Meet The Man Who Has Changed The Way We Look at Giving

Ramon Magsaysay Award winner and founder of Goonj, Anshu Gupta, has challenged the existing notions of charity by relying on shramdaan (voluntary labour) and the goodwill of the people 

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Ramon Magsaysay Award winner and founder of Goonj, Anshu Gupta, has challenged the existing notions of charity by relying on shramdaan (voluntary labour) and the goodwill of the people 

In the early ’90s, Anshu Gupta, then a young freelance journalist, used to roam the streets of Delhi in search of stories of people who remained invisible. This is when he met Habib bhai, a middle-aged man who lived on the pavement outside Delhi’s LNJP Hospital and delivered unclaimed dead bodies to the police. His cart was a moving advertisement for his work—‘laawaris laash uthaane wala’ scribbled on it. Habib bhai got paid Rs 20 and some cloth for every dead body he handed over to the police. The winter months were busy, Habib bhai had said matter-of-factly. After all, many more homeless people died in the bitter Delhi cold—sometimes up to 10 to 12 a day.

Gupta followed him around for a whole week to understand what it meant to be a bearer of unclaimed corpses. His middle-class notions about the boundaries of what was human were shaken, but not shattered—until he met six-year-old Bano, Habib bhai’s daughter. “When it gets too cold, I go to sleep hugging dead bodies,” she had said with a bland expression. “It keeps me warm, and the best part is, dead people do not move—you get to sleep peacefully.”

Trained to be a journalist, Gupta never quite forgot what he saw and heard during his week with Habib bhai—the heart-wrenching struggles of the dispossessed for daily survival. It was often not the cold but the inadequate clothing that triggered the needless loss of lives.

In 1991, following an earthquake, Gupta travelled to Uttarkashi to do relief work. A college student at the time, he had met an old man who left an impression on him. Despite the variety of relief items being donated to the victims, this man desired only clothing. It was obvious that his need for clothing was as much about protection as it was about dignity. Since then, each time Gupta encountered a needy person, he noticed if their clothing was adequate. If you find that a person doe...

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