Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Migrants head home with sacks, buckets, gunny bags

- Shiv Sunny shiv.sunny@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEW DELHI: With a black cloth masking his face and a skull cap on his sweaty head, 65-year-old Nasir Khan trudged towards the Anand Vihar bus terminal with a heavy white sack on his shoulders. The sack contained all his clothes, a towel, bedsheet, gas stove, few utensils, a kilo of sattu (gram powder) and two water bottles. A basic phone, for which he couldn’t find a charger, was in his pocket, as he hurried from his Tughlaqaba­d residence on Saturday morning. “I am taking all my belongings to my home in Rai Bareli. I don’t think I’ll return to Delhi,” said Khan.

Alongside him walked Sohan Yadav, a carpenter, who was headed to Sasaram in Bihar. His little brown bag contained four pairs of clothes, among other essentials. “Delhi had been my home for 20 years. I had lost all touch with my village. I have no belongings there, not even clothes,” said Yadav.

At his rented room in Wazirabad, 42-year-old Yadav has left behind his carpentry tools, his other belongings and a gas stove. Before leaving, he handed over the room key to the house owner with a request to look after his belongings.

Thousands of migrants walked back to their homes in Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhan­d and Bihar on Saturday — with the hope of hopping into a bus along the way — carrying their belongings in trolleys, travel bags, backpacks, sacks, jholas, buckets and even polythene covers. Most of them were headed to Anand Vihar, from where they hoped to board one of the 1,000 buses pressed into service by the Uttar Pradesh government. “When I began packing in the morning, I found the strap of my handbag broken. I had to hurriedly find a polythene bag to carry my belongings,” said Radhe Shyam, a daily wage worker.

Shyam packed light to keep a fast pace and not tire himself. His blue polythene bag contained a pair of clothes, two inner wear garments, a pair of chappals and a mobile phone charger. He kept his Aadhaar card, mobile phone and ₹2,000 cash in his pocket. “I am not sure my shoes will last the entire trip, if I have to walk. I also need to change my inner wear in case I have to walk all the way,” Shyam, who was headed to Prayagraj, said.

Before they left the city, with an uncertain future looming large, a lot of the migrants handed over their keys to their house owners, with many leaving belongings behind. “My house owner said he would have to spend on a duplicate key if we did not return. So, I had no choice but to hand over the key to him. I hope my belongings remain untouched when I return,” said Renu Devi, a homemaker, who walked with her husband and three children to Farrukhaba­d.

Her husband carried a handbag and her nine-year-old son, a backpack, which contained a pair of clothes for each of them, a milk bottle for the baby, a few chapatis and cooked vegetables, biscuit packets and their Aadhaar cards. “We withdrew all our savings from the ATM in case we have to pay extra for the bus or are forced to stay in our village for longer,” said Devi.

Babloo, an electricia­n who stayed in Uttam Nagar, decided to carry his tools to his house in Uttar Pradesh’s Ayodhya, along with other items. “I cleared my rented room of all my important belongings, left behind a few items that I could do without and settled my rent with my house owner. If I return to Delhi, I’ll begin living afresh. If I can’t return, I am prepared to continue my trade in my hometown,” said Babloo, who was accompanie­d by his wife and six other family members.

Some of them were also carrying equipment to cook food, in case they could not find buses. “Six of us are walking together. We’ll take turns to carry the load,” said Virendra Ranjan, who used to work as a cook at a roadside dhaba in Delhi’s Trilokpuri. They were headed to Begusarai in Bihar and were aware that even if they found a bus, they would have to walk a long distance once they entered Bihar.

 ?? RAJ K RAJ/HT PHOTO ?? ■
Migrant workers carry all their belongings in makeshift bags on their way to other states.
RAJ K RAJ/HT PHOTO ■ Migrant workers carry all their belongings in makeshift bags on their way to other states.

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