Sunday, September 7, 2008

BABY AASTHA- THE ABANDONED GIRL CHILD


(NAME CHANGED)
North India’s known for its chilly winters. One such winter afternoon, the boys were upto their usual games – and for indian boys a game is synonymous with CRICKET! The Tendulkars and Dravids of the colony, they always attempted 4s and 6s- a shot here, a shot there, some through window panes, others into open gutters- and off the fielders would follow the ball till their fists would grasp the ball firmly, and a satisfactory grin would run across their faces.
Who was to know, one of their gutter shots would be life-saving, literally..
This one afternoon the ball landed into a dirty ‘nala’ with an overgrowth of winter weeds. In his haste the boy chasing the ball fell over- part of it to grasp the ball, and part to show off his Yuvraj Singh heroism.. the ball in his fists, and arms in position to throw the ball to the next closest fielder..but what followed froze the boy in position-a feeble cry sounded from the nothingness of the gutter. The boy bent down closer,searching for he source of the cry-there lay a muddy, deglazed green polybag. Frightened and clueless as he was, he called upon his other playmates.. within minutes a crowd had gathered- the young ,the old, male and female. The cry continued weak and intermittent, but not a soul dared o touch the polybag. People started making guesses in thin air, coaxed each other to pick up the bag, layed down illogical statements on who should be the one to lift the “untouchable”, offered to call up the police .. While everything was being said, there was little being down- until the arrival of the good samaritan – in Mrs. Mridula Prakash.
Mrs. Mridula Prakash, a asociology teacher at Notre Dame Academy, run by the Sisters of Notre Dame (SND), was known to be one of the most approachable person in the colony.. a genuine soul, a woman with a heart of gold-truly a gem of a person.
The commotion outside her house compelled her to step out. On learning the facts of the situation, she stormed through the unyielding crowd, making her way to the scene of crime, despite numerous protests from the crowd. Without any hesitation, she bent down, lifted up the bag, tore apart its ends.. A baby girl, cold and wet, blood stained and muddy, with a clamped umbilical cord, and a flimsy piece of cloth wrapped around carelessly, lay in Mrs. Prakash’s arms. An uneasy hush took over the crowd, and the air was filled with murmurs a many. Mrs. Prakash looked at the crowd in disgust, for a moment that lasted less than a second. Without any further delay, she summoned the ambulance and rushed the baby to the hospital.. the crowd dispersed in a while- some amazed at the presence of mind of Mrs. Prakash, others touched at the sorry state of the baby.
Later was it known, that the baby survived and was adopted by Mrs. Mridula Prakash. The singular efforts of 1 brave woman saved just another Indian female baby from the wrath of a cruel society, for not many baby Aastha’s are fortunate enough...

3 comments:

  1. I've read this before....did you write it for echo??

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  2. hmmm..no...but i had narrated the story once in the assembly.. many ppl knew about the baby... n to think of it,i was a witness! all the adults there, they were like "police ko to hamare hee fingerprints milenge, lets not bother!!"...

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  3. why people do such ****** type of work...
    in india, as one side girls assuming that they are "dusra roop of devi"
    an on other side same people do ye sb..
    why they are not giving same amount of pref to girls like boys.....
    it is very shameful...
    it is a matter of big issue...
    kb tak n kyn ker rahe hain aisa.......

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