One evening when Saroo is five, Saroo insists that Guddu take him back to “Berampur” with him. Saroo spends his time with Shekila and Baba, the local holy man. As Guddu and Kallu get older, they begin spending more time at “Berampur,” a train station down the line where they have better luck finding food and money. Guddu and Kallu work hawking small items at train stations and sweeping train cars, while Saroo goes door-to-door begging for food from neighbors. Kamla works on building sites and is often gone for days at a time. Saroo’s family lives in a poor town he knows as “ Ginestlay” in a Muslim neighborhood, even though Kamla is Hindu. Luckily, the riot dissolves when Saroo’s father throws a rock at Kamla. The children go alone to their father’s house, and the next day, a riot breaks out in the street when Kamla and Saroo’s father begin fighting. His mother, Kamla, takes Saroo, baby Shekila, and their brothers Guddu and Kallu on a day-long journey to visit. His parents separate when he’s very young, and his only clear memory of his birth father is going to visit his birth father’s new baby when he’s four years old. Saroo returns his story to his childhood in India. Together, they draw a map of Saroo’s hometown and the train journey to Calcutta. Mum is flabbergasted when he explains how he became lost and ended up in Calcutta. After a while, Saroo begins to talk about his life in India. Though Saroo has a relatively easy time adjusting to his new life, he does anxiously run through his memories of his Indian family every night. His Mum pins a map of India to his wall to make Saroo feel at home. Saroo is adopted when he’s six and grows up in Hobart, Tasmania. He tells Saroo to follow him he’ll take Saroo to his mother. One man takes Saroo’s page of childhood photos, disappears for a few minutes, and then returns. Two other men arrive, and Saroo recites the names of his family members again. The woman says they don’t live there anymore. A young woman appears out of the next house to help, and Saroo begins to list the people who lived in the house. He’s in shock: the tiny house is clearly abandoned. A Long Way Home is a poignant and inspirational true story of survival and triumph against incredible odds, celebrating the importance of never letting go of what drives the human spirit: hope.As an adult, Saroo stands in front of his childhood home in India. Amazingly, twenty-five years later, with some dogged determination and a heap of luck-and the advent of Google Earth-he did. But despite growing up in a loving upper-middle class Aussie family, Saroo still clung to the last memories of his hometown and family in India, and always wondered if he’d ever find them again. Soon after, he was adopted by a couple in Tasmania. Uneducated, illiterate, and unable to recall the name of his hometown, he managed to survive for weeks on that city’s rough streets. Born in a poor village in India, Saroo lived hand-to-mouth in a one room hut with his mother and three siblings…until at age five, he mistakenly boarded a train by himself, and ended up in Calcutta, all the way across the country. Twenty-five years later, from Australia, he found his way back. As a little boy in India, Saroo Brierley got lost on a train.
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