homeindia NewsPandemic shadow over festival: As siblings refrain from visiting each other, 'rakhi' business takes a hit

Pandemic shadow over festival: As siblings refrain from visiting each other, 'rakhi' business takes a hit

As the COVID-19 pandemic continues its spread across the country, this is one Rakhi, a festival that celebrates sibling bonds, where many brothers and sisters won't be meeting in large family parties or even small lunches and dinners.

By PTI Jul 31, 2020 2:08:32 PM IST (Published)


Rajbala spends most of her day looking up at people walking past her roadside makeshift shop without a glance or looking down at the silk and cotton rakhis' lined up, undisturbed, in a neat arrangement on the pavement. Raksha Bandhan, or Rakhi, one of north India's biggest festivals, is only three days away and she hasn't managed to sell even one rakhi'.
The hours hang heavy, one slipping into another without a rupee earned, pushing the 42-year-old rakhi' vendor in Uttar Pradesh's Ghaziabad town further into penury. There isn't much to do. Nobody has come to buy anything so far, she said dejectedly, dusting once again the colourful threads she has sourced from all over.
As the COVID-19 pandemic continues its spread across the country, this is one Rakhi, a festival that celebrates sibling bonds, where many brothers and sisters won't be meeting in large family parties or even small lunches and dinners.