CHANDIGARH – Twenty-four-year-old Janu, as the parents fondly called her, performed to add glamour to weddings. Fighting poverty, braving gun-wielding men who often went wild in celebrations, Kulwinder was the sole breadwinner of the family.
There was a pal of gloom in a suburban street of Malout on Monday, where the dead woman’s parents sat in shock after performing her last rites.
“She was taking care of all of us… she was our son. Her brother had died and she was taking care of his three children as well,” said Kulwinder’s father Baldev Singh, who works as a labourer.
Dhillon Market on Court Road in Bathinda is a hub of orchestra groups, where artistes narrated how they faced harassment from the “uncivilised rich”.
Sonali, who runs a musical group, cancelled a wedding booking following Kulwinder’s death. “Bathinda has more than 100 orchestra groups, which perform in other cities of the state too,” said Sonali.
The young women are paid between Rs 2,500 and 5,000 for a single show. “Dancing for hours together is common and sometimes it continues till 4am,” she said. “Poverty, of course, is the reason for these girls to perform in front of unruly revellers at night,” she added.
As per the official record, Bathinda district alone has 24,000 firearm licences with around 20 new added to the list every day. Over 100 applications also come up for renewal of arms licences every day.