Sapanaari, Renu Ali’s son can be found working in a Karkhana. Renu Ali, an old widow from Aripara village went blind due to arsenic. All her three sons are affected two have left the village.
Sapanaari’s wife, Renu Ali’s daughter-in-law can be found working in a Karkhana. Renu Ali, an old widow from Aripara village went blind due to arsenic. All her three sons are affected two have left the village
Sapanaari’s wife, Renu Ali’s daughter-in-law can be found working in a Karkhana. Renu Ali, an old widow from Aripara village went blind due to arsenic. All her three sons are affected two have left the village
Sapanaari’s wife, Renu Ali’s daughter-in-law can be found working in a Karkhana. Renu Ali, an old widow from Aripara village went blind due to arsenic. All her three sons are affected two have left the village
About 500 m for the Jama Masjid us Sakkon Wali Gali, a lane named after uts occupants (“sakka” also means water carrier). “Bhishtis were settled here during the reign of the Mugal emperor Shahjahan. Our ancestors supplied water to the fort,” says 56-year-old Aqa Bhai, a resident. The lane once teemed with bhishti families, but of the 100-odd resident living there now, none work as water carriers. Mohammad Ali, the last person who lived here and worked as a water carrier, died two years ago.
Despite a ban on firecrackers put in place by the Supreme Court in 2019, people in the national capital burst them with gay abandon. Here, two children light crackers in Vaishali in Ghaziabad district, Uttar Pradesh.