LOST SPRING. by Anees Jung
LOST SPRING......by Anees Jung
"Lost Spring: Stories of Stolen Childhood" is a non-fiction work by Anees Jung that discusses the socio-economic conditions that rob children of their innocence and childhood.
The title word "Spring" represents the childhood of a human life, and "Lost" signifies how poverty and tradition have taken away dreams & hopes of millions of children in India.
The text revolves around two major themes..Jung explores how "grinding poverty" and age-old traditions push children to a life of exploitation. The narrative highlights the lack of education and the legal/political apathy that forces children into difficult work to make money..Similarly Loss of Innocence depicts the transition from a "carefree look" to a face burdened by the weight of adulthood and responsibilities.
About ::Saheb-e-Alam::
Saheb lives in Seemapuri.Its a settlement on the periphery of Delhi, inhabited by homeless people who fled Bangladesh in 1971.Saheb is a ragpicker whose name ironically means "Lord of the Universe." Everyday he "scrounges for gold, coin etc in the garbage dumps.This is a kind of wonderful work for him.In the end of his story, Saheb loses his freedom when he takes a job at a tea stall. Although he earns money, he is no longer his own master; the steel canister he carries feels heavier than the plastic bag he used to carry and make money on daily basis.
About Mukesh of Firozabad:
Firozabad is the center of India’s glass-blowing industry. Here families have spent generations working around high-temperature furnaces. Mukesh belongs to a family of bangle-makers who believe their occupation is a "god-given lineage." Working in dark hutments often leads to these children losing their eyesight before they become adults. Unlike Saheb, Mukesh dares to dream. He wants to be a motor mechanic. He is willing to walk the long distance to a garage to learn repairing work. This symbolizes his desire to break the "vicious circle" of middlemen and poverty and het away from his family professin of bangle making.
Anees was born in 1944 in Rourkela, she comes from an aristocratic family of scholars and poets. Her father worked as a high-ranking official under the last Nizam of Hyderabad. Her writing primarily focuses on women's issues, child labor, and the struggles of the marginalized. She was able to blend journalistic observation with a deeply empathetic and poetic narrative style. Her Lost Spring: Stories of Stolen Childhood... is her most famous work, where she exposes the grinding poverty and traditions that force children into manual work. In fact, she began her career in journalism with The Youth Times and has since written for several major publications.
Questions & Answers (1/2 Mark Each)
1.Who is the author of the story "Lost Spring"?
Ans: The author is , an acclaimed Indian journalist and writer Anees Jung.
2.What is Saheb-e-Alam looking for in the garbage dumps?
Ans: Saheb looks for "gold," which refers to coins, currency notes, or any valuable discarded items.
3.What does the full name of Saheb, "Saheb-e-Alam," mean?
Ans: His name literally means "Lord of the Universe.
4.Why did Saheb’s family leave their home in Dhaka, Bangladesh?
Ans: They left because frequent storms swept away their fields and homes, leaving them without a livelihood.
5.Where is Seemapuri located?
Ans: Seemapuri is a settlement located on the periphery (outskirts) of Delhi.
6.What is the primary means of survival for the people in Seemapuri?
Ans: Their primary means of survival is ragpicking.
7.What does garbage represent to the children of Seemapuri?
Ans: To children, garbage is "wrapped in wonder" as they occasionally find unexpected treasures like a ten-rupee note.
8.Why does Saheb start working at a tea stall?
Ans: He starts working there to earn a fixed income of 800 rupees and all his meals.
9.Why is Saheb unhappy working at the tea stall despite getting money?
Ans: He is unhappy because he has lost his freedom and is no longer his own master.
10.Which industry is the city of Firozabad famous for?
Ans: Firozabad is famous for its glass-blowing industry, specifically the manufacture of bangles.
11.What is Mukesh’s dream or ambition in life?
Ans: Mukesh dreams of becoming a motor mechanic and driving a car.
12.Why do the children in Firozabad often lose their eyesight at a young age?
Ans: They lose their sight due to working in dark, dingy glass furnaces and the polishing dust from glass bangles.
13. What prevents the bangle makers from forming a cooperative?
Ans: They are trapped in a "vicious circle" of middlemen, sahukars, policemen, bureaucrats, and politicians.
14.What does the title "Lost Spring" symbolize?
Ans: The title symbolizes the loss of childhood, which is the "springtime" or most vibrant stage of human life.
15.How is Mukesh’s attitude different from his family’s attitude toward their situation?
Ans: Unlike his family who accepts their poverty as fate, Mukesh is determined to break the tradition and pursue a different career.
'After months of knowing him, I ask him his name. 'Saheb-e-Alam,' he announces. He does not know what it means. If he knew its meaning — lord of the universe — he would have a hard time believing it."
Q1. What is the irony in Saheb’s name?
Ans: The irony lies in the contrast between his name, which means "Lord of the Universe," and his actual life as a destitute, barefoot ragpicker who survives by scrounging through garbage.
Q2. Why would Saheb have a "hard time believing" the meaning of his name?
Ans: Because his reality is one of extreme poverty and powerlessness. To be a "lord" implies ownership and authority, whereas Saheb owns nothing and is at the mercy of the city's waste for survival.
Q3. What does this quote reveal about the children of Seemapuri?
Ans: It reveals their lack of identity and education. They are living lives so far removed from dignity that even their names become a cruel joke played by fate.
B)
"For the children it is wrapped in wonder, for the elders it is a means of survival."
Q1. What does 'it' refer to in these lines?
Ans: 'It' refers to garbage or the refuse dumps in Seemapuri.
Q2. How is the perspective of a child different from that of an adult regarding garbage?
Ans: For adults, garbage is purely a means of survival (a source of daily bread). For children, it is a source of hope and wonder, as they might occasionally find a "gold" coin, a discarded toy, or a ten-rupee note.
Q3. Which literary device is used in the phrase "wrapped in wonder"?
Ans: Alliteration (repetition of the 'w' sound) is used to emphasize the magical quality the garbage holds for the innocent children.
C)
"The steel canister seems heavier than the plastic bag he would carry so lightly over his shoulder. The bag was his. The canister belongs to the man who owns the tea shop. Saheb is no longer his own master!"
Q1. Why does the steel canister feel "heavier" than the plastic bag?
Ans: The weight is not physical but psychological. The plastic bag represented Saheb's freedom and independence, while the canister represents the burden of employment, responsibility, and the loss of his "carefree look."
Q2. What does the phrase "Saheb is no longer his own master" imply?
Ans: It implies that Saheb has lost his autonomy. As a ragpicker, he worked when he chose; as a tea-stall assistant, he is bound by the rules and whims of his employer.
Q3. What transition in Saheb’s life does this passage mark?
Ans: It marks his transition from the "free" but precarious life of a ragpicker to the "secured" but enslaved life of a child laborer in the formal sector.
D)
For the children it is wrapped in wonder, for the elders it is a means of survival."
Q1. What does 'it' refer to in these lines?
Ans: 'It' refers to garbage or the refuse dumps in Seemapuri.
Q2. How is the perspective of a child different from that of an adult regarding garbage?
Ans: For adults, garbage is purely a means of survival (a source of daily bread). For children, it is a source of hope and wonder, as they might occasionally find a "gold" coin, a discarded toy, or a ten-rupee note.
Q3. Which literary device is used in the phrase "wrapped in wonder"?
Ans: Alliteration (repetition of the 'w' sound) is used to emphasize the magical quality the garbage holds for the innocent children.
5-Mark Question Answers (Short Essay Type)
Q1: "Saheb is no longer his own master." Explain this statement with reference to his transition from ragpicking to the tea stall.
Ans: As a ragpicker, Saheb was a free bird. Though he lived in abject poverty, he was his own master, carrying his plastic bag lightly over his shoulder and wandering the streets at his own will. His life changed when he took a job at a tea stall for 800 rupees and all his meals.
While he gained financial security, he lost his carefree look and his independence. The author observes that the steel canister he now carries belongs to the tea shop owner and feels much heavier than his old plastic bag. The "heaviness" is symbolic of the burden of servitude. He is now a servant bound by a master's schedule, highlighting the tragic reality that for the poor, even "security" comes at the cost of personal freedom.
Q2: Describe the hazardous working conditions of the glass bungalows in Firozabad as depicted by Anees Jung.
Ans: The glass-blowing industry in Firozabad is a death trap for the children who work there. They labor in dingy cells without adequate air or light, sitting next to high-temperature glass furnaces. The continuous exposure to extreme heat and the flickering light of oil lamps takes a massive toll on their health.
The most heart-wrenching impact is on their vision; the dust from polishing the glass bangles often leads to the children losing their eyesight before they even reach adulthood. These "shanty towns" are filled with families who have accepted this physical decay as a part of their "God-given lineage," showing how industrial exploitation is reinforced by social fatalism.
7-Mark Question Answers (Long Answer Type)
Q.1.Compare and contrast the characters of Saheb and Mukesh. How do their attitudes toward their life situations differ?
Ans: Both Saheb and Mukesh are victims of a "stolen childhood," yet they represent two different responses to systemic poverty.Saheb represents the loss of agency. He lives in Seemapuri, where survival means ragpicking. His approach to life is one of accidental discovery—looking for "gold" in garbage. Eventually, he succumbs to the pressure of survival by taking a job that robs him of his joy and identity. He accepts the transition from a "Lord of the Universe" to a tea-stall helper, signifying a quiet surrender to the cycle of poverty.
In contrast, Mukesh is a character of resilience and hope. Living in Firozabad, where everyone is a bangle-maker, Mukesh dares to dream of a different future. He insists on being his own master by aspiring to be a motor mechanic. He is willing to walk a long distance to a garage to learn the trade..While Saheb moves from a state of "free poverty" to "enslaved labor," Mukesh attempts to move from "traditional labor" to "skilled independence." Mukesh’s determination to break away from his family's "karma" provides the only glimmer of hope .
Q.2. "Lost Spring" is a scathing critique of the "vicious circle" created by those in power. Discuss the role of the middlemen, police, and politicians in trapping the poor...(7marks)
Ans: Anees Jung argues that it is not just poverty, but a calculated "vicious circle" of social and political forces that keeps children trapped in labor. Through the lens of the Firozabad bangle-makers, she identifies several layers of this trap..They keep the workers in a state of perpetual debt. Any attempt to form a cooperative is crushed because the middlemen control the supply chain and the market. Instead of protecting the vulnerable, the police are seen as enforcers for the powerful. They "haul up" and beat the workers if they try to organize, labeling their struggle for rights as "illegal..This group provides the structural apathy needed for the system to continue. They benefit from the status quo and fail to implement child labor laws or provide adequate education.. This web of corruption ensures that the children inherit not just a trade, but a "burden" they cannot put down. By the time they are old enough to act, they have already lost their ability to dream. Jung concludes that the combined weight of these two worlds—the stigma of caste and the web of the "bureaucrats"—stifles the "Spring" of these young lives before it can ever bloom.
Character Sketch of Saheb-e-Alam
Saheb is the central figure of the first part of the story, representing the displaced migrants living in the slums of Seemapuri.His full name, Saheb-e-Alam, means "Lord of the Universe," which stands in stark contrast to his reality as a barefoot ragpicker scrounging through garbage for survival.Originally from Dhaka, Bangladesh, he lives in a structure of mud with a roof of tin and tarpaulin, devoid of sewage or running water. He is a victim of both nature (storms) and man-made poverty. For Saheb, the garbage dump is a source of "gold." While adults see it as a means of survival, Saheb sees it through the lens of wonder, hoping to find a stray coin or a currency note.The most tragic shift in his character occurs when he takes a job at a tea stall. Although he earns 800 rupees and meals, he loses his "carefree look." The steel canister he carries feels heavier than his plastic bag because he is no longer his own master; he has traded his freedom for food.
Character Sketch of Mukesh
Mukesh is the protagonist of the second narrative, set in the glass-blowing town of Firozabad. He serves as a symbol of resilience and the "spark" of change. Unlike others in his community who have succumbed to their "karma" or fate, Mukesh dares to dream. He insists, "I will be a motor mechanic," showing a firm resolve to break away from his family's traditional trade.Mukesh belongs to a family of bangle-makers who believe that their lineage is "God-given" and inescapable. He lives and works in dusty, dark cells near high-temperature furnaces that often lead to premature blindness. While he dreams big, he is grounded. He knows he must walk a long distance to a garage to learn the trade. When the author asks if he dreams of flying a plane, he is silent—he is content with the more reachable dream of cars, showing he is a practical rebel.Mukesh represents the possibility of breaking the "vicious circle" of middlemen and poverty. His character highlights that while the environment is oppressive, the human spirit can still harbor the will to choose a different path.

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