City
Epaper

How Hindus saved lone Muslim family from rioters in Delhi's Madhuban mohalla

By ANI | Updated: February 28, 2020 17:45 IST

On Sunday night, Safina shuddered with fear as heard violent banging on her door. The atmosphere was charged with communal tension after stone-pelting between two groups in the locality.

Open in App

New Delhi [India], Feb 28 : On Sunday night, Safina shuddered with fear as heard violent banging on her door. The atmosphere was charged with communal tension after stone-pelting between two groups in the locality.

The family consists of Safina (name changed), her partially paralysed husband and two daughters. They are the only Muslim family in Madhuban mohalla of North Ghonda locality in north-east Delhi.

Hearts pounded louder than pounding of the door. Then the banging stopped and noises of men talking loudly came.

"I peeped out from a small window near the kitchen and saw our neighbours standing outside our entrance and arguing with 10-15 unknown people," Safina told .

It was the first day of the communal violence, worst in the decades, that fanned out to the entire north-east Delhi over the the next three days and claimed at least 42 lives, left over 200 injured and properties worth crores destroyed. The death toll is feared to go up.

Later in the night Safina's family moved to one of their Hindu neighbour's house. There are about 30 Hindu households in the mohalla who kept vigil as the atmosphere detriorated.

The next day, the violence escalated. The neighbours decided to shift Safina's family to Gautampuri for their safety.

Safina recounted, "Our neighbours assured us that they are with us but as things were deteriorating, they said they wouldn't be able to protect us if a big mob of hundreds came. Thye advised us to move to the nearby Gautampuri locality and come back only after things become normal."

Rajkumar Bharadwaj brought the family to Gautampuri in the early hours on February 25.

l Gupta, 49, said, "It was tough to rescue them. We were asked by the rioters as to why we were saving the Muslims. But we had to, it is the people of my country who are suffering. It cannot be Hindus or Muslims."

Rajkumar Bharadwaj said, "Their youngest clung to me throughout. After I brought them here at Gautampuri, I felt good. Situation till then was not okay."

On Friday, some semblance of normalcy returned to parts of north-east Delhi with some people opening their shops amid heavy police presence.

No fresh incidents of violence have been reported since Thursday as the shattered humans, both Muslim and Hindu, tried to gather the pieces of life strewn in the gory mayhem Delhi has rarely witnessed after the Partition.

Meanwhile, the morbid sight outside GTB Hospital's mortuary, agonising groans in the hospital wards burnt down houses and shops remind Safina and others what they have been spared of.

( With inputs from ANI )

Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai Metro Line 3 Introduces Discounted Passes for Students and Tourists; Check Rates

EntertainmentLisa Ray expresses heartbreak after airstrikes hit Lebanon: My adopted second home

BusinessReal estate firm Signature Global clocks 20 pc fall in FY26 sale bookings

NationalSaree-clad robot welcomes voters at Puducherry polling station

Politics"Maa is crying, maati has been overtaken by infiltrators, maanush is terrified": PM Modi slams Trinamool Congress in Bengal

National Realted Stories

NationalNo govt events in hotels, private venues: Rajasthan Chief Secretary issues circular

NationalK'taka bypolls: Voting crosses 54 pc in Bagalkot, 49 pc in Davanagere; SDPI, Cong workers clash

National'Absolutely wrong': Husain Dalwai after Maha Cong councillor refuses to sing ‘Vande Mataram'

NationalProactive approach key to tackling cybercrime, says Gujarat DGP

NationalRs 597 crore IDFC First Bank scam: Haryana suspends two IAS officers