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Ajay was seven when he lost his family. He got disoriented in the middle of Mumbai’s Ganesh Festival, not knowing that he would never see his parents again.
Police officers found him and sent him to a children’s home in Patna. But Ajay – who likes to go by Max – was not happy there. He was beaten regularly. With a few friends, he ran away to Delhi, where he joined a gang and mastered the art of pick-pocketing.
That was thirteen years ago. Now 20, Max is finishing high school and working as a part-time tour guide with the Salaam Baalak Trust, a non-profit NGO that works with street children.
Salaam Baalak Trust, launched in 1988, organises regular walking tours to show tourists and Delhiites the reality of street living around the New Delhi Railway Station. Some of these children, like Max, become guides as they get older.
The walk this Monday morning was just one of more than 80 walks organised by Delhi I Love You, a socio-cultural movement, as part of the Delhi Walk Festival.
In just seven days, the Festival will include heritage, food, nature, alternative, architectural and artistic walks for 400 rupees per person.
Through the walks, Ellis says he hopes to make people think twice about throwing trash from their cars and to consider the differences in what it is like to walk through Delhi as a man or a woman.
The festival ends on Sunday.
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