The news hits like a bad curry at 3am. Mumbai’s dabbawalas, the Tiffin Titans who have ferried lunchboxes with the precision of a Swiss watch for 130 years, are disappearing. Not gradually, not with a retirement party and a gold watch.
They are vanishing. Poof. Gone.
Like socks in a laundromat. The Tiffin Carriers of India have declared a state of emergency. Five thousand dabbawalas have simply...
evaporated. And who smells lunch on the wind? The British logistics firms.
Oh, yes. They’re circling the Tiffin Carrier carcass like vultures over a dead goat. G4S, DHL, FedEx, they’re all looking at the Mumbai lunchbox routes with the hungry eyes of a man who hasn’t eaten since Heathrow.
They see an opportunity to streamline, to optimise, to bring ‘efficiency’ to the chaos. They want to turn the world’s most beloved lunch delivery system into a spreadsheet. But here’s the thing.
You cannot be late with a dabbawala. No, sir. A dabbawala delivers lunch with the punctuality of a solar eclipse.
A British logistics firm? They’ll deliver your lunch to the wrong office, leave it on the wrong desk, and then charge you for ‘processing’. I can see it now.
Your daal makhani arrives in a jiffy bag, lukewarm, with a QR code. The QR code leads to a customer service chatbot named Barry. Barry says, ‘Your query is important to us.
’ Your query is your lunch. It is important. But Barry is not.
The dabbawala system is a testament to human trust. No technology. No GPS.
No central command. Just a man, a bike, and a colour-coded system that would baffle a quantum physicist. And now they are vanishing.
Where do they go? I have a theory. They have been raptured.
Taken up to the heavens by the Lunch God, Lord Tiffin, for they are too pure for this fallen world. Meanwhile, the British logistics firms are making PowerPoints. ‘Synergy’.
‘Integrated supply chain solutions’. They’ll boil the soul out of Mumbai’s lunch. They will replace the dabbawala’s iconic white cap with a branded polo shirt.
They will slap a tracking number on your tiffin. They will introduce ‘dynamic pricing’ based on demand. And somewhere, a dabbawala is laughing.
Laughing from the heavens. Because you can’t optimise love. You can’t streamline care.
A British logistics firm cannot put a price on the smile of a mother who knows her son will eat hot rotis at 1pm. But they will try. Oh, they will try.
And fail. But in the meantime, we are left with a question: who will carry the lunch? Who will be the new dabbawala?
Perhaps it will be a robot. A drone. A self-driving tiffin car.
Or perhaps the dabbawalas will return. Perhaps they are just on a collective tea break. One can only hope.
For if the dabbawalas truly vanish, we are not just losing a lunch delivery system. We are losing a piece of the human soul. And no amount of British logistics can replace that.
Now, if you’ll excuse me, I need a drink. Preferably a gin and tonic, delivered by a dabbawala. If only.








