Life limping back to normal, but summer nights harsh sans power
LUCKNOW, May 15 -- A month ago, residents of the Vikas Nagar slum were still coming to grips after flames lapped up their humble dwellings, reducing them to ashes on the evening of April 15.
Today, along the banks of the drain, tea stalls are operating again, grocery kiosks have reopened, children have begun going to school, people can be seen cooking on small stove-cylinders: all signs of a settlement slowly rebuilding itself after the devastating blaze that killed two children and displaced over 1,000 people.
What had initially emerged as emergency shelters made of sarees, plastic sheets and salvaged cloth have gradually transformed into comparatively sturdier bamboo-framed structures given to them as charity, covered with thick tarpaulin and mountaineering-style tents donated by volunteers and aid groups.
Rows of bamboo-supported tents with serial numbers now stand where ashes and twisted metal sheets lay scattered.
But as temperatures continue to soar, most families still spend nights in complete darkness as there is no electricity in the settlement.
"Charity workers erected my hutment for me. We also got gas cylinder, stove, bed, utensils that is helping us rebuild our lives," said Qaiser Jahan, 60, who lives with her son, a rickshaw puller and his three children.
Residents said that over the last month, families have started rebuilding not just houses, but daily life itself. Men working as labourers have resumed daily wage work at construction sites while many women employed as domestic workers in surrounding colonies have also returned to work. Narrow lanes once filled with burnt debris, now have grocery kiosks and scrap collection points.
Shaquila, 55, can't work as a domestic help due to her being a handicapped, so she reopened her shop that has a few spices, Maggie packets, tobacco products most of which she got as relief material.
"I'm trying to contribute whatever I can to the family of six," she said.
Children who had stopped attending classes after losing books, uniforms and school bags in the fire have also started returning to schools. Talking to Hindustan Times, children who introduced themselves as Komal, 13, Sonakshi, 13, Anshika, 10, Janvi, 6, and Shivani, 15, said they have finally resumed classes.
"We got back our books, but we have to get our uniforms and textbooks. No electricity is a big challenge for our studies," said Shivani, who will appear for Board exams next year.
A small informal primary school operating inside the slum run by Manju Devi, free of cost for underprivileged children, which had completely burnt down, has now been rebuilt using bamboo poles.
"We have started again. We got books and other study materials, but we're yet to get benches," said Manju.
Despite visible rebuilding, many families say they remain far from recovery. Electricity continues to remain absent across the settlement, leaving families to battle unbearable summer nights inside tightly packed shelters.
Several residents living in the more neglected portions of the slum are still struggling with partially covered huts and inadequate resources.
Parvati Pannalal, 60, who is settled in the mid portion of the slum, under a plastic makeshift shelter, said with moist eyes, "Because we are in the centre of the slum, relief items rarely reach us."...
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