“She is quite eager to take part in the elections as a voter. Last year too she voted in the Lok Sabha polls… This time also she is eager to get her finger inked,” said her son Sukh Ranjan.
A senior poll official said the Mandal family had applied for postal ballot facility for her at home, but the duration for that was over. “We are providing a special vehicle for her and her family in C.R. Park on Saturday,” the poll official told PTI.
Ms. Mandal’s grandson Suraj, 30, said she is willing to go to the polling station to exercise her franchise and the family will go together to vote.
Asked what her message is to people, especially those who don’t go to vote out of apathy or laziness, Ms. Mandal said, “Go out and vote. Democracy thrives on people and people must participate as each vote counts”.
As many as 132 centenarian voters — 68 men and 64 women — are eligible to exercise their franchise in the February 8 election and they will be treated “as VIPs” on polling day, officials said.
Bachchan Singh, 111, the oldest voter in the city in the 2019 elections who used to reside in Tilak Nagar, died in December 2019.
Mr. Sukh Ranjan, in his early 50s, says his mother will turn 112 years old in April but still has good memory of her life’s journey.
A few years before the 1971 war, Ms. Mandal along with her husband and children migrated to India from then East Pakistan to seek shelter after communal disturbance. They took shelter as refugees along with some others in Andhra Pradesh. That’s where Mr. Sukh Ranjan, Ms. Mandal’s youngest son, was born.
After the situation became normal, the family went back. But they returned after the 1971 war and took refuge at a place in Madhya Pradesh, which now comes under Chhattisgarh. “So, my family lived in refugee camps twice,” Mr. Sukh Ranjan said.
Ms. Mandal’s husband Jnanendra died when they lived in M.P. In the early 80s, her two elder sons came to Delhi to do odd jobs for a living. After a few years, the family settled in C.R. Park.
“Earlier we were living in DDA flats. Now we have our own home,” Mr. Sukh Ranjan said.
Of Ms. Mandal’s seven children — four sons and three daughters — five have passed away. While Mr. Sukh Ranjan is her only remaining son, she has one surviving daughter who lives in Bangladesh and had recently visited the family in Delhi.
Asked about her favourite things, the 111-year-old who speaks only Bengali, said, “Maach (fish), paan”.
“She doesn’t have any teeth left, but she eats fish, especially hilsa with great delight. Paan is also her favourite,” says Mr. Suraj, as her grandmother reaches out for the paan box, always kept by her bedside.
He said the family matriarch still manages to walk a little with the help of a stick and her eyesight is so good that she sometimes threads a needle.
At times she feels frail and “pleads to God to seek deliverance”, said Mr. Sukh Ranjan. “We tell her that she will live longer and take part in more elections,” he said.