Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘Pulling along’ slowly but steadily in a man’s world

- Deepika Singh deepika.singh@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Now you see her, now you don’t. Amid the sea of rickshaw pullers haggling with passengers, there is a good chance you might miss this lone, unassuming woman trudging along with her cycle rickshaw.

But as she gracefully brings the vehicle to a halt, it’s hard not to notice her -- with her striking features and artificial jhumkas adorning her ears.

Meet Ranju Devi, mother of three, who holds her own in a profession almost completely dominated by men.

Ranju became a cycle rickshaw puller in order to supplement her family income.

“My husband is a rickshaw puller but alcoholism did him in. He used to spend most of his time with the bottle, hardly bringing any money home and spending whatever he earned on more liquor.” says Devi, who appears to be in her 30s.

“One day, I decided to take matters into my hands and do something to feed my children,”she adds.

“It’s been one-and-a-half months since I took to driving the cycle rickshaw,” she adds.

Many of Ranju’s friends work as maids in the vicinity, but this was not an option she had.

“Employers these days have become very careful; they want their servants to be properly verified. But I have no identity proof -- be it an Aadhaar card or any other document, leaving me with very few choices,” says this native of Samastipur, Bihar.

Devi largely operates in and around the Dwarka sector-10 metro station.

Being a woman doing a man’s job has its ups and downs, she says. But that hasn’t deterred her from doing her job with determinat­ion.

“I do get stray comments and remarks from men here and there, but I have not faced much harassment, to be honest. They mostly mind their own business, and I, mine,” Ranju Devi says.

On whether she faces physical challenges doing her job given her slight frame, she says: “Yes, it is a job that requires you to be physically tough which is why I have to be choosy with my passengers. I prefer ‘single sawari’ but if it has been a rough day, I somehow pull myself together and accept whatever comes my way,” she adds.

Even the passengers are a bit hesitant about my capabiliti­es but I manage to find a few every day and bring home some money,” she says.

Devi earns anywhere between ₹ 125 and ₹ 150 a day, out of which she pays ₹ 50 to the owner of her rickshaw.

“What I am left with is hardly anything to support a family of five but at least, I can ensure that my children – aged 5, 3 and 1 – eat at least one meal a day. Thankfully, my husband has no objection to my pulling a rickshaw,” she says.

Devi calls herself “too poor” to have any aspiration­s. But she too has plans with the money she earns.

“I have a huge tumour on my neck and I hope I can earn enough to go to a hospital and get it removed. I want to put my children in school as well,” she sums up her life goals.

Ranju Devi has a message for other women like her.

“I hope more women join this profession; I feel very lonely waiting for passengers while the other rickshaw-wallahs chat and joke among themselves,” she adds, as an afterthoug­ht.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Devi took to rickshaw pulling to supplement family income.
HT PHOTO Devi took to rickshaw pulling to supplement family income.

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