They are India’s unseen street kids who fell through the cracks. During the day, they sleep around stinking waste and at night they collect plastic bottles, clean cars, sell flowers, steal or beg— all near a flyover in south Delhi. All of them had a home once. Each one of them has a story to tell, but they refuse to share it. Rohit wants a dibba of “good boot polish” before talking. He eats it. “Otherwise, I’m not able to sleep,” says the 10-year-old who abandoned his home in Gwalior to escape a cruel stepmother and an alcoholic father. Others have similar stories: Guddi ran away when her mother tried to push her into prostitution; Guddu’s father used to beat him mercilessly; Raju was scared of a teacher at school, and Pappu just got tired of poverty and hunger. They took a train to Delhi, got snuffed by gangs roaming the platforms and since then, it has been a story of torture, rape, starvation and drugs.
Helping these street children might be a complicated and long process but it is extremely important. The real problem is the number. Government figures are hardly convincing. It’s believed that there are over 5 lakh street children in Delhi alone, 10-15 times of what the government surveys say. There’s hardly any need to emphasize that these street children should be in schools – children are priceless asset to any nation after all.
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