English Short Stories

Dadi’s Last Piece of Roti

Dadi’s Last Piece of Roti

A grandmother and grandson sharing roti at an Indian family dinner table — moral story about sacrifice
Reading Time: 2 minutes

Every night, the same thing happened at the Sharma family table, and every night, nobody but Vihaan seemed to notice.

Dadi would take one roti fewer than everyone else.

Nine of them sat around the long table — Papa, Chacha, both mothers, three cousins, Dadi, and Vihaan — plates clattering, someone always asking for more subzi, Chachi shouting from the kitchen about the last roti being on its way.

And when the tawa finally emptied and the count came up short, Dadi always said the same thing.

“I am full. Eating too much makes an old woman sleepy.”

Vihaan was eight, but he was not stupid. He had counted the rotis rolled that morning. He had watched the pile shrink around the table, plate by plate, until the basket reached Dadi looking a little too light.

“Dadi, take mine,” he said one evening, pushing his plate towards her.

“No no, beta, you are growing. Eat.”

“You’re always full first,” Vihaan said. “Every day.”

Dadi laughed, the sound soft like tissue paper. “An old stomach doesn’t need what a young one does.”

But that night, Vihaan couldn’t sleep. He kept thinking of Dadi’s hands — how they trembled slightly now when she poured tea, how she’d started resting on the third step instead of climbing straight up to the terrace.

The next morning, he woke early, before even Chachi lit the stove. He found Dadi’s rolling pin, her flour-dusted board, and stood beside her.

“Teach me to make one roti,” he said. “A perfect round one. For you.”

Dadi looked at him for a long moment, flour on her fingers, morning light catching the silver in her hair.

“Why the sudden interest, beta?”

“Because you always give yours away,” Vihaan said. “I want to give one back.”

That evening, when the basket came around and Dadi reached for her usual half-portion, Vihaan placed a roti in front of her first — lopsided, slightly burnt at one edge, made with his own eight-year-old hands.

“This one is yours,” he said. “Only yours. Nobody else touches it.”

Dadi didn’t say anything for a moment. She simply broke off a piece, chewed slowly, and nodded at him the way she used to when he learned to tie his shoelaces for the first time.

“Best roti I’ve eaten in sixty years,” she said.

Vihaan knew it wasn’t true. But he also knew, for the first time, exactly what she had been doing for him every single night — and he wasn’t going to let her do it alone anymore.

📄 Free printable worksheet available below.
Complete the learning activities and download it at the end of this lesson.

📖 Story in Brief
Every night at dinner, Dadi quietly takes less food than everyone else, always insisting she's full. Her grandson Vihaan notices what nobody else does and decides to give something back instead of simply accepting her sacrifice. He learns to make a roti with his own hands, just for her, and finally understands what she has been doing for the whole family all along.
💡 The Lesson Inside
The people who love us most often give up the little things quietly, without ever asking for thanks — so don't wait for a special day to notice them. Say it today.
✨ Words Worth Keeping
Sacrifice
Giving up something for someone else, often quietly.
Trembled
Shook slightly, often from age, cold, or emotion.
Lopsided
Uneven or crooked on one side.
Gratitude
A feeling of being thankful for something someone did.
Portion
A share or part of something, like food.
Silver (hair)
A gentle way of describing grey or white hair, often on elders.
Lit (the stove)
Turned it on or started a fire for cooking.
Chewed
Bit and worked food slowly in the mouth before swallowing.
🌱 Phrases to Remember
Coming up short
Not having enough of something.
Pushed her plate towards
Offered food to someone else by moving your own plate closer to them.
Couldn't sleep
Unable to fall asleep, often due to worry or thought.
For the first time
Something happening that has never happened before.
Give something back
To return kindness or effort after receiving it.
📚 Quick Glossary
Roti
A round, flat Indian bread made from wheat flour, cooked fresh at almost every meal.
Dadi
A Hindi term for paternal grandmother, often a central, beloved figure in Indian households.
Subzi
A general Hindi term for cooked vegetables, usually spiced, served with roti or rice.
Tawa
A flat iron griddle used in Indian kitchens to cook rotis and parathas.
Chachi
A Hindi term for the wife of one's father's younger brother, part of the joint family structure.
🎬 See It in Action
1

Sacrifice - Her mother made many quiet sacrifices so her children could study abroad.

2

Trembled - His hands trembled as he opened the exam results.

3

Gratitude - She wrote a letter of gratitude to her old teacher years later.

🗣️ Say It Right
Sacrifice
/SAK-ri-fyse/
Gratitude
/GRAT-i-tyood/
Lopsided
/LOP-sy-ded/

🎯 Complete the Story Challenges

🧩 Vocabulary Explorer ✏️ Context Architect Timeline Master ✍️ Creative Novelist
Game 1: Word Match ✨ Reward: +10 XP

Vocabulary Matcher

Match the vocabulary word on the left with its correct meaning on the right.

Gratitude
Sacrifice
Lopsided
Trembled
Shook slightly, often from age, cold, or emotion.
A feeling of being thankful for something someone did.
Uneven or crooked on one side.
Giving up something for someone else, often quietly.
Free Reading Comprehension Worksheet

Strengthen your English skills with a printable worksheet based on this story.

Vocabulary Practice Reading Comprehension Critical Thinking Writing Skills
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