Had Sardarji Lived ...

This account from Harsh Mander tells the story of Lachmi, who lost her husband and many members of her family in the 1984 anti-Sikh riots

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This account from Harsh Mander tells the story of Lachmi, who lost her husband and many members of her family in the 1984 anti-Sikh riots

The following extract is by Harsh Mander, from Fatal Accidents of Birth: Stories of Suffering, Oppression and Resistance (Speaking Tiger, 2016). Lachmi, from a Labana Sikh community, lost her husband and many members of her family in 1984 and now lives in Tilak Vihar Widow’s Colony. Her struggle to keep her children untouched by drugs has been her greatest success.

 

It would be hard to find a building more burdened with suffering and memory in all of Delhi. And yet, if you walked past it, you would hardly turn your head to look at it again. There was nothing that distinguished it from the tens of thousands of other urban cages anywhere in the country. Floor after floor was crowded with one- room tenements, of the kind that governments occasionally build as homes for people of very meagre means. The customary signs of neglect were visible everywhere: peeling paint, crumbling plaster, exposed electric wires, stale unlit rooms. Also, the forced intimacy and vibrancy of community living–clothes and underwear hung out to dry on small verandahs; boys playing cricket in narrow corridors; girls in uniforms rushing from school to housework; women gathered in knots chatting, snatching some brief moments of leisure from the chores of cooking and cleaning.

It would be difficult to know, from the outside, that it was in this unsightly apartment building in Tilak Vihar that the government had settled 450 widows and their children who survived the terrible massacre of Sikh men and boys in 1984 on the streets of Delhi. It was official fiat which conjured within its walls a community of suffering, one in which several hundred boys and girls grew up with no fathers. These children initially assumed that this is how life is for all children. But each was destined to gradually and separately learn and struggle agonizingly to come to terms with the dreadful truths of how they lost their fathers and brothers: to tyres fl...

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