Updated On: 05 July, 2020 08:10 AM IST | Mumbai | Aastha Atray Banan
It is not just daily wage workers whove left Mumbai by the droves. Musicians, design consultants and amateur actors are coming to terms with having to leave the city

Ritika Kothari, who hasn't lived with her parents since she was 18, moved back to her Nagpur home. She is saving the Rs 85,000 rent she was splitting with a flatmate
One of the worst health crisis the world has seen also threw up an impossible social challenge for India, when daily wage workers denied food and work in the cities that they had made home, took to the highways to walk back hundreds of kilometres to their villages and towns.
Last week, the railways announced that the last special train arranged for migrants to return home had left Mumbai after ferrying lakhs over two months.