A migrant worker’s death, a family with no money to travel, and a funeral for an effigy
Sitaram Yadav died at a railway station in Agra; his family dressed a bamboo-and-straw effigy in his clothes to conduct the last rites
Written by Shubham Tigga
Ranchi | Updated: August 14, 2025 03:26 AM IST
3 min read
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Photos on social media of the unusual last rites, conducted in the Manduadih village in Giridih’s Jamua block, showed the family saying their final goodbyes to the effigy of the 38-year-old migrant worker, who was working in Agra and was found dead at the city’s railway station last week. (Express Photo)
When migrant worker Sitaram Yadav died at a railway station in Agra and his family back in Jharkhand’s Giridih district didn’t have the money to bring back his body, they did the next possible thing. They made a bamboo-and-straw effigy, dressed it in Sitaram’s clothes, placed his photograph on it, and conducted last rites at the community cremation ground by the river.
Sitaram Yadav, a 38-year-old migrant from the Manduadih village in Giridih’s Jamua block was found dead at the city’s railway station last week, and photos on social media showed the family conducting the last rites without the body. According to the family, the rites were conducted with an effigy after they were unable to meet the one-day deadline set by the police to collect the body.
“Last week, the police called to inform us of the death and that we had one day to collect the body before it was sent for post-mortem and cremated locally. But we didn’t have enough money to get there. Two men tried to go but lost their way while changing trains at Dhanbad and came back,” Manoj, Sitaram’s nephew, said.
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The family then decided to follow the established local custom under such circumstances: using a bamboo effigy as a stand-in for the deceased.
“The ashes will be immersed in the Ganga after the 12-day mourning rituals,” Manoj said.
Sitaram is survived by his wife and three children. The ritual now done, the family is now demanding to know why the body could not be sent to Jharkhand.
On its part, the Government Railway Police claim that the force had asked someone in the family to come down to identify the body, even promising to “arrange and pay for their return travel to Agra” but that “they declined”.
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The ritual now done, the family is now demanding to know why the body could not be sent to Jharkhand. (Express Photo)
Sitaram Yadav’s body was found in a general coach of a train arriving from Ajmer, Jitendra Kumar, the Station House Officer of the GRP at Agra Fort railway station, said.
“The train guard alerted us that a man was lying unconscious in the general coach. The RPF personnel brought him down, and doctors confirmed he had already died,” Kumar said.
The post-mortem report cited lung disease as the cause of death, the official said. “When we searched his belongings, we found a slip with a phone number… The relative who answered the call denied it was him from the WhatsApp photo we sent. The family later identified him from a tattoo on his hand,” he said, adding: “Eventually, the cremation was conducted here in Agra”.
Shikha Lakra, head of the State Migrant Workers Control Room helpline under Jharkhand’s labour department, said that Sitaram’s body was cremated in Agra after the family denied knowing him.
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“We had even been ready to arrange to bring it home, but the worker’s nephew had said it wasn’t their relative. Only later, after police pointed out a tattoo on the body, did they realise it was him,” she said.
Shubham Tigga hails from Chhattisgarh and studied journalism at the Asian College of Journalism. He previously reported in Chhattisgarh on Indigenous issues and is deeply interested in covering socio-political, human rights, and environmental issues in mainland and NE India.
Presently based in Pune, he reports on civil aviation, other transport sectors, urban mobility, the gig economy, commercial matters, and workers' unions.
You can reach out to him on LinkedIn ... Read More