My Story: 50 Years Is A Long Time, Have You Been Driving This Taxi All This While?

Supported by

Source: chintuchaiwala | Image Courtesy: wikimedia

“Chacha, Howrah jaoge?” , I asked him. I was irritated from the previous five refusals. Thankfully he agreed. I sat and he started the meter. “Chacha meter se zyada to nahi loge?” I asked as I still couldn’t believe that a taxi wala had agreed and didn’t even ask for extra!

“Nahi, babu, meter se hi chaliyega, agar aapko mann ho to thoda zyada de dena” I didn’t reply at that moment, and sank back in the seat. There was something about this guy that made me want to talk to him. I started awkwardly:

Me: “Uncle, are you from Bengal?”

He: “No, babu. I’m from Jharkhand”.

Me: “Oh,okay, how long have you been here for ?”

He: “It has almost been 50 years. I don’t even remember when I first came to this city”

Me: “50 years is a long time, Have you been driving this taxi all this while?”

He: “I started with a factory. worked there for 17 years, then the factory shut down all of a sudden. With nowhere to go, I started driving Taxis. since then I have been a taxiwallah.”

Me: “It’s been long.”

I didn’t ask anything for a while, and just observed him, meandering through the traffic with ease, later I packed up some courage and decided to question him on the rampant taxi refusals.

Me: “Uncle, I was refused by five taxis before you agreed. They were all young guys. Don’t they want to earn money? Don’t they understand the need of the passengers?”

He: “Babu, they understand everything, but the passengers, the government, the media don’t understand them. we taxiwallahs are poor people. Now if someone asks me late at night to go to a place very far from my house, shouldn’t I refuse? They ask me to go to Dhulagarh at 11 PM while my house is in Khidirpur, why should I agree? I won’t get any passenger while coming back, and I’d have to pay the price of the diesel from my own pocket along with the daily fare of the taxi. I hardly make 300- 400 bucks everyday after paying all these expenses to the owner. If I agree to go wherever the passenger wants to go this late in the night, how would I run my house?”

He had a point, no one ever listens to their part of the story. All we care about is our time. we read a few news articles and curse them.

Me: “But uncle, the refusals are rampant during peak hours too!”

He: “I don’t do that. There are some taxiwallahs, who think they’ll only look for fares who’ll pay more, or go to routes where there is more chance of getting a passenger, but I don’t think they are doing anything wrong. Instead of going to a direction where I won’t get any money while coming back, it’s better to not go there. I was once asked by a guy to go to this place, which is around 20 Kilometers from here. I got around 270 bucks from him as per the meter, but while,coming back I didn’t get any passenger, I had to pay 250 bucks for the fuel spent on those 40kms. Now after three – four hours of hard work, if you make only 20 bucks of profit, isn’t it better to say no? ”

I kept quiet for a while, I felt he had a strong point, we should not always listen to what the media says, and these guys do things for a reason. It’s not that they don’t want to earn- the refusals are because they don’t want to starve even after hours of hard work.

Me: “Chacha, Why don’t you buy your own taxi? How long will you rent a cab?” I asked this question to divert the topic. Anything more about the refusals would’ve been harsh on him

He: “I owned two taxis once, and was financially very stable, but 5 years back, I had to sell both of them to marry off my daughter. I wanted to give her a grand wedding. I spent around 8 lakh rupees on her wedding. Everyone was very happy.”

I saw his eyes go wide open with pride.

Me :”Was she your only daughter?”

He: “I have a son and two daughters. Both the daughters are married now, and leading happy lives with their families. My elder daughter has started a school, and the younger one is a teacher in a government school. My son is a Manager in a restaurant”

His face was elated, the shine in his eyes was something I had seen in somebody after a long time.

Me: “Wow! You’ve taught your kids well!”

He: “Yes, all my kids have a Masters Degree”

Me: “Your kids are in such good positions, why do you still drive a taxi?”

He: ” Because I don’t want to be dependent on them, I have never taken a single penny from anybody as a loan. My mother died when I was 15, I had a younger brother and a younger sister, I took care of them. Even they are well off financially, but I never asked for a single penny from them. If you go by my age I should have retired 5 years ago, but this will power to be self dependent drives me and my taxi.”

Me: “Chacha, baat to badi gehri kehdi aapne” (‘Uncle, that was very deep.‘)

Me: “Accha chacha, why do you drive a taxi? You can easily get a private driver’s job. The pay would be more stable, you won’t have to pay for anything from your pocket!”

He: ” I once tried that, but the owners used to ask me to do petty jobs, as if…

#PoweredByYou We bring you news and stories that are worth your attention! Stories that are relevant, reliable, contextual and unbiased. If you read us, watch us, and like what we do, then show us some love! Good journalism is expensive to produce and we have come this far only with your support. Keep encouraging independent media organisations and independent journalists. We always want to remain answerable to you and not to anyone else.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Featured

Amplified by

P&G Shiksha

P&G Shiksha Turns 20 And These Stories Say It All

Amplified by

Isha Foundation

Sadhguru’s Meditation App ‘Miracle of Mind’ Hits 1 Million Downloads in 15 Hours, Surpassing ChatGPT’s Early Growth

Recent Stories

18 Minors Rescued from Suspected Trafficking Ring at Howrah Station Under ‘Operation AAHT’

Did Pakistan Violate Ceasefire Along LoC in Poonch on August 5? Army Rejects The Claim

India Launches Free E-Visas, Flights, & Strategic Deals with Philippines to Boost Ties

Contributors

Writer : 
Editor : 
Creatives :