
Daily Wage Worker Feeds 300 Stray Cows for 7 Years
After working all day to support himself, Gautam Yadav spends every evening collecting leftover rotis door-to-door to feed 300 stray cows in Berunda, India. For seven years, this daily ritual has turned into a community effort that keeps hundreds of animals from going hungry.
Every evening in Berunda, India, Gautam Yadav finishes a full day of hard labor and immediately starts his second shift. But this one doesn't pay a single rupee.
For the past seven years, he's walked door to door collecting leftover rotis that families set aside for him. His cart fills up quickly as neighbors now keep flatbreads ready, knowing exactly where they're headed.
Around 300 stray cows and calves depend on what happens next. Gautam wheels his loaded cart through town, stopping at roadsides and open fields where hungry animals wait.
There's nothing flashy about his routine. No social media posts, no fundraising campaigns, no requests for recognition. Just a man who couldn't stand watching animals dig through garbage for scraps.
As a daily wage worker, Gautam knows what it means to worry about the next meal. Some days, every rupee matters for his own survival. Yet he's never let financial uncertainty stop him from showing up for the animals counting on him.

Sunny's Take
What makes Gautam's story so moving isn't just his compassion. It's that he gives from a place of having little himself.
While he works to feed himself, he simultaneously works to feed hundreds of others. The physical toll alone is remarkable after long days of manual labor, his evenings disappear into service.
His quiet dedication has sparked something beautiful in Berunda. Neighbors who once might have tossed leftover rotis in the trash now save them carefully. What started as one man's mission has become a shared community value.
Gautam also takes care to remove any plastic or harmful waste from the food before distribution. He's protecting these animals not just from hunger, but from the dangers that often come with scavenging.
The people of Berunda have come to know his routine so well that some prepare extra rotis just for his evening rounds. His consistency has built trust and inspired others to see stray animals as beings worthy of care rather than nuisances to ignore.
In a world obsessed with grand gestures and viral moments, Gautam reminds us that real change often looks ordinary. It's showing up when you're tired, giving when you have little, and caring when no one's watching.
One evening at a time, one roti at a time, he's making sure 300 animals don't go to sleep hungry.
More Images
.png)
%2Fenglish-betterindia%2Fmedia%2Fmedia_files%2F2026%2F06%2F25%2Fgautam-yadav-feeding-strays-2026-06-25-17-39-24.png)


Based on reporting by The Better India
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
Spread the positivity!
Share this good news with someone who needs it