Around 40 students of Gurukul School in Uttar Pradesh’s Shahjahanpur district expressed disappointment after the comedian-actor’s comments. rajpal yadav Even though he sent them money he collected from their pocket savings while he was in prison, they never met them or responded.Gurukul Seva Trust authorities said the students put the money they had saved from their daily pocket money into a piggy bank and mailed it to Yadav’s ancestral village address in Kundra on February 21 as a token of support. Along with their savings, the children included touching letters expressing their desire to meet him after his release.
In a 29-second video that is currently going viral online, children can be heard saying, “Namaste Rajpal Bhaiya, we see that you have been released from prison and are back at home. congratulations. We all want to meet you and find out if the help we sent has reached you. If so, why did you not reply to our letter? We are angry with you. ”He added that even if he couldn’t meet them in person, he could at least talk to them to put them at ease.See also: After being released on bail in the Rs 9,000-crore check bounce case, Rajpal Yadav calls himself a ‘Chalti Phil checkbook’ and says, ‘I am making money.’
“We will definitely meet, hug, and take pictures.”
Speaking to PTI over the phone, Rajpal Yadav said in a video response that he had only recently returned home and had not had a chance to spend proper time with his family yet.“As far as I have met the children, I have heard that they are from orphanages. In my opinion, if the children have an ashram, they are not orphans,” he said.When informed that the children were from a Gurukul school, the actor clarified, “I am a person who believes in the Guru tradition and all those children are my children. I will definitely meet them, hug them and take pictures with them.”He also said he was collecting details about people who had helped him during his legal troubles.
Loan case related to Ata Pata Rapata
Yadav, who hails from Shahjahanpur and is known for his comedic roles in Hindi films, had taken a loan of Rs 500 crore from Murli Projects Private Limited in 2010 for the film ‘Ata Pata Lapata’. He was then sent to prison for failing to repay the loan.Kumar Sagar, president of the school, told PTI that it was during this period that the students decided to send a small amount of their savings as a gesture of moral support, adding that they also donated an additional amount before dispatching the piggy banks. The video is now widely distributed, and children are looking forward to a warm encounter with the actor they supported during a difficult period in his life.