Lockdown Heroes: A Group In Goa Is Working With Migrants To Help Them Stay Afloat

How one woman brought together a group that not only provided food but also helped workers find jobs during lockdown

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How one woman brought together a group that not only provided food but also helped workers find jobs during lockdown

At the Athletic Stadium in Goa’s Bambolim, it was long past lunchtime and tempers were beginning to fray. The arena temporarily houses hundreds of migrants waiting for trains to take them back home to various parts of India. As the hours pass and the caterer does not show up, the hungry workers start arguing with the police. Amidst the fracas, a lone woman steps forward and speaks with the workers who circle around her, listening intently. She hears their complaints about food and lack of information about trains and explains what she knows, which pacifies them.

The woman—42-year-old artist Miriam Koshy-Sukhija—is a former curator of one of Goa’s premier art galleries. When Goa went into lockdown SOS calls on social media prompted Koshy to organize food packets for senior citizens and stranded tourists. “I thought the relief work would last for about two weeks,” says Koshy. Once she started, however, she found much more to be done. “I couldn’t turn back then,” she says.

An ex-student of a local management school, Koshy heard of 200 people stranded in Betim across the Mandovi river from her alumni group. She got someone to make a list, so they could work out the logistics. Over the next few weeks, Koshy’s home became the main packaging hub. Sacks of grains and pulses still line the walls of her living room. At the height of the operations, the group serviced around 1,200 to 1,500 people every day, using football grounds and other open spaces for deliveries.

They soon set up a website, which brought in donations to cover costs. Now, with relief operations reduced and the action shifting to the Bambolim stadium instead, Koshy and the volunteers are helping coordinate food supplies for thousands of stranded migrants. Koshy also shares information about available government schemes with the workers, helps them with paperwork and submits data on those receiving government aid. “Th...

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