Hindustan Times (Delhi)

A housekeepe­r’s book plans

The portrait of a potential author currently working in a shopping mall

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He is in his early 50s and wishes to write a book. He has already started preliminar­y work. “It will be a book on housekeepi­ng ethics and style,” says Ashu Prashar, an assistant manager, soft services, at a city mall where he administer­s the housekeepi­ng staff. For 10 years, Mr Prashar has been making the excruciati­ngly long commute from his home in east Delhi’s IP Extension to Gurugram’s South Point Mall on Golf Course Road. It takes him about two hours one way and “just before the (coronaviru­s-triggered) lockdown began, I started to write ideas for my book on the mobile phone while travelling to office.”

A father of two, Mr Prashar was formerly working in the insurance industry as an adviser, “which I didn’t enjoy at all.” His long years as a housekeepi­ng manager introduced him to a “workforce” comprised of people whose lives and hardships he wasn’t intimately familiar with—migrants from other states who were obliged to move to big cities like Delhi and Gurugram to envisage a different future. “Over the years, I have come across people who have remained houseboys, cleaning the floor or rest rooms or staircases all their working lives.” This makes the manager uneasy. Ideally, he wants the folks starting as “houseboys” to move up in life, to graduate to supervisor­s and eventually—why not—to his own designatio­n. “So I’m hoping to write a book that may help the young staffers to grow profession­ally.”

It was during his commute in the metro that Mr Prashar laid the foundation of his book-inprogress. He started by putting his own spin on the word ‘house keeping’; he got that ready in two weeks of shuttling between IP Extension and Golf Course Road. The author feels no hesitation in sharing it publicly:

H is for honest

O for observer

U for unique

S for supportive

E for efficient

K for knowledgea­ble

E for energetic

E ‘encouragab­le’

P for punctual

I for innovative

N for neatly

G for gentle

Indeed, Mr Prashar is already sharing this “formula” with his mostly young staff of men and women. Since a great number of them, he says, are from background­s where basic education is tough to access, the gentleman himself give them lessons in maths, English and Hindi—“most of our folks have arrived newly from West Bengal and don’t know the North Indian languages that well.”

Almost all of his recent housekeepi­ng staff left for their villages during the lockdown and the team that newly assembled following the mall’s reopening on July 1st comprises of fresh arrivals. “A lot many live nearby, in Chakarpur and Sector 56 areas... they arrive in the city with only their spouses, leaving the children behind, with their families, back home.” Both “Mr and their Mrs” pick up work, with the “Mrs usually becoming household cooks in apartments,” informs the manager. In his book, Mr Prashar confides, he will also lay out tips on the new ways of housekeepi­ng “because that old way of jharoo-pocha is over and things are now more mechanised.”

Since his days — like for most people who have to shuttle daily between Delhi and Gurugram — are so hectic, he has decided to write a major portion of the book during the course of his working day. “I’ll carry a pen and notepad in my pocket, and as soon as a line or an idea strikes my mind I will immediatel­y jot it down.”

Mr Prashar gives himself a couple of years to finish this project. “After which I will try to get it published both in Hindi and English.”

He now formally poses for a portrait with a part of his team, who probably will learn the tips of the future book in real time, and even before the author pens them down.

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