




As soon as the train stopped, my partner Sunil Kotwal and I managed to book the baggage of a family. With one bag on my head and two in my hands, I followed Sunil. This wasn’t the first time that I was carrying luggage, but this was certainly the first time I was getting paid to do so.
It was a long exhausting walk from the platform to the parking area. I never thought that balancing the bag on my head would be that difficult and, as expected, dropped the bag. The sahib said, “Kaam theek se nahin kar sakte? (Can’t you work properly?)” I replied, “Naya bharti hoon, sir (I am a new recruit)”—this is the answer Sunil told me to give disgruntled customers. Outside the station, the rickshaw wallahs gathered around me asking, “Kahan ki sawari hai?”
After keeping the luggage in the car, it was time to talk money. Sunil asked for Rs 100. The passengers knew the luggage was heavy and they had hired not one but two porters. But, as expected, the sahib said, “Itne se kaam ke liye 100 rupaiya? ( Rs 100 for just this work?)” And he put a Rs 50 note in our hands and went off. We were disappointed by the negligible returns that we got for the load that we had carried. This was my first introduction to the disconnect that exists between the income and the work that...


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