A few months ago I started a thread about Tasmanian man, Saroo Brierley and how he was reunited with his mother in India. The updated story is here. It is a long article so I will summarise it.
Saroo was born into a poor family in India. Soon after the birth of Saroo's little sister, Saroo's father deserted the family and the mother, Fatima, became even poorer. She had three sons and a little baby to provide for.
A couple of years later Saroo and his older brother Guddu went to the railway station to beg and look for lost change. They boarded a train so that Guddu could sweep under the seats for change. Saroo fell asleep and when he woke up he couldn't find his brother. His brother's body was later found along the tracks, he had either accidentally fallen off the train, or possibly someone had pushed/thrown him from the train.
Saroo ended up in Calcutta and eventually was taken to an orphanage. He was adopted by a Tasmanian couple, who later adopted a second boy from India.
Fatima searched for him for a long time.
When he grew up Saroo started to search for his Indian family. He spent several years looking at photos on Google Earth trying to find images that were familiar to him. Eventually he found photos of the railway station and of the fountain he had played in as a child.
He went to India, found his family and spent 10 days with them. His mother couldn't speak English, and Saroo himself only had a few words of Hindi. Communication was difficult.
Now it seems that serious problems have risen between Saroo and Fatima.
From the article
Saroo was born into a poor family in India. Soon after the birth of Saroo's little sister, Saroo's father deserted the family and the mother, Fatima, became even poorer. She had three sons and a little baby to provide for.
A couple of years later Saroo and his older brother Guddu went to the railway station to beg and look for lost change. They boarded a train so that Guddu could sweep under the seats for change. Saroo fell asleep and when he woke up he couldn't find his brother. His brother's body was later found along the tracks, he had either accidentally fallen off the train, or possibly someone had pushed/thrown him from the train.
Saroo ended up in Calcutta and eventually was taken to an orphanage. He was adopted by a Tasmanian couple, who later adopted a second boy from India.
Fatima searched for him for a long time.
When he grew up Saroo started to search for his Indian family. He spent several years looking at photos on Google Earth trying to find images that were familiar to him. Eventually he found photos of the railway station and of the fountain he had played in as a child.
He went to India, found his family and spent 10 days with them. His mother couldn't speak English, and Saroo himself only had a few words of Hindi. Communication was difficult.
Now it seems that serious problems have risen between Saroo and Fatima.
From the article
Fatima is very angry. Some of her comments areIn Tasmania, Saroo faced more changes. The media frenzy over his story intensified. He hired an agent to juggle interview requests. Movie producers began calling. Publishing houses battled over the book rights.
He went back to work at his family's hose supply business, and hunted for a house with his girlfriend. He turned off his phone at night to silence the relentless ringing.
He began sending Fatima $100 a month, so she could quit her job cleaning homes and washing dishes that pays her about 1,500 rupees ($30) a month. But she hasn't quit her job and hasn't touched the money he put in her bank account. She insists she won't take his money unless he gives it to her in person.
She seems to want him to care for his mother as a good Indian boy should, seeing to her every need, following her commands and revering her above any job, girlfriend or wife. That's what many sons are brought up to do in India. Not in Australia.
She still lives in her tiny concrete home with peeling whitewash and a roof of bamboo and corrugated metal, surviving on subsidized grain, near-rotten onions she buys at a discount and stale bread she softens in lentil stew. She frets that her poverty might embarrass Saroo or his Australian parents.
The gulf between mother and son remains vast.
"Take care of the family you are staying with, don't bother with this family here'
but Saroo has another lifeThen he announces he is coming back. He is getting money together and is going to buy her a house.
"No, no!" she says angrily. Don't bother coming. I will go away for a few months and no one will be here to see you"
Do you think that the culture differences between Saroo and Fatima are too great to overcome, or do you think that, in the end, love will help them overcome these problems?He hopes to visit India once or twice a year, but he cannot move back. He has other responsibilities, other family and a whole other life in Tasmania.
He is Australian now.
"This is where I live," he says. "When I come back, whether it's sooner or later, then we can start building our relationship again."
Fatima is confused and frustrated.
She doesn't want him to move back here, where there is nothing. But she wants to be with him. Maybe she can move to Australia, she says. She adds sternly that she would ban all girlfriends from his house.A few minutes later she softens. She couldn't really move away from her life here to an unfamiliar place where no one can talk with her, she says.
At least, and at last, Saroo's return has brought her "mental peace," she says. She tries to understand that he has new parents, new expectations and a new life a world away.
She just wants him to see her once in a while, to call her occasionally, even if they can only speak a few sentences to each other.
"For the moment," she says, "it's enough for me that I went to him. And he called me Amma."
Mother.