Outlook – July 28, 2019

(Axel Boer) #1

R


ARELY has the entire country watched an
individual’s battle for life with greater interest.
Especially when the person is not a beloved
leader or a swoon-inducing film star, but a
nondescript five-year-old. After Prince Kumar
of Haldaheri village in Haryana’s Kurukshetra district
tumbled into a 60-foot-deep borewell, scores of news
channels trooped into the village and embarked on a
marathon reportage. People across the nation came
together to pray as the rescue mission was underway.
In July 2006, Prince had gone to a shop in the neigh-
bourhood where he saw a mouse scurry into a sack.
Intent upon stomping the vermin, he jumped on the
sack twice. The third time, he found himself spinning
into the depths of darkness. The army, which was car-
rying out the rescue operation, lowered a bulb into the
borewell and threw in Parle-G biscuits. They dug paral-
lel to the shaft and after excavating to the same level
as Prince, cut horizontally to reach him. Trapped for
over 48 hours, the child was scared to see uniformed
stran gers. He refused to come with them, so his uncle
was called. Seeing the familiar face, Prince leapt into
his arms. Millions glued to the television broke into
gasps of delight. He was exceedingly lucky—in subse-
quent years, many children could not be rescued in

time after falling into borewells.
Today, Prince is a portly 17-year-old with a hint of
fuzz above his upper lip. The borewell he fell into was
hardly 50 metres from his house; it is a tubewell now.
His school is shut for summer vacations and Prince
now spends mornings in the fields, helping his father,
and tending to the two buffalos and a cow his family
owns. Later in the day, he plays PUBG on his phone,
makes videos on TikTok and watches YouTube. Gully
cricket and pumping iron at a gym in the neighbouring
village occupy the evening slots in his schedule. Makke
ki roti with sarson ka saag is his ideal meal and
Gandhi’s biopic his favourite movie.
Prince took the Class 10 exams a few weeks ago, but
couldn’t clear two papers, English and maths. He plans
to consult his seniors to chalk out his future academic
course. Joining the army is on top of his profes-
sions-to-pursue list. “The salary is good, the perks are
excellent and you get to fight for the country,” says
the teenager. However, others in the village have been
unable to find jobs despite completing courses in
industrial training or getting a bachelor’s degree, he
adds with concern. Thirteen years after a second life,
Prince is awaiting another stroke of luck. O
Salik Ahmad in Kurukshetra

Prince loves
gymming,
PUBG, gully
cricket and
shooting
videos on
TikTok. He
wants to join
the army.

All’s Well That Bore Well


Prince Kumar
Whose rescue from 60 feet under riveted a nation

29 July 2019 OUTLOOK 37


SURESH K. PANDEY

AP
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