Bicycle Santa

How one man’s simple idea made a big difference to innumerable village children

offline
How one man’s simple idea made a big difference to innumerable village children

It’s a hot summer morning in Maharashtra's Jhadpoli village,100 kms north of Mumbai. Manoj Bumbe, a fifth standard student, rides barefoot down a mud road, pedalling furiously on his yellow bicycle. In contrast to the grimy little boy, the bicycle looks shiny new, although it isn’t. What matters is that Manoj can now ride the distance to his school in Alonde, two km from his home. Before he got the bike, he had to walk for almost two hours every day.

Manoj swerves to avoid a brood of chickens that scuttle into his path from the house where 17-year-old Renuka Vishwa Nemale lives. A shy, soft-spoken, 10th-standard student, she too has a cycle now, a red one. “Walking to school was tiring. Sometimes I reached late and had to stand outside until the class ended,” Renuka recalls. “Some days I even missed school to avoid the long walk. But ever since I got my bike, I found more time to prepare for my SSC exams.”

Renuka and Manoj, like a few dozen other children in Jhadpoli, were given free bicycles through a voluntary scheme started last year by Hemant Chhabra, a friendly 47-year old Mumbai businessman who simply calls it ‘The Bicycle Project’. The bikes were all disused or rusted old ones that privileged city kids in Mumbai had discarded. Chhabra gets them meticulously repaired and painted before giving them away.

Chhabra started this project with his wife Sangeeta and Simona Terron, a journalist friend. A college dropout, Chhabra tried his luck at several businesses, including leather export and children’s camps, before settling down as a manufacturer of eco-friendly bags a decade ago. He also took frequent breaks to visit his organic farm in Jhadpoli, where he grows fruits and vegetables. During one such trip last year, while waiting at the village bus stop, Chhabra watched kids walking to school in the rain, and his mind raced back to his own childhood. Years ago, Father used to ...

Read more!