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INTLMajor Fire in Bangkok Bar Kills at Least 27ARحريق حانة في تايلاند يخلف 27 قتيلاًITIncendio in un pub a Bangkok: almeno 27 mortiARنقل 28 شخصًا إلى المستشفى إثر تسمم جماعي في فندق بتركياARاكتشاف بروتين التهابي يسبب تصلب المبايض مع التقدم في العمرRUМИД РФ: Отставка правительства Украины – попытка Зеленского переложить вину за коррупциюARارتفاع حصيلة ضحايا زلزال فنزويلا إلى 4333 قتيلاً وهجوم بطائرات مسيّرة في كولومبياESPasajero de Ryanair hospitalizado tras salir despedido parcialmente por ventanilla rota en pleno vueloESAlcaldes almerienses gestionan el impacto del incendio que causó 12 muertesTRTartıştığı Annesinin Evini Ateşe Verdi, Polis YakaladıINTLMajor Fire in Bangkok Bar Kills at Least 27ARحريق حانة في تايلاند يخلف 27 قتيلاًITIncendio in un pub a Bangkok: almeno 27 mortiARنقل 28 شخصًا إلى المستشفى إثر تسمم جماعي في فندق بتركياARاكتشاف بروتين التهابي يسبب تصلب المبايض مع التقدم في العمرRUМИД РФ: Отставка правительства Украины – попытка Зеленского переложить вину за коррупциюARارتفاع حصيلة ضحايا زلزال فنزويلا إلى 4333 قتيلاً وهجوم بطائرات مسيّرة في كولومبياESPasajero de Ryanair hospitalizado tras salir despedido parcialmente por ventanilla rota en pleno vueloESAlcaldes almerienses gestionan el impacto del incendio que causó 12 muertesTRTartıştığı Annesinin Evini Ateşe Verdi, Polis Yakaladı
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BackArtist's Undelivered Sketch Becomes Family's Cherished Memory After Fatal Fire
Artist's Undelivered Sketch Becomes Family's Cherished Memory After Fatal Fire
NEWS
Times of India6/25/2026Crime2 min readIndia

Artist's Undelivered Sketch Becomes Family's Cherished Memory After Fatal Fire

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  • A 24-year-old 3D artist, Nilesh Kumar, died in the devastating Aliganj fire, leaving behind a hand-drawn sketch of his parents intended as an anniversary gift.
  • The portrait, discovered among his belongings, has become his grieving parents' most cherished possession and a symbol of their profound loss.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Nilesh Kumar, a 24-year-old 3D artist, was among 15 people killed in the devastating Aliganj fire. He had secretly created a sketch of his parents as an anniversary gift, which was discovered after his death.

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LUCKNOW: For weeks, 24-year-old 3D artist Nilesh Kumar had quietly worked on a surprise he never got to deliver. Tucked away inside a notebook in his room was a hand-drawn sketch of his parents, Shatruhan Lal (70) and Santosh Kumari (60), he had planned to gift them on their wedding anniversary in July. The prized souvenir reached the distraught parents only after they had lit the son’s pyre. Nilesh was among the 15 people killed in the devastating Aliganj fire. In the days that followed, as Nilesh’s grief-stricken family gathered his belongings, they came across the carefully preserved sketch. The portrait, intended to celebrate his parents’ lifelong companionship, has now become the family’s most cherished possession, and its deepest heartbreak. Santosh Kumari sits for hours holding the drawing against her chest, running her trembling fingers over the pencil lines her son so lovingly drew. Shatruhan Lal, who retired from the electricity department, stays quiet for most of the day. “He wanted to hand it to them himself,” Nilesh’s elder brother Abhishek Kumar told TOI. Family members said Nilesh intended to present the portrait around Guru Purnima on July 29, when the family would have celebrated his parents’ wedding anniversary. What was meant to be a moment of laughter, surprise and photographs together has instead become a memory marked by silence. Every stroke of the sketch reflects the young artist’s affection for his parents. While the portrait captures their smiling faces, the couple who inspired it now look at it through tears. Drawing was not merely Nilesh’s profession; it was the language through which he expressed himself. Abhishek shared that Nilesh took to sketching when he was 13 or 14 years old, effortlessly recreating popular cartoon characters such as Motu Patlu, Chhota Bheem and Shinchan. “By the time he was 16, he decided to make a career in animation,” Abhishek said. After completing professional training in animation, Nilesh spent the past three to four years establishing himself as a 3D artist, earning appreciation for his creativity while dreaming of giving his parents a better life. The brothers’ last conversation now haunts the family. “He was checking flight tickets to Kolkata for Durga Puja in October. We chatted about travel plans, family and other things. It was a normal conversation. We never imagined those would be the last words we would ever exchange.” The family has received a compensation cheque of Rs 5 lakh from govt, while the remaining assistance is still under process. “Everything happened so suddenly,” Abhishek said. “People came to help, but we were not in a state to understand anything.” For the family, the sketch is no longer a piece of artwork. It is Nilesh’s final message of love, one that arrived too late. The anniversary gift that was meant to bring smiles to two ageing parents has instead become the last trace of the son who dreamt of making them happy, even in the smallest of ways.

Open Questions

  • How did the Aliganj fire start?
  • What is the status of the remaining government assistance for the family?

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This article was originally published by Times of India.

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