Young Engaged Couple Among Air India Crash Victims

It was supposed to be the start of a beautiful new chapter. Hardik Avaiya, 27, and 28-year-old Vibhooti Patel had just returned to India to celebrate their engagement with loved ones. The young couple from Leicester, England, had shared the kind of joyful moment most people dream of — surrounded by family, preparing for a lifetime together.
Just days later, that dream was gone.
On June 12, Air India Flight AI-171 crashed seconds after takeoff from Ahmedabad's Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport. Among the more than 240 lives lost were Hardik and Vibhooti.
A Celebration Cut Short
Hardik and Vibhooti had traveled to the small town of Umbhel in Gujarat for a brief 10-day visit to celebrate their engagement. According to Darshan Patel, an elected official in Umbhel, they were preparing to return home to the U.K. when they boarded Flight AI-171 bound for Gatwick.
But the Boeing 787 never made it far. Moments after leaving the runway, it plummeted into a residential neighborhood, killing almost everyone on board — including 230 passengers and 12 crew members, according to Air India.
'We Just Cried'
Friends back in Leicester were on their way to pick up the couple when the news broke. Dhaval Patel, a close friend of Hardik, was en route to Gatwick Airport when he received a phone call about the crash.
"So we immediately checked the ticket and matched the flight number, and we just cried," he told the BBC.
The couple's deaths hit the local community especially hard. Both were active members of Leicester's Shree Hanuman Temple, where Hardik volunteered as a secretary. Friends described him as humble and reliable, someone who preferred to stay out of the limelight.
"He was a model devotee and volunteer because he had selfless service," said Rajesh Patel, another member of the temple community, according to the BBC. "He was jovial, liked to crack a joke. He was dedicated, hard working, very pleasant."
Building a Life Together
Patel was a physiotherapist pursuing her master's degree at Leicester College, while Avaiya worked in a warehouse. Though his family lived in India, he had built a tight-knit community around his temple in Leicester.
"When [Avaiya] left, he asked the staff if the temple needed anything bringing back, that's the kind of person he was," Dhaval said, remembering Hardik's generosity, according to PEOPLE.
Their love story, so full of promise, had only just begun. For friends and family, the loss was more than tragic — it was incomprehensible.
The Sole Survivor and a Community in Mourning
Of the 242 on board, only one British man survived. The crash claimed the lives of citizens from India, Britain, Portugal, and Canada.
Back in Leicester, prayer services and hymn festivals were held at the temple to honor the couple. Friends remembered them as family.
"Events like this — people come together and give their respects and it gives us some sort of a release from the feeling of shock and feeling distraught," Dhaval said, according to the BBC.
An Empty Future
For a couple who had everything ahead of them — love, education, community, and dreams — the tragedy leaves a haunting absence. It's a reminder of how suddenly joy can turn to grief, and how closely our futures are tied to forces beyond our control.
Friends of the couple spoke of struggling to process a reality that still doesn't feel real.
"It's a feeling of helplessness, emptiness, normally if something goes wrong, we can sort things out but this has been very difficult," said Mr. Patel, according to the BBC.
In their memory, Leicester's temple community continues to come together — not just to mourn, but to celebrate the love and generosity Hardik and Vibhooti brought to everyone around them.
References: A Young Couple Got Engaged and Was Ready to Spend the Rest of Their Lives Together. Days Later, They Died in the Air India Crash | Newly engaged couple among Air India crash victims