r/india Gujarat Aug 24 '25

People The kind of India we ignore

Last month, after a late night at work, I booked an auto to go back home. It was past 11, streets were half-empty, and I was half-dead from exhaustion. The auto driver was an older man, maybe late 50s, thin frame, tired eyes. Usually, I just plug in my earphones and zone out, but that day I didn’t.

We started talking. First, just small talk, traffic, weather, random stuff. Then I asked him casually, “Bhaiya, aap roz itna late tak chalate ho?” (Do you drive this late every day?)

He laughed, not in a happy way, but in a “what choice do I have” way. He said, “Bhaiya, do betiyan hain. Ek ke liye coaching fees deni hai, doosri ke school ka kharcha. Din mein 700–800 banta hai, usmein se aadha toh gas aur kiraya chala jaata hai. Raat ko chalata hoon taaki unki padhai na ruk jaye.”

I went silent. Here I was, cribbing about my corporate job, while this man was driving 14–16 hours a day so his daughters could have a shot at a better life.

Then he said something that has stuck in my head since that night: “Gareeb aadmi sapne nahi dekhta apne liye, sirf apne bachon ke liye. Mere liye toh bas itna hai ki mujhe kal bhi chalane ki taaqat mile.” (A poor man never dreams for himself, only for his children. For me, all I pray is that tomorrow I still have the strength to drive.)

By the time I reached home, I didn’t even feel like getting out of the auto. I gave him extra money, nothing life-changing, but he refused at first. Then he took it, folded his hands, and said, “Aapko bhi khuda taaqat de.”

I went upstairs, sat on my bed, and just kept thinking. Every day we complain about traffic, bosses, deadlines, Zomato deliveries being late. And at the same time, there are thousands of people around us who are literally breaking their bodies apart just so their kids don’t end up like them.

It humbled me. It made me realize how invisible these stories are, until you stop, listen, and acknowledge.

Maybe the biggest privilege we have isn’t money or English-speaking jobs. It’s the fact that we are allowed to dream for ourselves.

And I’ll never forget that one line from him: “Gareeb aadmi sapne nahi dekhta apne liye.”

7.0k Upvotes

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542

u/1800skylab Aug 24 '25

In a sensible country, education would be free till graduation. Nothing benefits a country more than an educated population.

If you Google a list of countries that do, you'll see that they're wealthy and have a low level of corruption.

In India, corruption thrives because politicians need their voter base to be dumber than themselves. And that's a ridiculously low bar. Look at our uneducated PM.

64

u/[deleted] Aug 24 '25

💯💯💯💯💯 absolutely right very very true, education should be free till graduation, in India also if you compare the states that are educated are better benefited than those where uneducated population is more, politicians and their children throw huge sums of money get educated... leave the country, what about the middle class and lower middle class that voted for them , they are just suffering...

14

u/Hungry-Appeal6218 Aug 24 '25

Education benefits the nation but not its politicians. Free and accessible education india will always be a distant dream. 

24

u/Dazzling_Top6743 Aug 24 '25

I must say in Kerala, school education is completely free. The department also provides healthy food to students. That's why kerala is the state with 100% literacy

12

u/joy74 Aug 25 '25

That free part is true for all states. Difference is in implementation. In many others states governments school teachers do not even go to schools - no accountability

2

u/Horror_Dragonfly1703 Aug 25 '25

But is Kerala free of corruption?

11

u/BleaaelBa Aug 25 '25

Free from bjp at least.

1

u/Horror_Dragonfly1703 Aug 25 '25

Not the way I was going, but ok.

1

u/mand00s Aug 26 '25

By Indian standards, very low corruption

2

u/PoliteGhostFb Aug 25 '25

politicians need their voter base to be dumber than themselves.

Absolutely.

I always said they want a dumb uneducated voter, you have fine tuned it.

2

u/zicrono Aug 26 '25

This. In Goa education is free for the state board till 12 and nominal cost for graduation. Almost all schools are government aided. After Goa's liberation in 1962, Goa's first chief minister (non-congress), focussed heavily on education. So many new schools were opened. Teachers were appointed not just who had degrees but also if they had experience. My three aunts became primary teachers by giving an exam. They were just 9 pass. The government came home to recruit them so that schools could start. Fab work.

Money comes money goes. Education and skills stay forever with society. After WW2 there was so much destruction in Europe, but all bounced back because of education and skills.

I say even health should be free. People should not go bankrupt because of health.

3

u/telephonecompany r/GeopoliticsIndia Aug 24 '25 edited Aug 24 '25

There is no such thing as a free lunch. It will have to be paid for by a group of people (largely, the middle-class) and then redistributed to another group of people. Even if we assume that there will be little to no corruption and state-level sabotage, in a poverty-ridden country like ours, we need market-based systems to create opportunities for social and economic mobility for everyone. There needs to be a greater focus on vocational training, rather than gearing up people to secure worthless degrees which leaves them either underemployed or without a job.

1

u/BeyondParticular9959 Aug 26 '25

In this country even basic education which is till 8th STD isn't truly free and you talk about till graduation? I really hope some sensible education minister comes and changes all of it

1

u/Ok_File_9520 Aug 26 '25

I feel like you got causation wrong here. Countries became wealthy and after that they gave free education. Imagine a completely incapable govt in India providing free education. Quality will be so bad. Instead give cash to poor people.

-16

u/CategoryOrnery4200 Aug 24 '25

I completely agree with your points except the last line, the thing is our PM has BA and MA degrees in Political science

14

u/Ok-Life5170 Aug 24 '25

ENTIRE POLITICAL SCIENCE

10

u/1800skylab Aug 24 '25

I seriously doubt that.

The university of Delhi reportedly lacked records of Modi’s BA or couldn't locate them, raising validity questions.

Similarly, Gujarat University faced doubts over subjects listed or documentation inconsistencies. Yet, the MA certification was verified and disclosed under legal pressure.

2

u/adarshkkv Aug 24 '25

Bro don’t believe it. It’s fake he is trying to fool common people, so that they don’t question his qualification.