 700 miles away.”

Don’t worry, mummy,” she reassured her mother along the way, using borrowed cellphones. “I will get Papa home good.”

During the past two months under India’s coronaviru­s lockdown, millions of migrant labourers and their families have poured out of India’s cities, desperate and penniless, as they try to get back to their native villages where they can rely on family networks to survive.

Many haven’t made it. Some have been crushed by trains; others run over by trucks. A few have simply collapsed while trudging down a long, hot highway, dead from exhaustion. But amid all this pain and sadness now emerges a tale of devotion and straight-up grit. The Indian press has seized upon this feelgood story, gushing about Jyoti the “lion-hearted.”

And a few days ago, the story got even better.

While resting up in her village, Jyoti received a call from the Cycling Federation of India. Convinced she had the right stuff, Onkar Singh, the federation’s chair, invited her to New Delhi for a tryout with the national team.

Reached by phone on Friday in her village of Sirhulli, in Bihar, one of India’s poorest states, Jyoti said in a scratchy voice barely above a whisper, because she still sounded exhausted: “I’m elated, I really want to go.”

As India struggles with the coronaviru­s and the severe measures to contain it, the plight of the nation’s migrant workers has become a crisis within a crisis. Scholars estimate that tens of millions are on the move, the biggest migration of humans across the subcontine­nt since the partition of India and Pakistan in 1947.

Jyoti’s father, Mohan Paswan, a rickshaw driver from a lower rung of India’s caste system, was injured in a traffic accident in January and was running out of money even before the lockdown. He was among the legions of migrant workers performing menial jobs in the shadows of Gurugram, a satellite city of New Delhi and home to corridors of shimmering glass towers and many millionair­es.

Jyoti came out from their village in Bihar to care for Paswan. She had dropped out of school a year ago because the family didn’t have enough money. Things got even worse after the lockdown, with their landlord threatenin­g to kick them out and then cutting off their electricit­y.

That’s when Jyoti came up with the escape plan.

As for how much she actually rode versus the help she received from trucks, Singh acknowledg­ed that maybe the story had become a bit stretched, totally understand­able in times like these.

But one thing was not in doubt, Singh said.

“She has guts.”

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