Remember, Remember: The Ninth of November, and more

Every cloud has a silver lining, as this old man's deed proved.

offline
Every cloud has a silver lining, as this old man's deed proved.

On 9 November 2016, most of India was reeling under the overnight demonetization of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 currency notes. The closure of banks and ATMs across the nation only added to the public's woes. The day was witness to many heart-wrenching and heart-warming stories.

That day, I remember standing in front of a pharmacy in Mumbai and counting the last few valid notes in my purse. I wanted to make sure I had enough to pay for the insulin injection I was about to buy. Suddenly, I noticed a woman approach the counter. She wore a simple sari and looked wan and exhausted, like she had been running around in the sun for a long time. It wasn't hard to guess that she was an ordinary, working-class woman.

She handed a prescription to the pharmacist and asked, in Marathi, "Brother, could you give me these medicines, please?" After a pause, she meekly ventured, "Um, could I pay you later? Say in two or three days?" The pharmacist, who was packing her medicines into a white polythene bag, stopped. The harassed woman looked at him with pleading eyes, one hand resting on the pharmacy counter, the other clenching the sari pallu tightly. "My son is burning with fever. No one is buying my plastic toys today. Please could you help me, brother? It's just until the banks reopen and I can exchange the old Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 currency notes I have," she said.

She even showed him the two 500-rupee notes she was carrying to prove her point. "I am not asking you to give me the medicines for free; a loan is all I'm asking for. I will pay you as soon as I can," she pleaded. But this was a privately owned drugstore and the pharmacist was reluctant to take the now illegal tender. He quickly picked up the bag of medicines he had just assembled from the counter and dumped it back in a drawer, without a word. He then turned his back to the woman and got busy with some work. The woman bit her lower lip. The pharmacist's gesture was a clear, resounding 'no'.

...
Read more!