Puffing on a joint, Khushi extends her hand to welcome and help whoever comes in: men, women, colleagues — some also with their children — wait to settle the week’s accounts. She shifts to make room for a few on her charpoy, while others settle on car-seats scattered on the floor. The room is both Khushi’s working and resting space.
Khushi’s dark, round face is poised as she makes frantic phone calls to rescue colleagues who have been detained for smuggling foreign goods. This is a group, a loose troupe, of local carriers— petty smugglers, known as gandamars. Their job is to deliver illegal goods to their allocated destinations, with one major condition: they must not get caught.
On the phone, Khushi tries to sweet-talk the authorities, yet her tone is assertive. She turns abruptly to an assistant in the room, shouting and cursing as one might expect a gangster from a movie to. Her demeanour is what is generally regarded as masculine, but it is not consciously so. She says it’s her circumstances that have made her this way: her job comes with a tough life, she’s been to jail at least four times, and her husband passed away early.
It was 15 years ago when circumstances compelled Khushi to enter the smuggling business. She had to find a way to feed and clothe her children, and smuggling presented itself as an option.
“I am not a criminal,” she clarifies, “I am simply trading illegal goods”.