Saheb dreams of going to school and receiving an education instead of picking garbage. He yearns for a better future where he can escape the cycle of poverty and make something of himself, reflecting the hopes and aspirations of many ...
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When the author says, “Garbage to them is gold,” she highlights how garbage dumps, despite their filth and degradation, are viewed as valuable resources by impoverished children like Saheb. For them, scavenging represents a source of livelihood and the faint ...
Saheb’s family originally came from Dhaka, Bangladesh, but they migrated to India in search of a better life after facing severe poverty and hardships in their homeland. The family left their rural home with the hope of finding stability and ...
Saheb scavenges garbage dumps out of necessity, as his family is impoverished and relies on whatever resources they can find to survive. For him, garbage represents a possible source of income and occasionally small treasures, like discarded items or scraps ...
The central theme of Lost Spring is the exploitation of children and the loss of childhood dreams due to poverty and social injustice. Anees Jung explores how economic hardships force children into labor, depriving them of education, freedom, and the ...