Instead of rushing back to Canada, Guri stays for three months. He learns the old ways of farming from the last surviving farmer in the village, a 70-year-old woman named Mai. He starts a small YouTube channel called “The Last Khet” —not for money, but to record the songs, the soil, the stories. Within weeks, it goes viral among the Punjabi diaspora. People start sending seeds, tools, even memories.
When Guri arrives, the village feels smaller. His old room is untouched—his cricket trophy still dusty on the shelf. At the hospital, Bauji whispers, “The field is dying, son. But I wasn’t sad about the crops. I was sad you stopped believing this land could ever be enough for you.” sad punjabi movies
Bauji recovers enough to sit under the old banyan tree and watch Guri work. One evening, Guri asks, “Bauji, was I a bad son?” Instead of rushing back to Canada, Guri stays