Friday, June 19, 2026
ADVT 
India

'1984 Riots Shut Our Doors To A Better Life'

Somrita Ghosh IANS, 30 Oct, 2017 12:42 PM
    Located in a dingy and dirty lane, there's hardly any scope for the sun's rays to penetrate into Surjeet Singh's 50 sq yard home. The two room set is the only shelter for him, his wife, four children and widowed mother, to whom the house was alloted after his father was killed in the anti-Sikh riots of 1984 -- when he was just eight at the time.
     
    "You can see how we are surviving. It has been now more than three decades of the 1984 riots, but seems our lives have remained stagnant. Forget justice, our condition of living has rather deteriorated. The riots shut our doors to a better life," Surjeet, now 40, told IANS.
     
    The Widow's Colony in West Delhi's Tilak Vihar was established by the government and alloted to the widows who survived as a part of the compensation to victims of the anti-Sikh riots that broke out on October 31, 1984 on the assassination of then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. However, the present condition of the colony is extremely miserable; power lines hang low, garbage is littered over the narrow lanes and the drains are left uncovered.
     
     
    Around 3,000 widows were alloted houses in Tilak Vihar but now only a countable are left. Many went back to Punjab while few have settled in other parts of Delhi.
     
    Sixty-five-year-old Kuldeep Kaur, one a widow who has been residing in the colony since its inception, said that she has now learned to live with the traumatic and harrowing past pain but was worried about the future of her children and grandchildren
     
    "I am old now and have accepted whatever was written in my destiny. The riots not just took away life of my husband but permanently closed the scope of leading a secured and decent life. My three children saw their father being burnt alive in front of their eyes; they didn't attend school. And now, my son drives an e-rickshaw; what future will he give to his children," Kuldeep Kaur lamented.
     
    Surjeet Singh, who is a freelance photographer by profession, said he saw his father murdered by angry and violent mobs but was too young to understand what was happening. "Imagine a life without a father, how difficult it must have been for the widows to continue their lives with the sole earning member gone. At that time, women were not so educated to get a job. The situation after the riots was very bad," he voiced.
     
     
    The riots had majorly affected the children of the widows living in the colony; they got involved in addictions -- started taking drugs and surrendered themselves to alcohol --and left schooling.
     
    "Nobody could afford school, even though some went to school they couldn't complete their education because the dreadful past was too difficult to forget and difficult to concentrate on studies. The boys of Tilak Vihar are actually useless but you cannot blame them," Surjeet Singh pointed out.
     
    Kuldeep Kaur recalled how their lives changed in a blink; she and her children had no roof to shelter them and had to spend many days hungery. Being less educated, she couldn't get a job so took up a stitching work to continue her livelihood.
     
     
    "And this is not just what I have gone through but tale of all the widows in Tilak Vihar. Kamane ka zariya khatam ho gaya hain (our medium of earning a livelihood is closed). Now they (the survivors of the riots) either run autos or have small shops of their own," she further added.
     
    The survivors pitched that despite knowing under what circumstances they live, there has been no help from the government.
     
    "Its all gimmick by the political parties, whosoever comes to power. They leaders show their face either before the elections or during this time. They show their sympathy, give us false promises and then vanish, no sign of them for a year," Surjeet Singh pointed out.
     
    Kuldeep Kaur lamented that even the compensation amount which was offered by the government has not yet been fully given to them. She said: "Kishto mein milta hai (we get in installments). Had we got the money in time, our children could have at least completed their education, got a decent job and settled well."
     
     
    Surjeet Singh said that he doesn't expect any monetary compensation -- all that he wants is a better life for his children and doesn't want them to struggle for a living.
     
    "Only those who have gone through this knows the pain. But now, our hunger for justice have also died. We have lost all hope for the culprits to be punished. Every year many journalistst turn up, they talk to us, express their grief and gratitude, but nothing fruitful comes of it," he replied. 
     
    "An earnest request," Singh paused before adding: "Please do write something that forces the government to take up our case seriously."

    MORE India ARTICLES

    I Saved Rs 36,000-crore, Have Stopped 'Sweets Of Many': PM Narendra Modi On Corruption

    I Saved Rs 36,000-crore, Have Stopped 'Sweets Of Many': PM Narendra Modi On Corruption
    Vowing to root out corruption in India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi today said he has "faced problems" by depriving the "sweets of many" and saved over Rs 36,000 crore annually by stopping leakage and theft in government schemes.

    I Saved Rs 36,000-crore, Have Stopped 'Sweets Of Many': PM Narendra Modi On Corruption

    Modi Government's Policies Have Now Started Showing Result: Smriti Irani

    Union HRD Minister Smriti Irani today said several development initiatives taken by the Narendra Modi government have now started showing results.

    Modi Government's Policies Have Now Started Showing Result: Smriti Irani

    Toronto Real Estate Board Must Lift Restrictions On Home Sales Data

    Toronto Real Estate Board Must Lift Restrictions On Home Sales Data
    TORONTO — Canada's largest real estate board must give its realtor members access to more home sales data, which they could share with the public online, the Competition Tribunal said Friday.

    Toronto Real Estate Board Must Lift Restrictions On Home Sales Data

    Golden Temple Priest Who Refused To Honour Prakash Singh Badal Resigns

    Golden Temple Priest Who Refused To Honour Prakash Singh Badal Resigns
    Balbir Singh said he got his transfer orders for Machiwara Gurdwara in Ludhiana but he preferred to resign from his services.

    Golden Temple Priest Who Refused To Honour Prakash Singh Badal Resigns

    Kerala Sports Minister, Says Muhammad Ali Got State Many Medals

    Kerala Sports Minister, Says Muhammad Ali Got State Many Medals
    It was a knockout punch like the many Mohammad Ali executed during his career. And in hindsight it would appear like one of those television phone-ins Kerala sports minister E P Jayarajan should have avoided.

    Kerala Sports Minister, Says Muhammad Ali Got State Many Medals

    Mercedes Hit-and-Run: Delhi Minor To Be Tried As An Adult

    Mercedes Hit-and-Run: Delhi Minor To Be Tried As An Adult
    In the first prosecution under the amended Juvenile Justice Act, a minor accused in the Mercedes hit-and-run case in which a 33-year-old Delhi business consultant was killed in April this year will be tried as an adult.

    Mercedes Hit-and-Run: Delhi Minor To Be Tried As An Adult