Thursday, August 7, 2014

Windshield Cleaning Kids


Just stop at a busy city road signal till it becomes green and your vehicle is swarmed and stalked by various vendors cum beggars of all ages, of all genders. Some sell car sunshades and pieces of clothes for cleaning the dashboard, others flowers, jasmine garlands, bracelets, newspapers and prize bond results while many sell ball point pens, pencils, and even azaar-bunds (belt for shalwar/pajama). And there are numerous beggars and beggars in disguise, like women showing fake medical prescriptions to win sympathies and earn alms. Some real crippled/handicapped beggars also have their permanent dens on such intersections and signals. Word is that they were crippled in their childhood by their masters to grow into more effective and well-earning beggars.

But the emergence of an eye catching development at these signals in recent years is; Windshield Cleaner boys and girls. You stop at a red signal on a busy downtown road, and while in waiting till it turns green you take a peep at a missed call at cell-phone, suddenly just out of nowhere your windshield gets blurred with a foam-brush applying detergent on it. Without unrolling the glass you wave at a boy or girl trying to clean the windshield and yell in anger from inside the car that windshield was already clean and stop doing it. Unfortunately, within seconds, the washer boy’s brush had already started removing the detergent with the thin rubber attached at the other side of brush making the screen look cleaned and sparkling again. The signal turns amber and you begin moving the car, the cleaner boy now walks along the side of car expecting cleaning charges from you that normally range between 5 to 10 rupees; even peanuts for a hired car driver, let alone car’s owner. Since the boy or a girl cleaned the windscreen without your consent therefore you prefer to punish them and drive away rudely without paying them. Now this is a very common sight taking place repeatedly on each of four roads at an intersection throughout midday till midnight.

The above scenario depicts a normal behavior one would observe frequently on busy city road signals on daily basis. Nevertheless, there prevail some extreme situations too; the driver getting flared up on a cleaner and starts misbehaving with them using loud foul words, and sometimes trying to hit them too. These cleaner children, mostly and might be hailing from beggar parents do sometimes turn reactive. You would overhear them murmuring and cursing these rich car owners like; shame, you can’t afford a labor of 10 rupees, cruelty with poor, and alike. I too, sometimes fall prey to misdemeanor and rebuke such kids but then never speed away without having paid them their cleaning charges.

The other day I stopped my old jeep adjacent to a car at some city intersection road signal. The cleaner boys and girls ran up to the cars, they thought whose owners would pay them cleaning charges, carrying dirty old mineral/soft drink bottles filled with liquid detergent in one hand and small windscreen cleaning brushes in other. A boy started applying detergent with foam on windshield in spite of resistance and protest from the car driver. The gentleman looked perturbed but still asked his wife sitting along with him in the vehicle to look into her clutch some coins to pay the cleaner. She started searching desperately but it looked as if she failed to find them. In the meanwhile the signal turns Green from Amber and vehicles behind this particular car start blowing/honking horns to move. Finding the scene interesting and in a bid to help resolve this petty matter I shout at the cleaner, while moving my jeep slowly, and show him a 10-Rupee Note for his cleaning services rendered to the car. The boy is perplexed at my offer but still runs to grab it while I watch in amusement the stunned family in the car.


Without feeling myself a generous fellow, I tried to perform similar so-called ‘feat’ on other occasions too but due to traffic rush, chaos and noise at intersections I failed to do so. Hope, someone gets inspiration from reading this piece and repeats it.

1 comment:

  1. Used to happen in Bbay often, some while ago. Pretty much similar reactions I have seen of ppl on the roads as described by you:)) Tho personally have never been at the mercy of the cleaners - generously or without permission, offering to clean my car:))

    I think they well understand - ppl in cars (mostly are fair ppl). If they seek their service- they will pay. Hence they don't waste their energies cleaning and later gtg abused. Am sure the kids there will soon get smart about this, and rationalize their enthusiasm soon:))

    As far as the tipping on behalf of your co- fellow- car- on -the- road - Kudos mr A! Well done!:))

    ReplyDelete

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