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Home > News > India News > Article > Delhis beggars learn English for Cwealth Games

Delhi's beggars learn English for C'wealth Games

Updated on: 06 May,2009 10:45 AM IST  | 
Agencies |

Beggars are gearing up for it by learning not just English, but languages like French and Spanish as well, not knowing that only English is spoken in all the Commonwealth countries.

Delhi's beggars learn English for C'wealth Games

Beggars cannot be choosers, but beggars are quick to spot an opportunity, especially when there is a buzz in the city about "thousands of tourists" flocking here for the Commonwealth Games next year.


And beggars are gearing up for it by learning not just English, but languages like French and Spanish as well, not knowing that only English is spoken in all the Commonwealth countries.


"There will be thousands of foreign tourists when the games are going on. That is why some beggar families are teaching younger child beggars to beg in foreign languages," said Savitri, a street performer from Prem Nagar, west Delhi.


Savitri's extended family of 25 people, including 15 children, belongs to the Nat tribe of Chhattisgarh that performs acrobatics and tight rope tricks on the capital's streets to earn money, especially from foreigners.

"We say: Please sir! Give me Rs 10! Anything...," demonstrated her daughter Kusum, a 10-year-old child acrobat.

Vijay Babli, who claimed to be the leader of over 1,200 mendicant families living in Lal Quarter in Rohini, northwest Delhi, was recently quoted as saying that "classes" had begun to prepare the young alms-seekers to target the large number of tourists expected for the Games in October 2010.

Beggars posted at famous tourist spots like India Gate, Jama Masjid, the Bahai Mandir area and other shopping hubs like Connought Place often learn just a few sentences in foreign languages.

Nikolina, a Croatian national studying here, was surprised when a beggar asked her in English where she was from.

"I was shocked when a man dressed in rags approached me and asked me in English if I was German, or French, and started saying please give me money in various languages," she said incredulously.

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