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The behind the beyond
The behind the beyond













the behind the beyond

The behind the beyond free#

Manju dedicates herself to her studies and helps Asha with Shiv Sena business whenever asked, sacrificing sleep and leisure time to do all her chores in her rare free time.

the behind the beyond

She genuinely believes that education can make a difference in the lives of the poor girls of Annawadi, though her mother has a more cynical attitude Asha runs a school in the slum just to appear charitable. Meanwhile, Manju is the “most everything” girl in Annawadi-kind, beautiful, smart, and obedient.

the behind the beyond

Everyone in Annawadi loves Kalu because he has a good sense of humor despite his hard life. Other boys, like the charming young Kalu, become addicted to drugs and survive on theft. Boys like Abdul and Sunil understand that they, the poor, are hated in the city, though they try to get by with their dignity intact. Mumbai city officials approve the plan, hoping to show that impoverished slums are a thing of the past in India. The conglomerate that owns the land on which Annawadi has been built is constantly threatening to demolish the slum to make more room for airport construction. His growth has been stunted by lack of nutrition, and he tries to use his appearance to his benefit and gain pity from the security officers at the airport, but it rarely works. Sunil rarely finds enough trash at the airport to have money to eat properly. He scavenges all day for trash to sell to Abdul, mainly looking along a concrete wall at the airport that is covered in advertisements for ceramic tiles that will stay “beautiful forever.” The purpose of this wall is to hide Annawadi from the airport’s rich international passengers. Another young boy in Annawadi, Sunil, knows just how few options there are for the poor. Manju does not approve of Asha’s corrupt dealings, but Asha sees corruption as the only way for the poor in India to get ahead. Asha does nothing without profit in mind, including sending her daughter, Manju, to college so that Manju will be able to improve their family’s situation even more. She wants to be the first female slumlord of Annawadi, fixing issues for the powerful Shiv Sena party and taking advantage of government anti-poverty programs to make money.

the behind the beyond

Mirchi dreams of a clean job working as a waiter in a hotel, though he knows that Muslims like himself still face discrimination, and that could limit his opportunities.Īnother slum resident, Asha, also dreams of making it big. Because Abdul works so hard, his younger brother Mirchi can continue his education. Abdul, the Husain family’s oldest son (who is sixteen or seventeen), sorts recyclables to sell to recycling plants, which helps his parents Karam and Zehrunisa provide for their family of thirteen. The book then skips backward to January of 2008, seven months before the burning. Abdul is hiding in his family’s garbage shed, afraid of being arrested for setting his neighbor Fatima on fire, despite that he is innocent and has tried as hard as possible to stay out of trouble all his life. The book opens with a prologue that introduces Abdul, a garbage sorter in the Mumbai slum of Annawadi.















The behind the beyond