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Where is the nearest Dalit village?
2010-11-18 11:50:00
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So long as this question is asked in India, there is no India shining,
India emerging, or as President Obama said in New Delhi, a week ago -
India emerged. I am in village Gaunpura, an hour's drive from Patna.
But to get to this village was an adventure in itself. The highway
from Patna is perfectly laid; the traffic is orderly as compared to
Punjab or Haryana. Then we turn into towns.
There is filth everywhere. Rotting mounds of garbage, which has
probably never been cleared. It just keeps piling up, layer upon
layer. The gutters are overflowing. Man and pig cohabit. The stench is
unbearable. I walk gingerly placing one foot ahead of the other
avoiding animal faeces. I look around, nobody other than I have a
cloth covering his or her nose. It appears worse than many similar
towns that I have been to, in the rest of India. This seems to be the
same Bihar I have visited earlier. Same problem of a lack of civic
facilities here too, just like before, and just like in UP, Orissa,
Andhra Pradesh. Any state for that matter.
The people seem oblivious to the smell and the filth around them. And
amidst all this decay, there stands a bright red pandal (decorative
tent) with a garishly attired statue of the Mother Goddess. It is the
most important festival of Chatt and people of all castes are allowed,
by tradition, to participate in the festivities.
Tradition and modernity, vulgar modernity, mingle outrageously. 'Munni
badnaam hui', a raucous song from the latest Bollywood film 'Dabbang'
blares from loud speakers. I take my pictures like any big city
dweller, searching for colour in India but finding squalor instead.
Arvind Adiga's The White Tiger comes to mind. The stark contrast
between rural and semi-urban India on the one hand, and the glass
skyscrapers of Gurgaon, Haryana, on the other. Yes, Rahul Gandhi is
probably right; there are two Indias, and more.
My destination is a Mahadalit village. Now, the term Dalit has roots
in Sanskrit where the root 'dal' means 'to split, crack, open'. Dalit
has thus come to mean things or persons who are cut, split, broken or
torn asunder, scattered or crushed and destroyed. The present usage of
the term Dalit goes back to the nineteenth century, when Marathi
social reformer, Mahatma Jyotirao Phule used it to describe outcastes
and untouchables as the oppressed and the broken victims of our
caste-ridden society.
But I'm deeply fascinated by the term Mahadalit at many levels. That
there is a term called Mahadalit. Although it can be literally
translated as "Mega Dalits", what does it really mean - the blessed
among the Dalits or the most depressed section among the Dalits? I am
told it is the latter --- the most deprived of the deprived.
Mahadalit is a term created with great political fanfare in 2007, when
the Nitish Kumar Government set up the Mahadalit Commission to
identify Mahadalits, ostensibly for a better targeting of schemes for
their uplift and development.
According to the Commission, there were three criteria of inclusion:
literacy rates, placement in services and social stigma. The
Commission identified 18 of Bihar's 22 Dalit castes as Mahadalit. The
four groups that were excluded were: Jatavs and Paswans, together
accounting for more than 60 per cent of Bihar's Scheduled Caste (SC)
population; and Dhobis and Pasis, the two groups considered relatively
better off among Dalits. In 2008, Pasis and Dhobis were also included
in the Mahadalit list. In 2009, the Jatavs followed them into the
burgeoning Mahadalit ranks, leaving out only the Paswans.
In Gaunpura, I am shocked that the Mahadalits live separately than
people of other castes, even other Dalits. Hadn't Bihar changed? TV
programmes have been telling us so. So my cameraman and I get off the
highway into 'kuchcha' roads, drive over a snake, and ask "Bhaiyya,
yahan Dalit basti kahan hai?"(Where is the Dalit village)? Blank. I
repeat, "Dalit basti". No response. Then my cameraman whispers,
"Harijan basti". We get the directions. Gaunpura is a little hamlet
where about 30 families live in abject poverty.
They are well aware of their rights, that they are entitled to housing
under the Indira Awas Yojna programme, the Mahatma Gandhi National
Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) should grant them minimum
days of work.
Some of them who worked under this scheme like Ramdev were not paid
for 11 days of labour that he did, out of the 60 days he was employed
under the MGNREGA. He has been fighting with the authorities to get
that money.
Another says he was thrown in jail when he asked for his complete
wages. Bijay Pawan says fake MGNREGA booklets are handed to the
villagers to sign in their attendance and then they were cheated off
their wages. Uma Devi is completely illiterate, but has cast her vote
a few days back. She says that it is to teach a lesson to those who
should have built a house for her under a central government scheme,
but didn't do it.
I visit another 'home' of sorts. Here, 18-year-old Chand is making cow
dung cakes to be used as fuel for cooking. Chand was pulled out of
school when she was in the seventh grade because her older brothers
would not send her to the next village to attend high school. Has she
heard of the state government scheme, I ask her, which entitles her to
a cycle so that she can get to a school safely and quickly? With a shy
smile, Chand says that her brothers would never allow it because she
would have to cycle past an upper caste village.
I drive out to Shahjahanpur, a Hindu upper caste village. The contrast
seems stark. The roads cut at right angles; there is round the clock
electricity, clean yards and brick-and-mortar homes. The men wear
footwear and vests over trousers, unlike in Gaunpura. The women wear
synthetic sarees and jewellery. The children are studying in Delhi or
Singapore. I spot some Maruti cars and one Honda city as well! There
is cable TV connection in all homes. The Dalits live outside the
village, and no Muslim family resides in this village called
err...Shahjahanpur.
Dabbang! This is straight out of the latest Bollywood potboiler
Dabbang, it seems. When I ask whom they voted for, pat comes the
reply, "Nitish Kumar and the BJP...he has reduced lawlessness in the
area. We can go out at night without being scared of being kidnapped."
"But what about the Naxalite problem," I ask. "Oh that is only in the
poor areas, you know where there is no development." Hmm..So there is
an area of complete darkness, some area of substantial darkness and
some semi-dark areas in the 'area of darkness' known as Bihar.
Anecdotes may not be evidence but they do tell a story. Last week, in
a village near Patna, a 55-year-old Dalit was beaten to death.
Retaliatory attacks by Dalits led to several arrests. Lal Babu Ram had
walked through the fields of an upper caste landowner. Some say he
refused to work in the landowner's fields. Babu Ram is dead. We will
never know the truth.
Reporters, who travel with the chief minister during his campaign
tours, have filed reports that it is development and not caste, that
is the main electoral plank this time in Bihar. This is just spin.
Politicians have promised development in every election held in Bihar.
Even today, development doesn't trump caste in Bihar. The choice is
not between development and caste. Caste remains a social and
political reality in Bihar, which no political leader --- from Nitish
Kumar to Rahul Gandhi --- can afford to ignore. A Brahmin, Rajput or
Bhumihar (upper caste Hindu) does not stand a chance of becoming the
Chief Minister of Bihar. In the same vein, the empowerment of the poor
among the backward castes is still a long way off.
Villagers want bijli, sadak and pani (electricity, roads and water).
Every election, it is the same demand, and the same promise. The
message is not new. What is different is the style of delivery. Nitish
Kumar, the current chief minister doesn't indulge in histrionics as
his immediate rival Laloo Yadav. He has indubitably brought about a
change in Bihar, at least in some parts of Bihar. But decades of
misgovernance have made corruption and criminalisation a part of the
system.
Things are changing in Bihar since I was last here. The change, though
perceptible, is very slow. Bihar needs to change faster, and change
equitably for the complete society. If I, in my lifetime, come to a
place in Bihar and don't have to ask, "Where is the Dalit village?"
I'd say India has emerged. Else, I am not going to take even President
Obama's word for it. By Smita Prakash (ANI)