6944266-LOST SPRING QN BANK Rev 24
6944266-LOST SPRING QN BANK Rev 24
6944266-LOST SPRING QN BANK Rev 24
1. “ a place on the periphery of Delhi yet miles away from it” means –
i. Semapuri is not in Delhi
ii. Seemapuri is in Delhi
iii. Seemapuri is different from the rest of Delhi
iv. Seemapuri is near Delhi
a. i, ii, iii, iv
b. ii, iii
c. i, ii
d. iii, iv
A. b
2. Find a synonym of outskirts
A. Periphery
3. Which of the following best describes a squatter?
a. One who lives on a land not belonging to him
b. One who sits cross legged
c. One who spends all the money he has
ISWK/ CLASS XII/QUESTION BANK/ENG/2024-25/ SONY PC Page 1
d. None of these
A. a
4. Why do they have only ration cards ?
A. The ragpickers aim at mere survival and so the authorities provide them ration cards through
which they get cheap ration. Other than that, these people never ask for any permit or identity card.
5. Find a synonym of without
A. Devoid
2. . And survival in Seemapuri means rag-picking. Through the years, it has acquired the
proportions of a fine art. Garbage to them is gold. It is their daily bread, a roof over their
heads, even if it is a leaking roof. But for a child it is even more.
1. Seemapuri (is) a place on the periphery of Delhi yet miles away from it
metaphorically. Justify this statement.
Ans. Geographically, Seemapuri is a place on the outskirts of Delhi. It houses migrants
from Bangladesh, who earn their living as rag pickers. A run-down place that lacks
amenities of sewage, drainage, or running water, it is unlike the life of glitter and
glamour in Delhi.
2. Through the years rag picking has acquired the ‘proportion of a fine art’
in Seemapuri. Justify the statement.
Ans. The means of survival of the migrants of Bangladesh in Seemapuri is rag picking.
Garbage to them is gold. Like a fine art that has no end in appealing to the sense of
beauty, the rag pickers scrounging the garbage is a never ending process which provides
them their daily bread day after day.
3. Does rag picking mean the same thing for parents and children? Give
reasons for your answer.
Ans. No, rag picking is not the same for parents and children. For the elders, rag-
picking is a necessary evil-the only means of survival as it provides them their daily
bread. On the other hand, the children view the garbage as a mine of gold. They marvel
at what they might find in the garbage dumps. A chance finding of a currency note or a
coin thrills them beyond imagination and provides them hope of finding more.
6. What is Saheb looking for in the garbage dumps? Where is he and where has
he come from?
Ans. Unlike his parents who sifted through the garbage dumps for their survival, Saheb
took it to be a treasure trove, wondrous and magical. He sometimes chanced upon a coin
and hoped to find more. He was not only looking for the yellow metal but anything
valuable like money, clothes, shoes, etc.
He lived in Seepapuri . He had come from Bangladesh in 1971.
7. What explanations does the author offer for the children not wearing
footwear?
Ans. The author disagreed with the usual explanation that is offered for the children
going barefoot as a part of tradition. She felt it was only an excuse for the lack of money.
They could not afford shoes as they lived in ‘a perpetual state of poverty’.
14. Why does the author describe children of the slums as partners in
survival?
Ans. Children in Seemapuri are offsprings of homeless rag pikers. Due to extreme
poverty , their parents are unable to provide for them and so they end up picking rags at
an early age for their survival and as support to their families.
15. How does Mukesh’s grandmother view the family occupation of bangle
making and its poverty?
Ans. She views it as the destiny of her family members. Her husband’s blindness, their
misfortune and impoverished condition – she feels, are ordained by destiny. Years of
deprivation and suffering have made her accept everything stoically in the name of
karma or fate.
16. How has being born in the caste of bangle makers become both a
destiny and a curse?
Ans. Many people in India follow a rigid caste system. Being born in a caste of bangle
makers in the city of Firozabad is both a destiny and a curse. By virtue of their birth,
extreme poverty, lack of education and opportunity, they have taken up the profession of
bangle making at an early age. Their destiny becomes a curse as once in this
profession, they’re in the grip of a vicious circle. All doors close on them and in a short
span of time they end up losing their spirit as well as their eyesight.
17. Describe the atmosphere in glass furnaces. How can working there
affect the young children?
Ans. Glass furnaces of Firozabad are ill-lit, ill-ventilated, unhygienic and dingy
hovels. Working for long hours in these hot furnaces with high temperatures bends the
backs of young children, leads to loss of vision at an early age and makes them old
before their time.
18. Why are the people of Firozabad averse to cooperative movement? Ans.
Generations of family subservience to middlemen, combined with lack of
education, awareness and acute poverty has broken the spirit of the younger
generations also. They fear that organizing themselves into a cooperative movement will
only make them bear the wrath of police. They lack a leader and are aware that the vicious
nexus of sahukars, middlemen, politicians and police will not allow the cooperative
movement to take shape.
Bangles – red, green, blue, yellow etc. are a symbol of ‘suhaag’ and
auspiciousness in marriage in our country since centuries. In today’s world, they
are also a fashion statement for the young and old women alike. These glass
bangles of varied hues adorning a woman’s wrist provide not only a visual treat
but also music of their own. These bangles spread joy and happiness in the lives of
women. But ironically little do these women realize that the makers of these
beautiful bangles themselves lead a miserable life. After nearly 60 years of
independence, Firozabad, the hub of the bangle industry is an underdeveloped,
backward town with neither any infra- structure nor basic amenities. The town
resembles a dumping ground. The glass furnaces where workers make bangles are
ill-lit and ill-ventilated, dingy hovels with high temperatures. People here do not
even get one frugal meal a day. To add to the misery, all of them lose their
eyesight at a young age and live in a dark world for the rest of their lives.
The lesson ‘Lost Spring’ describes the apathy of the bangle-makers on two planes.
Firstly, it is the plight of the street children forced into labour early in life and
denied the opportunity of studying in schools. Secondly, the glass industry has
its own hazards. The employment of very young children in the pathetic working
conditions is illegal. Over and above, it is the apathy and callousness of society
and the political class to the sufferings of the poor that makes us sympathetic
towards these bangle makers. They work in glass furnaces with high
temperatures. Their dingy cells have no light, no ventilation. Children work in
these extreme conditions while welding pieces of coloured glass to make
bangles. Their eyes are more adjusted to the dark than to the light outside. They
often lose their eyesight at a young age.
The other reason for which the poverty stricken bangle makers suffer is because of
the exploitation at the hands of the middlemen and politicians. They do not work
to bring an improvement in their conditions, instead they get brutally beaten up by
the police. They are unable to organize themselves. Hence, their life is full of
sufferings both physical and emotional.
3. “But promises like mine abound in every corner of his bleak world.”
What does the writer mean?
The writer, Anees Jung, met Saheb every morning looking for money in the
garbage. Saheb confessed that he scrounged the rubbish heaps as he had nothing
better to do. He longed to go to school but there was not one in the neighbourhood.
When Anees asked him casually that if she started a school, would he join, he
consented very gladly. In fact, he was so enamoured with the idea that a few
days later he asked her if her school was ready. Anees was embarrassed at having
made a promise that she was not serious about. She felt that most people made
promises to children like him that were never fulfilled.