% About: love, family, & life's-challenges (see the links below) %

http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/society/exotic-transport_bern-s-slumdog-rickshaw-driver/42104310
Bern's slumdog rickshaw driver
Apr 21, 2016  Anand Chandrasekhar, Bern

[images  
http://www.swissinfo.ch/image/42104320/3x2/640/426/16db99028c9a12f34419606eb67a4496/Og/197755755-jpg.jpg
Delhi has around 84,000 licensed cycle rickshaw drivers but there are
probably many more such vehicles plying the streets ( / Keystone)

http://www.swissinfo.ch/image/42104322/2x3/305/458/e714641b8fb7caa3c580ab223ca3fa40/ST/5631-jpeg.jpg
Lal used his Delhi auto rickshaw as a marketing tool for his travel agency 
( / Sohan Lal)
]

Former slum-dweller Sohan Lal used to drive a three-wheeled rickshaw on the
chaotic streets of New Delhi. Love brought him to Switzerland, and he now
ferries tourists around in the Swiss capital Bern in an e-rickshaw. 

It is a perfect spring afternoon in Bern with clear skies and abundant
sunshine. The city’s railway station area is buzzing with human and vehicle
traffic as the work day comes to an end. Amidst the orderly crowd, stands a
vehicle that looks like nothing else around - a cycle-rickshaw. 

It belongs to 39-year-old Lal who came to Switzerland from India a little
over ten years ago. He offers swissinfo.ch a ride and a glimpse of the Swiss
city he now calls home. 

Young entrepreneur
Lal was born in a Delhi slum - known locally as “jhuggis” - to parents who
left their village in the neighbouring state of Uttar Pradesh in search of
better prospects. But his father became mentally ill and his mother was
forced to work as a construction labourer to support Lal and his five
siblings. 

“She would earn around INR10 (CHF0.14 or CHF1 at the-then exchange rate) a
day after working for around nine hours carrying 20 bricks at a time up
ten-storied buildings under construction,” he told swissinfo.ch. 

Lal did not go to school. To help out he was forced work as a shoeshine boy
from the age of nine. He’ll never forget the incident that changed his life. 

“A German tourist came up to me to get his shoes shined,” says Lal. “After I
finished, he gave me 50 rupees and left, which was 50 times more than what I
was charging.” 

That stroke of good fortune prompted a realisation that he could make more
money by focusing on foreign visitors to Delhi. Instead of staying put in
one spot like other shoeshine boys, he travelled around looking for generous
overseas tourists. He also picked up English by overhearing their
conversations and interacting with them, as well as spending some of his
hard-earned cash watching Hollywood movies in cinemas. 

Soon he had saved enough money to buy a cycle rickshaw and later even
upgrade to a motorised autorickshaw. As a rickshaw driver, he continued his
strategy of targeting foreign travellers by winning them over with his charm
and basic English knowledge. He would then direct them to travel agencies in
return for a commission. 

“If the tourists booked a holiday with the travel agency, I would get a 50%
commission,” he says. “I made a lot of money this way.” 

In a matter of a few years, he had saved up enough to purchase a couple of
second-hand taxis and start his own travel agency. But he didn’t stop
driving his rickshaw. 

“I would use the rickshaw to find clients for my travel business,” he says.
“Instead of taking a cut from travel agencies like before, I would offer
them chauffeur-driven tours in my own taxis.” 

Swiss miss
Money was no longer a cause for worry for Lal. But another chance meeting
with a foreigner would once again change his life. In 2001, he met a
19-year-old Swiss girl called Nadia at Connaught Circus, a famous shopping
centre in the heart of Delhi.

“I knew she was the one for me even before I even spoke to her,” he says.
“But she was fed up with India, as every person who approached her either
wanted money or to sell her something.”

Lal invited her, along with her brother and a friend, for a cup of tea.
Something clicked and Lal and Nadia visited each other in Switzerland and
India for a couple of years until they decided to get married in 2014.

“I came to Switzerland with a suitcase and CHF300,” says Lal. “I spoke no
German and had to start all over again.”

He worked at a number of odd jobs like washing dishes in restaurants or
cleaning cars in garages. Anything he could find.

“There are no bad jobs but the toughest one I did was packing meat at a
slaughterhouse,” he says. “It was tough to see the animals being killed.”


In 2012, his wife spotted a job ad looking for someone physically fit and
ready to make their own money. Lal followed it up and ended up becoming a
rickshaw driver. These e-rickshaws appear futuristic when compared to their
Indian cousins, which are little more than bicycles with a seat at the back.
With an aerodynamic shape, lightweight polyethylene cabin and a 48 volt
motor powered by a lithium-ion battery, it is easier to tackle hills and
heavy clients on an e-rickshaw.

The company that owned the rickshaws sold advertisement space on them and
drivers could keep any money they made after deducting a sum for daily
rental of the vehicle. Lal began making so much money that the company
offered him a job contract. However, just as things were looking up Lal had
a falling out with the company owners and found himself without a job.

“I bought a rickshaw from Germany but couldn’t use it due to obstacles from
my old employers who wanted to preserve their monopoly,” he says.


Bouncing back

Lal was forced to sell his imported rickshaw at a loss. He borrowed money
from friends to purchase a second-hand rickshaw already registered in
Switzerland but couldn’t raise enough cash. However, thanks to a
crowdfunding campaign he managed to collect CHF6,300 and buy his rickshaw.

He now makes a decent living with between his rickshaw business and working
in a restaurant as a runner. While his professional life may not sound
glamorous, he has become a sort of minor celebrity in Bern, especially after
being featured in local newspapers. Shopkeepers and restaurant workers wave
to him as he passes by.

“I am not a hero but people like me here and it makes me want to stay,” he
says.

He now has a Swiss passport and is a father of two daughters aged five and
seven.

While most of his clients are Swiss, he gets a fair share of Indian
tourists, particularly couples on their honeymoon.

“They begin with a one hour tour but often end up hiring me for four hours,”
says Lal.

But not all his Indian clients are fans. Some of them look down on him, as
driving a rickshaw is viewed as a lowly job in India.

“In Switzerland people look at you as a person and all jobs are respected
here,” he says.

Despite the physical demands of driving a rickshaw and the competition he
faces from his former employer turned rival, Lal has no regrets.

“I started from zero and am now a happy man despite the difficulties,” he
says. “Even if I am still a rickshaw driver, I love this job as I get to
meet a lot of people from different countries.”

    Rickshaws in Switzerland 
    Entrepreneurs in the Swiss tourism sector have embraced the
opportunities offered by these three wheelers. Swiss cities like Zurich,
Geneva, Bern, Basel, Thun and Biel offer rickshaw taxi services and tours
and some are equipped with iPod audioguides. For a really cheesy Swiss
experience, tourists can even opt to have a fondue in one.

    Most of the e-rickshaws are imported from Germany and have to be
authorised by local officials for use in Switzerland. Rickshaws equipped
with electric motors are considered as motorcycles and cannot travel on
pedestrian or one-way streets. The vehicles have to insured and drivers also
need a permit to park their vehicles in taxi stands. 
[© swissinfo.ch]



http://www.rikschawalla.ch/
[Sohan Lal's website (in German)]
Willkommen bei Rikscha Walla
...
https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.rikschawalla.ch%2F&edit-text=
[His site translated into English]



https://www.tripadvisor.de/LocationPhotoDirectLink-g188052-d8036333-i139423116-Rikscha_Walla-Bern_Bern_Mittelland_District_Canton_of_Bern.html
Foto: “The Indian ride now in Suisse”
[images
https://media-cdn.tripadvisor.com/media/photo-s/09/68/32/29/rikscha-walla.jpg

https://media-cdn.tripadvisor.com/media/photo-s/08/4f/6c/1e/rikscha-walla.jpg

https://media-cdn.tripadvisor.com/media/photo-s/08/4f/6c/cb/rikscha-walla.jpg

https://media-cdn.tripadvisor.com/media/photo-s/08/4f/6d/8c/rikscha-walla.jpg
]



https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.100-days.net%2Fde%2Fprojekt%2Fgo-rikscha-walla%2Fproject&edit-text=
[Lal's crowdfunding campaign (translated)]

[images  
https://www.100-days.net/media/projects/2016/photos/5653_large.jpg?m=1405328637

https://www.100-days.net/media/projects/2016/details/2016_1_detail.jpg?m=1401454552
]

HILF RIKSCHA WALLA ON THE ROAD
rickshaw Walla

To make Rickshaw Walla on its feet, I have asked some friends if they want
to support me on the first steps towards independence, which they did. So I
founded a sole proprietorship and ordered a rickshaw. With this I will soon,
hopefully chauffeured by Bern in July, tourists, locals, friends and
acquaintances. The fare is always negotiable. Just as in India. I'll
occurrence under the name "Rickshaw Walla". Walla comes from the Indian and
means as much as professional person and almost every profession appended as
name in India - like the pub-Walla, the Chai-Walla, the dish washing Walla,
or just the Rickshaw Walla.

Why 6250.- francs?
The goal is the introduction and promotion of Rickshaw Walla in Bern - the
only real Rickshaw Walla! Besides the rickshaw itself still accruing costs
logo, business cards, website, office supplies and all the permits for the
of registration. For that I need your support.

The 6250.- although not enough to cover all costs, but I can use it to start
a rickshaw Walla.

What do you get for that?
Besides a good karma for your support visit from an amount of CHF 50.- a
photo Place on the rickshaw! Send me a photo or logo, and I create a
collage. If the action concluded I tape cers rickshaw complete with your
photo and drive as by Bern - a month. From CHF 200.-'s also a Rickshaw Walla
T-shirt.

Thank you for your support ... Sohan Rickshaw Walla
This text was written on my behalf by my colleague Janos, Tom and Dominik.
My written German is still a little bumpy ... but I speak German, English
and Hindi [of] course
[© 2016 100-DAYS.NET]




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