Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Four kids mourn their dad as another family loses mother

- Ravi Krishnan Khajuria ravi.khajuria@hindustant­imes.com

RS PURA/ARNIA/SAI KHURD: People huddled around Shakandhya Devi at a relief camp in RS Pura town let her cry aloud when an urn containing the ashes of her husband’s mortal remains were shown to the woman on Monday.

She and daughter Shilpi have been weeping intermitte­ntly, the hollow of their eyes and dark circles around them showed as much, since a Pakistani shell exploded near Ghar Singh in the crop fields of their village, Bera, close to the border on Saturday.

Marginal farmer Singh had gone to the fields to rescue the family cow from the mortar shells. Splinters from one such deadly munition cut him down.

The father of three sons and a daughter was cremated by Saturday afternoon and the family left for RS Pura town to escape the relentless Pakistani attack with artillery and machine gun fire on frontier civilian areas.

The sole breadwinne­r of the family was among a dozen people, including soldiers, killed in the Pakistani shelling along the border in J&K since Thursday.

Singh’s eldest son Rakesh lit the pyre on Saturday, with mortar shells and bullets flying overhead. “Our father died for the country. This government provides jobs to stone-throwers and kin of terrorists. Can’t any of us get a government job to sustain our family?” asked the jobless man. He continued in a trembling voice: “Our world has turned upside down. We are marginal farmers; we do farming for others. Can ₹1 lakh compensate a human life?”

Nearly 15km from the camp, another family mourned the death of a beloved mother — 50-year-old Bachno Devi of Sai Khurd village in Arnia. Living barely 1.5km from the border, she had opened the door of her house hearing husband Jeet Raj screaming in agony. He was hit by a Pakistani shell in the verandah on Friday morning.

Raj was trying to tell his family to stay safe inside. But as his wife opened the door, a shell exploded near her. She was killed instantly. “Shrapnel hit my mother’s neck,” said Devi’s 18-year-old son Ravi Kumar, who was wounded too. The family with a small land holding has three daughters and two sons. Eldest son Babu Ram, 21, and Ravi Kumar have passed their Class 10 finals, but are jobless. The father worked as a farmhand. “We pray to the government to provide us a government job,” Babu Ram said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A girl is consoled as she mourns the death of her father, who was killed in firing from the Pakistan side of the border on Sunday, before his cremation in Akhnoor Sector of Jammu on Monday.
REUTERS A girl is consoled as she mourns the death of her father, who was killed in firing from the Pakistan side of the border on Sunday, before his cremation in Akhnoor Sector of Jammu on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India