Srabasti Ghosh has been providing home-cooked meals to Covid-19-affected families in North Kolkata apart from amplifying calls for help on social media
Srabasti Ghosh packs food for Covid-affected people, at her home in North Kolkata’s Bagbazar area. She sends home-cooked food to 50 to 60 families
Srabasti Ghosh hardly has the time to look up and talk. The 26-year-old is busy packing home-cooked food for Covid-19-affected people in the remote corners of North Kolkata. “I have been providing meals to all five members of a Covid-19-affected family in Dum Dum area since the past several days. It’s unfortunate that one of them passed away a few days ago,†she says with a tinge of sadness. “I have been providing meals to one or two members of many families here. Now I have to increase the number of meals in a short span of time as their family members are also down with the coronavirus. The situation is alarming and people are helpless when it comes to dealing with pandemic.â€Â Â
After completing her graduation from Kolkata’s Presidency University in 2016, Ghosh moved to Delhi to pursue her master’s in performance studies from Ambedkar University. Three years later, armed with her master’s, she returned to Kolkata. A professional artiste in dance and theatre now, Ghosh also works with the Kolkata Centre for Creativity.
Kolkata was among the worst hit cities during the second wave of the coronavirus. Since the pandemic brought havoc in the lives of people, Ghosh felt a strong urge to do something for the helpless. Belonging to a middle-class family, she realised she could not do something on a large scale. But that didn’t stop her from making small contributions. Initially she forwarded verified leads to people on queries related to availability of oxygen cylinders, hospital beds, ambulance numbers, on social media.
“I was attending hundreds of phone calls then… I tried my best to provide information about oxygen cylinders, hospital beds, plasma etc, but often realised some numbers were not functional or the facilities were not up to our expectations. It took time to check the verified leads. And in emergency situations, I would just forward the numbers without talking to people. This prompted me to think how I can be of help to people directly, and discussed it with my parents. That’s when I decided to deliver home-cooked food to the affected families in North Kolkata,†says Ghosh, a resident of Bagbazar area.
Initially, she began by delivering two meals to 15 people in her neighbourhood. That number has swelled to 50-60 now, making it 100 to 120 meals a day.