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‘The compensation won’t last forever’

She wakes up early to dress her siblings for school. Then, she cleans the house, cooks lunch and coaxes her mother to eat.

Updated on: Dec 26, 2008 02:44 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By
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She wakes up early to dress her siblings for school. Then, she cleans the house, cooks lunch and coaxes her mother to eat. In the evening, she helps her two brothers and little sister with their homework and ensures they eat the dinner she has cooked. Only then does she sit down with her own books.

HT Image
HT Image

At 16, Neelam Gupta has taken charge of rebuilding her family's life.

Her father Shivshankar, who used to sell bhelpuri at CST station, was one of the first to fall to terrorist bullets. The 37-year-old was packing his basket to leave when the firing started. He fled through a nearby gate but was hit by two bullets outside Cama Hospital at 10.10 pm.

When his body was brought to their one-room shanty in Mankhurd's Annabhau Sathaye Nagar the next afternoon, Gupta's mother Rajkumari (33) crumbled.

And Neelam grew up.

The young girl comforted her siblings — Deepak (14), Sandeep (12) and Sheetal (9) – and attended to all the condolence calls and media questions.

Neelam tries to maintain a brave front for her family's sake. But sometimes she can't help herself. “I miss my father, too,” she says, her eyes welling up.

The family used to manage on the Rs 100 to Rs 150 a day Shivshankar brought home. “When he had to close down his stall at a Zunka Bhakar three years ago, I went without food for days. But I always felt secure because I knew he would take care of us,” she says. “Now, it is my responsibility.”

 
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