It is 4 am in Jungle Mahal village, and the lane outside Ghanshyam Maurya’s house is still dark. The 52-year-old has already left, pushing a wooden handcart with a huge water tank on it. Inside, his wife, Shashi Lata, is lighting the stove. By the time the roti goes on the griddle, her husband will have crossed several kilometres, stopping at every junction where he has placed earthen pots for labourers, travellers, patients, and passers-by. Gha…
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