This Man Has Buried Over 550 Unclaimed Dead Bodies in the Last 60 Years...His Story is Inspiring
Mithalal Sindhi, from the Indian city of Ahmedabad, is not a rich 
man by any means. He has been living on the streets for the last six 
decades, earning a modest living by selling Bajra (pearl millet) from 
his pedal rickshaw. Most of what he makes, Mithalal spends on performing
 the last rites for unclaimed dead bodies that no one else takes 
responsibility for.
Mithalal is being considered one of the most kindhearted Indians alive.
Oddity Central reports that during the partition of the British 
Indian Empire, 15-year-old Mithalal moved from Pakistan to Bombay, with 
his family. He did a number of odd jobs to make ends meet and survive in
 the big city, but in 1957, he moved to Ahmedabad where he started a 
small fruit selling business using what little savings he had.
It was during this time that he met Nyaldas Sindhi, a vegetable 
vendor, with whom he became very close friends. They would eat lunch 
together and even sleep next to each other on the footpath, at night. 
Their friendship came to an abrupt ending in just two years, after 
Mithalal tried waking his friend one morning, but he didn’t respond.
Devastated by Nyaldas’ death, the young fruit vendor realized his 
friend had no close families or relatives to take care of the last 
rites. Mithalal asked the Mukhya (Leader of Vegetable Market) for help, 
but he refused, telling him it was not his concern. No one was willing 
to take responsibility for his friend, so he stepped up and had his body
 cremated near Callico Mill. It was this experience that made him 
realize that there were so many people dying every day in Ahmedabad that
 had no one to perform their last rites. He decided he was going to be 
the person to do it.
Regardless of their religion, whenever someone dies and no one 
claim responsibility, Mithalal Sindhi is always there to lay them to 
rest.
“It could be of a Hindu, Muslim, Jain, Christian. But for me 
there is only one religion and that is humanity. I don’t believe in any 
other religion,” the kindhearted man told Humans of Ahmedabad. 
“Whenever a dead body is recovered, the first thing I do is always look 
for a sign or symbol that indicates dead person’s religion. After I get 
to know about their religion, I perform the rites accordingly. If the 
dead person is Hindu, I take him to VS Crematorium, if it’s a Muslim, I 
take him to Jamalpur and If it’s Christian then I bury them at 
graveyard. I pull out my pedal rickshaw and take them to crematorium.”
He always tries to find any kind of information about the 
deceased’s family, but he says that many times, even if he manages to 
track them down, they claim not to know them and refuse to pay for their
 last rites.
“For society, it might just be an unclaimed dead body, but for 
me if it’s an aged woman, than she is like my mother, if it’s a young 
boy then he is like my son, if it’s a middle aged women, then she is 
like my younger sister. I couldn’t perform the last rites of my own 
father but I don’t feel sad about it. For me all those who died are my 
family in some way or the other,” Mithalal says.
It costs Mithalal around 1,500 Indian rupees ($23) to perform the 
last rites for a person, which he pays from what little he makes selling
 bajra from his pedal rickshaw, near Ellis Bridge. So far, he has bid 
farewell to over 550 unclaimed bodies, and doesn’t stop on performing 
this free service until he takes his last breath. It has become his 
life’s mission and he finds it incredibly fulfilling.
That’s because Sindhi has never cared much for material 
possessions. He gave up his inheritance, and continued living and 
sleeping on the streets, instead moving in with his four children, who 
own their own house and run a roadside fast-food restaurant. The 
footpath has been his home for the last 60 years, and more importantly, 
it’s the place people know they will find him whenever an unclaimed body
 turns up.
“I am 83 years old, have been living on the footpath for the 
last 60 years and believe me I am satisfied with what life has given to 
me. I have been sent on earth by God to perform this beautiful activity.
 This city remembers me whenever an unclaimed dead body is found and I 
am happy about it,” Mithalal concluded.
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