
Among the 241 victims of Air India’s accidents, the mother of an 8 -year -old boy was Gujarati Abdhiben Patel, who was not very preserved to travel to India and left her young son behind for the first time.
According to her colleague Abdhiben, known as Abdhi, she flew to India just two weeks earlier to take care of her older mother, but hesitated with a trip.
“She didn’t want to go,” said Atif Karim, 45, her colleague and close friend in Zone Beauty Studio in Northampton, told PA.
“She said,” I just don’t like I’m away from him. “It was her first time she left him and was very nervous.”
Atif shared that although Abdhi was not enthusiastic about the way: “It was a sense of duty. Her mother was good, but you can say she weighs it.”
“Completely devoted to him”
Atif Karim shared that the recent tension between India and Pakistan, which led to the abolition of flight and uncertainty, also added Abdhi’s concern.
“All flights were canceled. It didn’t have it like the right time,” he said, sharing her husband Pankaj worked at night.
Abdhi was inseparable from his son Meer, he said. “She was still saying how shy and reserved, how he was strapped. She was completely devoted to him – her whole world was spinning around him.”
Abdhibin Patel planned to return to work on Saturday. On Wednesday, the day before the accident, Atif sent to sign up for a task and offered to complete it remotely.
“She said,” Do you want me to finish it? “And later:” Don’t worry, I’ll solve it, “he said. “That was the last thing I heard.”
Who was Abdhiben Patel?
Originally, Gujarat moved to the UK in 2012 and entered the salon in 2016. Over the years, she worked and managed business in the last three.
“He was the most sought and most reliable worker I had ever had,” Atif said. “But more than our girlfriend.”
“She was lively, kind, she always smiled – she had a way to calm people and always cared about their lives.”
“She came up with everyone and left a real mark on the people she worked with and the customers she served.”
(Tagstotranslate) Air India Crash