Anto has been at the Palarivattom Junction, Kochi, for the
past eight years owing to an unexpected event
Pics: Anto; Green coconut seller Thomas next to Anto
By Shevlin Sebastian
On most mornings, I stop at a cart that sells green
coconuts at Palarivattom Junction in Kochi, so I can have its cooling water.
Less than two feet away, there is a three-wheeler with a hood. A man with his
paralysed legs placed on two pedals in front of him sells lottery tickets. I
have rarely spoken to him except to buy tickets a few times.
One afternoon, when I went to have the water, the
lottery-seller was not there. It seemed so unusual that I asked the coconut
seller Thomas what had happened.
“Oh, Anto goes home in the afternoons, and returns in the
evening,” he said. Then he told me about Anto’s life. I had assumed Anto had
been afflicted with polio from his birth but that was not true.
So, one afternoon, I went to Anto’s house to hear his story.
On March 26, 1999, Anto had been called to unload
advertising boards from a van at a godown in Edapally. Only he and the driver
were present. Because of the weight of the boards, the vehicle could not go up
an incline near the godown. So, it was parked on the slope. The driver got down
to open the shutter at the back, as Anto stood to one side. Unfortunately, the
vehicle started rolling back. The driver jumped out of the way, but the van
toppled sideways and fell on Anto.
He started screaming. Several bystanders rushed up and with
a collective shouting and exhalations of breath, and using their shoulders and
hands, they pushed the vehicle back on its wheels. Anto was carried to an
autorickshaw and taken to the Ernakulam Medical Centre. There, the doctor told
him that his spine had been broken. An operation was done, to join the cords,
so that Anto could at least sit up. But nothing else could be done.
Anto lost the movement of his legs and all physical
awareness from his waist downwards. Thereafter, he did physiotherapy for
several months. Thanks to the third party insurance of the vehicle, he had got
a payment of Rs 2 lakh. He tried to walk, using a walker. But there was not
much of an improvement. Anto felt depressed. He gave up and spent a few years
lying on his bed. But, by then, he was staring at a financial crisis.
One day, a friend suggested to Anto that he could earn
money by selling lottery tickets. His two daughters pushed the wheelchair to
the main road, on Thammanan, one kilometre away. “I sold tickets for one year,”
says Anto. Then a reporter of The New Indian Express noticed Anto while riding
past on his bike. Later, he published a feature on the paraplegic in 2011.
Consequently, The Hotel and Bar Association gave Anto a donation of Rs 40,000.
The Cochin Corporation followed it up by providing a scooter. Thereafter, Anto
went to the main junction at Palarivattom in 2012 and started selling tickets.
He has been there ever since.
Anto gets up at 5 a.m. After a cup of tea, he gets ready
and reaches the junction at 6 a.m. At 10 a.m, one of his daughters brings
breakfast in a tiffin box. He eats the food using a spoon. “I will hang the
container at the back,” he says.
At 3.30 p.m., he rides back home and has his lunch. Then he
rests on the bed and has a nap. His wife empties the urine bag. Then at 5 p.m.,
he returns to the junction and works till 10.30 p.m. That’s 15 hours at the
junction every day. And there are no holidays.
On average, Anto sells 200 tickets a day. “But now there are
many sellers, so the numbers are going down,” he says. “Another problem is that
the minimum rate of a ticket has gone up from Rs 30 to Rs 40. So, sales have
gone down. And because of the coronavirus, it has become much worse.”
Anto is honest enough to say that nobody has won a bumper
lottery prize from his stand. But there have been many winners of a lower
denomination, from Rs 100 to Rs 5000. From unsold tickets, Anto has sometimes
won Rs 500 or so.
Many people buy tickets, but the buyers are mostly males.
“There are a few who when they see that I am handicapped buy a ticket out of
sympathy,” says Anto.
It is not an easy job. Sometimes, buyers will scrape away
part of the number. They can change the number zero into a three. The number
six can be made into an eight. Then they will show it to Anto and say they have
won a prize. “They do it so well, it is difficult to spot the fraud,” says
Anto. “I end up paying them the money. But at the lottery office, they will
tell me I have been tricked.”
Some customers will come in the night and say they have a
bus or train to catch. And they will hurry Anto to pay the money. Nowadays,
Anto scans the number with his mobile and checks it with the lottery office by
sending it on WhatsApp.
Some people have taken loans from Anto. One day, a
middle-aged man said, “My car has a puncture. I have to change the tube, but I
don’t have any money.” Anto had seen him around the junction and so he gave him
Rs 500. After that, he never saw the man again. Another man came and said his
mother was in the hospital and he needed some money to pay the bill. So Anto
gave it to him, but he vanished after that.
But Anto is visible all the time. He says that both the
summer and the rainy season are difficult. In the summer, because of the heat,
it can become unbearable. “I don’t have a fan,” he says. “The charge of the
vehicle’s battery will go down if I connect it to the fan. And when it rains, I
don’t move. I stay there only.”
To lessen the pressure on his back, he sits on a tube.
Because of long hours, sores develop at the back of his legs. His wife puts
ointment now and then.
Anto stays at a house that he has built by taking a bank
loan. It was completed in 2012. Downstairs, there is a dining hall and a
kitchen. At one side, near the staircase, there is a large bed for Anto.
Upstairs, there are two bedrooms with an attached bathroom.
Anto married Daisy in 1992. His elder daughter, Delshy, 25,
who has a Masters in Business Administration degree, works in an office. His
other daughter, Delmy, 23, took a bank loan and is doing a finance course in
Berlin, but is stuck in the German city because of the lockdown.
Daisy says that Anto likes to work a lot. “He always felt
happy working,” she says. “Anto had been depressed for many years, but selling
lottery tickets keeps him occupied.”
Asked whether he is angry with God over his misfortune,
Anto says, “This is fate. Accidents happen.”
(Published in The Kochi Post)
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