Panipat (Haryana): Scurrying across the crowded platforms, eyes searching for a customer. With a crinkled Kurta Pyajamaand a shawl on his head, Kishan Chand, a 91-year-old porter, doesn't want to waste even a minute as the train arrives at the Panipat Railway Station. In a conversation with ETV Bharat, Kishan Chand said, "My family came to India from Pakistan at the time of partition. I was 15 years old. To earn a livelihood for my family I started working at this very railway station in 1947. It was a small railway station back then with only three to four trains passing from here." Kishan Chand told that before partition, his family used to live in the Khelaiya district of Pakistan.
With no place to stay, Kishan Chand and his family considered this railway station their home. Kishan Chand says, "I was 15 when I started working here in 1947, and today I am 91 years old and I am still working here. I have made friends here, and raised my children with the money I earned by carrying luggage for passengers."
In the era of coal engines, we were hired to add coal to the engine for Rs 1, Kishan Chand recalled. Kishan Chand said, "Either we carry the luggage on our heads or we start begging. Begging was never an option for me. I worked hard and raised my five kids. No day is the same for a railway porter. I make up to Rs 400 some days, and on other days, I have to go home with just Rs 100. Sometimes, I even have to go empty-handed."