![]() However, Saroo also describes how these organizations often struggle to enable people to act kindly in individual cases due to hard-to-navigate international and local laws. ![]() ![]() Similarly, Mum and Dad's desire to build a family through adoption-a desire that Saroo characterizes as a way for his parents to help others less fortunate than them-is something that must necessarily must be done through official channels. Sood is described as though she was always inclined toward helping others, she wasn't truly able to channel her desire to do so until she founded ISSA, the humanitarian-focused adoption agency that facilitated Saroo's adoption as well as that of his brother Mantosh and thousands of other children. In the case of these people, Saroo partly attributes their ability to act kindly to their association with agencies and larger systems that promote such kindness, while also exploring the ways in which those agencies can actually hinder people's ability to act kindly. Sood of the ISSA adoption agency and his adoptive parents, Mum and Dad. Saroo not only focuses on the kindness of strangers, but also the kind acts of people he became close to, such as Mrs. Because of this, Saroo is forced to accept that sometimes people act kindly for no apparent reason, something that's difficult for him to understand as a child whose experiences overwhelmingly taught him that people other than close family weren't to be trusted. For a variety of reasons, including his youth and his general distrust of adults, Saroo also never learned why these people helped him in the first place (though he does wonder if the old man was Hindu and therefore, would later be rewarded via the laws of Karma). He also never learned the names of either person, or of any of the people who consciously or unconsciously helped him survive, such as the religious men Saroo slept near or the kind mother who fed and housed Saroo for a night. In his adult narration, Saroo's greatest regret is that he never thanked either the old man or the teenager. Later, a teenager takes Saroo in and after a few days, he turns Saroo over to the police-an act that Saroo credits with saving his life, as it led him eventually to the ISSA adoption agency and his life in Australia. The first of these is the mysterious older homeless man who saves Saroo twice from drowning in the Hooghly River. He overwhelmingly asserts that he and other fortunate people have a responsibility to help others who are less fortunate, just as other people once helped him.Īmidst the horrors of the dangerous Calcutta streets, Saroo comes across several people who help him for seemingly no reason other than simply being kind. Because of these kind people who made his survival and later successes possible, Saroo positions his memoir as a meditation on the positive effects of small and large kindnesses. At its heart, Saroo's memoir is a story of kindness-his narration lingers on people who were kind to him as a child in Khandwa, while roaming the streets of Calcutta, and then his adoptive parents in Australia. ![]()
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