Saturday, July 13, 2013



“My family left me to die,


BUT I’VE FOUND MY HAPPINESS


"My wrinkled countenance reflects my misery,
my dirt-lined nails exude my toil.
I'm.
A mother. A daughter.
A chaste. A sinner.
A women. An Indian."



The other day when I was out to capture poverty dwelling in slums for a photography contest, I met Anwari.

Anwari, 50, huddles around the dark, dirty sludge-laden meandering lanes of the Naza market, in Lucknow, day and night, playing a waste-picker.  In between gathering all dirt and sludge, the frail wrinkled woman smiles, and agrees to pose for me when Jahan, her best friend joins her. United by a common fate, the two women engross themselves in work and chatter, cherishing a friendship that goes beyond age, work hours and gossip.

Anwari’s parents abandoned her when she was in her metric. Being a girl and the only child to her parents proved fatal for her. Too young to shoulder the burdens of an unsupporting family and teenage trauma, she smiled through it all 40 years of life, with Jahan, as a waste gatherer!

It’s been five-years-and-a-half since Anwari was diagnosed with the cancer of the nasopharynx (nasal part of the throat). Back then, as a school girl in a village, she’d dismissed the headaches and fever as common flu. To avoid taunts from her alcoholic father, she suffered in silence. It was only when Jahan saw traces of blood running down Anwari’s nose, she realized something was horribly wrong with her best friend and she took her to a doctor. “I was going mad with pain. I’d scream for hours,” Anwari shudders. Tired of her outburst, Jahan decided to take her to her village, where her parents lived.

Jahan’s friendship brought Anwari a temporary relief, but her parents abandoned her for life this time.

“They don’t want me to live with them,” says Anwari. “Though I have explained that cancer isn’t contagious, they think they’ll get it from me.” Unable to bear the humiliation she faced every day, Anwari tried to commit suicide, and once again was consoled by Jahan.

A convulsion of pain ran across the length and breadth of my body and I sat there frozen. To begin a lighter conversation with Anwari, I spent an hour with her chatting about everything from her health to her favorites. Soon the old woman transformed to a bubbly teenager. Slowly the conversation drifted to Azam, a man in his late fifties, Anwari’s co-worker and also a cancer patient.

The old man is thin and gaunt with deep wrinkles in the back of his neck. The brown blotches of the benevolent skin cancer the sun brings from its reflection on the tropic sea were on his cheeks. Anwari considers him the perfect man for her. They are together all day. Oblivious to others, they find solace in each other. Anwari is wary of talking about him, but the shy smile at the mention of his name is testimony to the surreal bond they share at the second innings of their age. The duo is unaffected by the glares of the society. “He understands my pain better than anyone ever can, barring Jahan,” says Anwari. Azam has given her hope for a future she did not believe in. “I asked him, jokingly, if he’d marry me, and he said he would if he had his own house,” she blushes.


P.S. – Anwari and Azam are currently undergoing treatment at a local hospital, courtesy Jahan. 



28 comments:

  1. Wonderful ! You should start writing scripts for movies now:D

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  2. its really very nice... n u r doing fantastic job dear...

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    1. Nice to see your comment Isha :-) Thanks

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  3. a very good real life article..nd by the ay what is MEA?

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  4. hmm ...... not bad yar ..... KEEP IT UP!!!

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  5. invigorating piece of work.congrats!

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  6. nooreen, your grasp and indepth understanding of a situation is great and well expressed. can we expect something fun and bubbly next time !

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    1. Thanks Vikas ji. I guess I learnt it in class 5 "Sweetest songs are those that speak of the saddest thoughts" !!! Keep reading :-)

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  7. Nooreen....this is terrific writing ! where you've been all these days ? no posts lately ? please keep writing,you have more fans than you cud've ever imagined :D

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  8. Wonderful piece this is and the accompanying pic is all the more interesting :) keep writing nooreen :)

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  9. My God Nooreen,what a gifted writer you are.I've been following your posts since long but you seem to improve with every post.This is a real touching piece you wrote.You should seriously consider going into professional writing.Trust me,that's where you belong !

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    1. Thanks so much Medha :-) keep reading :-)

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  10. Hello Nooreen,i am Medha's friends ....we really are inspired by your posts...we love them all....keep writing nooreen...we want you to write on diverse issues...

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    1. Thanks Iram. Glad to read your comments :-)

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  11. It moved me from inside.Nooreen ,you are a master writer indeed ! god bless you girl.This couldn't have been better.I loooove the pic that goes so well with the story.Wowww !

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    1. Thanks so so much Charu! I'm no great writer. Its only you people who inspire me to churn out this simple stuff! I like connecting with people, you all the most.
      Best n love, N.

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  12. Wow ! Charu told me about this post.This IS THE BEST...i mean im confused..i like all of them :) I wish you were studying here.I'd made you my guru.

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    1. Oh my my! Shubham that's too sweet a compliment! I'll prefer being friendly with all my readers, instead. I'm no guru. I'm still to learn so much. Nevertheless, your comment made me feel special. Thanks.
      N.

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  13. i m very proud of noore that u have don some think her which is very humble,i & others who reading these story of anwari may pray her others like her

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