THE drought that actually occurred last year but hit the headlines this year brought into sharp focus

Similar documents
SOCIAL INCLUSION AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT THROUGH MGNREGA

Struggles for Equality

Rural urban migration mystery

Andhra Pradesh: Vision 2020

A critical analysis of the effectiveness of employment policies in Assam. Chandrama Goswami, Dept of Economics, Mangaldai College, Assam

Bharatiya Janata Party

Migrant Child Workers: Main Characteristics

More sustainable hunger eradication and poverty reduction in Vietnam

*Suggestions for State Budget *

Causes of Rural unemployment in India ABSTRACT

THE WATER CONSERVATION AUTHORITY OF INDIA BILL, 2016

SESSION 7: PUBLIC INTEREST LITIGATION IN ENVIRONMENTAL CASES. Public Interest Litigation

Impact of MGNREGA on Socio-Economic Upliftment of the Beneficiaries A Case Study of Pali District of Rajasthan. Doctor of Philosophy

Chapter Eight The Great Depression

Development Dynamics. GCSE Geography Edexcel B Practice Exam Questions and Answers

THE HILL TRIBES OF NORTHERN THAILAND: DEVELOPMENT IN CONFLICT WITH HUMAN RIGHTS - REPORT OF A VISIT IN SEPTEMBER 1996

COMMUNITY RESERVES AND CONSERVATION RESERVES: MORE RESERVE AND LESS COMMUNITY!

SHORT ANSWER TYPE QUESTIONS [3 MARKS]

Gujarat Gaurav Sampark Abhiyan

Planning Commission Model Bill for the Conservation, Protection and Regulation of Groundwater, 2011

SOCIOLOGY (CODE 039) SAMPLE QUESTION PAPER II CLASS XII. Max. Marks 80 Time: 3 hrs.

DÓCHAS STRATEGY

A PREVENTIVE APPROACH TO AVOID POVERTY FROM SOCIETY

URBANISATION AND ITS ISSUES

The Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia

Causes and Impact of Labour Migration: A Case Study of Punjab Agriculture

Improving the situation of older migrants in the European Union

BOOK REVIEW: Sex Trafficking in South Asia Telling Maya s Story

IMPACT OF GLOBALIZATION ON MICRO, SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES IN INDIA. Mr. S. MOHANDASS. Head, Research Department of Commerce,

ITL PUBLIC SCHOOL Pre-SA2 ( ) Social Science Handout Class VIII Subject: Civics CHAPTER- LAW AND SOCIAL JUSTICE

NREGA in Abu Road, Rajasthan

Action at the Frontline, Mandera, Kenya

This document relates to item 4.5 of the provisional agenda

Chapter 3 Notes Earth s Human and Cultural Geography

SPEECH. at the ACP-EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly. St Julian's, 19 June Page 1 of 20

CHAPTER 24: THE NEW DEAL

Note Taking Study Guide DAWN OF THE INDUSTRIAL AGE

The End of Bipolarity

The Transition Penalty: Unemployment Among Recent Immigrants to Canada CLBC Commentary

THAILAND SYSTEMATIC COUNTRY DIAGNOSTIC Public Engagement

SPEECH BY HIS EXCELLENCY HON. MWAI KIBAKI, C.G.H., M.P

Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen,

Water for Domestic Use on Irrigation Cooperative s Agenda

Prof. Bhasker V. Bhatt Civil Engineering Department SCET, Surat

Has Globalization Helped or Hindered Economic Development? (EA)

CH 17: The European Moment in World History, Revolutions in Industry,

Chapter 26: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal

1/24/2018 Prime Minister s address at Asian Ministerial Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction

FINAL/NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION

India Then and Now! By: Ankit Sood Matrikel Nu.:

Great Depression and Canada

Jagtikikarana Sandharbhat Mahatma Gandhijinchya vicharanchi Prasangikta

LITHUANIA S NEW FOREIGN POLICY *

MINISTRY OF COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY

NCERT Class 9th Social Science Economics Chapter 3: Poverty as a Challenge

Helen Clark: Opening Address to the International Conference on the Emergence of Africa

The Future of South Africa by Nelson Mandela

SS7CG3 The student will analyze how politics in Africa impacts the standard of living.

ECONOMIC GROWTH* Chapt er. Key Concepts

The National Movement and Mahatma Gandhi ( )

Committee: Special Committee on the Sustainable Development Goals

HUMAN RESOURCES MIGRATION FROM RURAL TO URBAN WORK SPHERES

GROWTH OF SCHEDULED CASTE POPULATION

Analyze the impact Franklin D. Roosevelt had on the American people after becoming President.

SUSTAINING SOCIETIES: TOWARDS A NEW WE. The Bahá í International Community s Statement to the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development

Dhaka, 10 December 2009

National Farmers Federation

Chapter 12. Services

Alphabet Soup New Deal Programs and Reforms

Hand made change. At Trade Aid we re helping talented people improve their lives through trade

A lot of attention had been focussed in the past

US History The End of Prosperity The Big Idea Main Ideas

Prepared Statement of: Ambassador William R. Brownfield Assistant Secretary of State for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs

Problems Perceived by the Women Workers under MGNREGA in Jaipur District of Rajasthan, India

Rwanda: Building a Nation From a Nightmare

SSUSH17 The student will analyze the causes and consequences of the Great Depression.

Supporting Africa s regional integration: The African diaspora Prototype pan-africanists or parochial village-aiders?

Christian Aid Tea Time and International Tea Day. Labouring to Learn. Angela W Little. September 19 th 2008

TANZANIA. Tanzania. Prevalence and Sectoral Distribution of the Worst Forms of Child Labor 4812

GLOBALIZATION A GLOBALIZED AFRICAN S PERSPECTIVE J. Kofi Bucknor Kofi Bucknor & Associates Accra, Ghana

The Industrial Revolution Begins ( )

Interview with Philippe Kirsch, President of the International Criminal Court *

Interlinking of Rivers in India: Dialogue and Negotiations by National Civil Society Committee

THE MAHARASHTRA GROUNDWATER (REGULATION FOR DRINKING WATER PURPOSES) ACT, 1993

Rural Labor Force Emigration on the Impact. and Effect of Macro-Economy in China

Statement by Mr Tomás Ojea Quintana Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Democratic People s Republic of Korea

Guidelines for CBSE Proficiency Test in Social Science 2011

HISTORICAL BACKGROUND During the British rule in India, the government policy towards industry and business was indifferent. The first century of Brit

President presented the President Color to the Indian Navy's submarine branch

Irrigation Rules, 2056 (2000)

9. Comparative Review of case studies.

Project: ENLARGE Energies for Local Administrations to Renovate Governance in Europe

CLASS IX. SYLLBUS FOR Ist TERM: History-India and the Contemporary World: 1 The French Revolution. 2 Forest society and Colonialism.

Public Policy in Mexico. Stephanie Grade. Glidden-Ralston

Thank you David (Johnstone) for your warm introduction and for inviting me to talk to your spring Conference on managing land in the public interest.

Violation of Refugee Rights and Migration in India

Nine principles that should guide the Green New Deal

Dark secrets of foreign investment in Ethiopia and tears of the poor

Human development in China. Dr Zhao Baige

Bare Acts & Rules. Hello Good People! Free Downloadable Formats. LaLas

Transcription:

Reclaiming Lost Power Saurashtrians Resolve to Make Their Villages Water Sufficient Madhu Kishwar THE drought that actually occurred last year but hit the headlines this year brought into sharp focus the gross mismanagement of natural resources in India due to malgovernance, inefficiency and corruption. We have all been saturated with those depressing stories coming to us through the mass media which itself woke up too late to the coming crisis. However, the good news is that there is a new ferment all over the country with many people declaring: No more of crippling dependence on the government. Citizens are beginning to explore ways of taking charge of their own environment, and expecting the government to either leave them alone or play a supportive role rather than act the tyrannical lord. Not surprisingly, such community initiatives are getting institutionalised in rural areas far more rapidly than in metropolitan cities. Because our villages have been far more callously neglected than urban centres, it has become a matter of life and death for the rural population to regain control over their own lives. In this issue, we introduce our readers to one such important initiative from Gujarat where one individual managed to galvanise a whole community into collective action to combat droughts, and water scarcity. From the signs of it, this is having a powerful ripple effect in many other areas of life too. MATHURBHAI Savani, of the Patel community, comes from village Khopala, Taluka Gadhada, in Bhavnagar district of Gujarat. His family used to own a total of 13 bighas of land. Like many other men from his droughtprone village, he left home a little over twenty years ago in search of a better living. This 38 year old was then still in his teens. He began by taking a job as a low-paid worker in the diamond polishing industry of Surat. Though Mathurbhai had only studied up to Class V, he had inherited the enterprising spirit of his community. So within a few years he set up his own small diamond business which quickly prospered. Soon he brought three of his brothers from the village to join him in expanding it. Currently, his polished diamond exports to Europe are worth more than Rs 100 crores a year. He attributes his success to both hard work and good luck. The diamond polishing trade is dominated by his Patel community from the drought-prone regions of Gujarat. Virtually all those who are now the leading figures in the trade began as manual workers and Mathurbhai Savani Speaking at a conference. slowly gained enough expertise to establish their own businesses. Apart from their enterprise, the Patels from this region are famous for being a closely-knit community. Even after they migrate to far away countries, they tend to keep in close contact with their villages. Abroad, they are known to devise new institutions and associations for reinforcing their ties with one another, even when they get thinly spread out over a large continent like North America. Concerned but Helpless Like many others of his community, even after he became a successful diamond merchant, Mathurbhai regularly visited his village for one month every year at Diwali time for a family reunion. From his elders he had 6 MANUSHI

heard that their village had a plentiful water supply until about forty years ago. The water table used to be fairly high, so that even in the summer months there was no shortage of drinking water. The crisis began when a number of households in the village used the urban earnings of their sons to sink electric powered bore-wells and began drawing ground water for irrigation without recharging the depleting supply by water reharvesting. Earlier, in keeping with the topography and scarcity of rainwater, these areas used to grow coarse grains and other such crops that require small amounts of rainwater and that would yield some output even during droughts. But with the tube-wells making it possible to draw huge quantities of water, crops requiring regular irrigation began to be cultivated. As a consequence, the aquifers below ground were eventually depleted and the water table went down so far that even drinking water became hard to obtain. His awareness of water scarcity in the village never left Mathurbhai because he would experience it afresh every year. He was concerned about the rest of his kin who remained in the village and wanted to help find a solution to the water shortage. The sight of women trudging long distances for small amounts of drinking water, and repeated crop failures, kept troubling him. But it took a long time before he decided to translate his concerns into action. At first, he did not know where to begin. The culture of dependence on the mai-baap sarkar had become ingrained in the area. The government had promised people in these drought infested regions that the state would bring them water as a result of building this or that big dam. Yes, to self help: A public meeting of the Saurashtra Jaldhara Trust. But those promises of new sources of water never materialised. Rajsamdhiyala Inspires Then Mathurbhai heard that village Rajsamdhiyala in Rajkot district had solved its water problem several years earlier. He was told that the water works maintained by the people of this village had converted their dry region into a lush green zone. Inspired by such accounts, Mathurbhai and his close friends arranged for 150 people from Khopala to go and see for themselves how this miracle had been achieved.* That was in early 1998. They came back very inspired from that trip and soon after their return, they formed a committee in their village to combat the water scarcity. This was followed by a large meeting of people from the village who had settled down in Surat in the diamond and other businesses. The Patel network proved extremely useful in giving momentum to the work of water harvesting. Yet, Mathurbhai * In the next issue of MANUSHI we hope to carry a detailed account of how this transformation originated in Rajsamdhiyala village. and his colleagues were determined to follow Rajsamdhiyla example by involving every community in the effort. Eighty per cent of the approximately 5,000 residents of Khopala village are Patels. Harijans, Brahmins, Rabaris and other communities in the village add up to no more than 20 per cent of the population. To make their work really inclusive, the committee included even non-farming families. Mathurbhai explains how they went about making this committee truly representative: In our villages, 40-50 families of a particular jati constitute a kutumb (kinship group). We told them to select one young man from each such kutumb to represent them in the village committee. The village has a total cultivated area of 16,000 bighas. The committee decided to levy Rs 200 per bigha from each family. That totalled to 32 lakh rupees for use as a common fund. Those from the village who had built businesses in Surat added one crore rupees to the fund. In order to ensure the active participation of women, a separate special purpose Mahila Mandal was No. 121 7

also formed. Today the Mahila Mandalhas 1,100 members. All Through Shramdaan Within six months, after carefully charting out and agreeing upon the best prospects for water harvesting in the village, they constructed about 200 check-dams and ten ponds. They also built 22 channels around the village leading in all principal directions and about 200 structures interlinking the channels. The total length of these channels is 58 kilometers. All this work was done through shramdaan - that is voluntary, unpaid labour contributed by the villagers themselves. Non-farmers in the village contributed by digging up one big village pond. A penalty of Rs 50 per person was assessed for each day that people were absent from their assigned communal work. The fines derived from these penalties added up to Rs 20,000. After the first rainfall last year, all their check-dams were filled. By the end of that week all the approximately 550 village wells had been recharged and the water level had risen between 20 and 50 feet. Earlier, the wells were all completely dry. The benefits to the villagers were rapid and substantial. At a time when most regions of Gujarat have experienced severe drought and resulting crop failures, village Khopala has no scarcity - neither of water nor of crops. In fact, output increased dramatically. The village sold agricultural products worth 5.44 crores this year. Earlier, they could achieve such incomes only in years of good rainfall. During the years of poor rainfall, the agricultural output would be worth less than one crore rupees. From Khopala to Saurashtra But Mathurbhai was not content with solving the problem in his own village. The success of Khopala led The regreened and water rich Rajsamdhiyala village which inspired similar work in Saurashtra. him to take on an even more ambitious project. By this time, he had also come to hear about a much larger scale work of Tarun Bharat Sangh (TBS) in Alwar district of Rajasthan. The Tarun Bharat Sangh had acted as a catalyst in promoting water harvesting in scores of villages. This effort led to the recharging of numerous wells and johads (ponds) but also given new life to five completely dead rivers, like the Aravari. These had dried up and dissappeared decades ago. In addition, TBS had succeeded in regreening nearly 250 sq. km. area of land. All this had reportedly contributed to substantial increases in agricultural production and milk yields. So Mathurbhai decided to take his team to go and personally study the work of TBS in order to figure out the dynamics of promoting this work on a macro scale. After having redeemed the pride of their village, now they were ready to redeem their pride as Saurashtrians and take on the task of making the entire region water sufficient. Men and women join shramdaan to make water harvesting structures. 8 MANUSHI

The team came back from Alwar really inspired. Mathurbhai then called a combined meeting of the diamond merchants of Surat, Bhavnagar and Ahmedabad, at which he presented an account of the large benefits enjoyed by his village Khopala, the Rajkot village Rajsamdhiyala and the Alwar region of Rajasthan - all on the basis of their organised and sustained water harvesting and regreening activities. That led to a much larger citizens initiative and the formation of Saurashtra Jaldhara Trust around November 1999. The Trust organised a 325 kilometer longpadyatra of 400 people that traversed through numerous villages of Saurashtra, generating a great deal of enthusiasm for water harvesting and regreening. Impressed by this and similar drought-combat schemes being undertaken by citizens, the Chief Minister of Gujarat announced that any village which could raise 40 per cent of the funds required for a waterharvesting scheme would get the remaining 60 per cent from the government. The Saurashtra Jaldhara Trust has entered into this partnership on a large scale. Since they represent the organised might of the Patel community, they have been able to ensure that the 60 per cent of the funds contributed by the government are reaching the village committees directly and the construction work is undertaken by the villagers themselves rather than through bureaucrats and contractors. In all such cases the work has moved much faster, has cost much less and is of far better quality. Government Proves Inept But in most of those cases where the government took charge of the construction work, the results are shoddy. To quote from a report by Mark Tully who compared the outcome of people managed projects vs Rajendra Singh of Tarun Bharat left and Hardev Sinh Jadeja of Rajsamdhiyala whose work inspired many. government executed projects. One of the less encouraging occasions of my visit was a discussion in the ice-cold VVIP bedroom of the Junagadh Circuit House between BJP workers and the minister appointed to look after the district. The party workers, who had no interest in condemning their own government, said that of the nine dams they had inspected eight were of inferior quality, with very little concrete. The villain of the piece was inevitably the contractor. The workers all agreed that where the dams were built by villagers themselves there was no problem. Later, I went with the BJP workers to inspect a dam under construction just outside the Gir After having redeemed the pride of their village, now they were ready to redeem their pride as Saurashtrians and take on the taks of making the entire region water sufficient. sanctuary. A labourer was plastering a thin sheet of concrete over a construction of mud and stones, whereas the dam should have been entirely concrete... Dams that collapse or leak will also undermine villagers faith in water harvesting, and everyone I met in Gujarat, including politicians and officials, believed that they held the key to replenishing the underground water table... And yet, the government functionaries cannot control their greed or overcome their inefficiency to perform this task efficiently. When People are In-charge However, the water harvesting schemes undertaken by Mathurbhai s Saurashtra Jaldhara Trust are ensuring high quality work because they have taken measures to get each village to take the responsibility for the construction of its own check-dams and ponds. Already, intensive water harvesting and reforestation work has taken off in about 250 villages in Saurashtra, out of a total of about 4,800. The standard the Trust seeks to achieve is Khopala quality - defined as work so perfect that even one drop of rainwater is not allowed to escape harvesting. In each such village they No. 121 9

are constructing a minimum of 40 to a maximum of 400 check-dams, depending on the specific size, population and topography of each location. In approximately another 1,000 villages, less thorough work involving one to 20 check-dams is already under way. They are still able to call upon Surat merchants to contribute a large share to help subsidise the village work because of the emotional bonds these people have with their villages. Among other things, the Trust provides free cement for all the water works. The Jaladhara Trust has already enrolled three lakh members. Mathurbhai is its Chairman. Most of the fund-raising campaigns are implemented by young people. Mathurbhai feels the older people, who have lived through long periods of economic distress, don t part with money for this project as readily as young people, who are more open to new ideas and are more generous. The Mahila Mandal has demonstrated a great deal of enthusiasm for these projects. Women also come for shramdaan in large numbers - not just village women, but also women from city-based families take active part. Reinforcing Village Solidarity The Jaladhara Trust regularly mobilises people through padyatras and mahasammelans. Mathurbhai and his colleagues have been pleasantly surprised to find that joint work on water reharvesting has reinvigorated the eroded unity of the villages. Many old animosities are getting dissolved as people join together for this work, which villagers view as a quasi sacred activity. Rajendra Singh of Tarun Bharat Sangh, who accompanied apadyatm of the Jaladhara Trust, observed that many instances of intrafamily conflicts and fragmentation in the village have been arrested and caste and status differences are being bridged spontaneously through the jaldhara abhiyan. He narrated a couple of instances from his own experience. For example, when they reached a village called Dahesara, which has many high status Durbar Patel families, the yatra leader asked Rajendra Singh to take the lead in approaching that particular community. Rajendra was surprised why he, an outsider, was asked to take the lead. The villagers explained that there was a long history of animosity between Durbar Rajputs and other Patels over some land dispute, which years ago had resulted in the murder of eleven people. The Patels wanted to end the animosity with the Durbar Rajputs and resume social interaction, using this pani yatra as a means to overcome the old animosity. There was a legal case related to the dispute that had dragged on for years in the law courts without any resolution. Rajendra Singh was asked to facilitate this process of reconciliation because the Mathurbhai leading a padyatra. villagers felt that if he went with them and asked the Durbars to participate in the work, they would hesitate to rebuff him because that would amount to insulting a respected guest of the village. Though unsure of the result, Singh agreed to accompany them and try out their strategy. He was happy to see that the atmosphere between the old enemies remained cordial throughout his visit. This became the beginning of a real thaw between the two groups. In another instance, in a different village, during the course of a village meeting, the Durbars and Patels called for the joint cooperation of two warring families who had a murder case going on between them for over a decade. Both families were prevailed upon to resolve their conflict. They took an oath not only to withdraw the court cases but also to bury their enmity. Bridging Rich Poor Divide In Vikalia village in Bhavnagar district the village leaders asked Rajendra Singh to go and personally visit the house of a Barvad caste woman to thank her for contributing Rs. 11,000 from her meagre savings to the work. 10 MANUSHI

Rajendra was surprised that she was being singled out until be heard the explanation. She was from one of the lower castes, while those asking Singh to express their thanks were all Patels. The idea was not only to show special gratitude and respect to people who despite their poverty were contributing generously, but also to encourage greater intra caste collaboration on common needs of the village. Along with the water reharvesting work the Jaldhara Trust also intends to take on reforestation work on a similar scale. I asked Mathurbhai whether, with such a powerful support base, he is interested in entering electoral politics. His answer was categorical: No. What can an MLA do? Very little! MLAs come to us begging for money. I have much greater capacity to do good work for society through our Saurashtra Jaldhara Trust. All this will be ruined if I join electoral politics. I will not demean myself by joining a political party merely to win this or that election. Towards Self Rule It is now being widely acknowledged that our forests began disappearing and water sources polluted or destroyed as the management and control over these were forcibly snatched away from local communities by the rapacious colonial state. This process was not brought to a halt even after we declared Independence from British rule. However, as the ecological crisis becomes unmanageable, even government has had to acknowledge that at least in India, traditional systems of water harvesting organised by self governing communities worked far far better than any of the modern systems of water management and supply devised in the last century. This is being repeatedly demonstrated by numerous initiatives being Urban women join the rural women in the campaign for water. undertaken by village communities in different parts of the country to assert their rights to manage their natural resources. Their success proves that the vision, put forth by Mahatma Gandhi in Hind Swaraj, of India being a society of autonomous village republics is not based on naive romanticism. It characterises the essential ingredients of our civilisation. Its revival will actually make modern democracy become more meaningful, deep-rooted and more functional in our country. The increasing mistrust of the government and the growing desire of people to reclaim their lost powers is likely to strengthen real civil society institutions in our country. Experience all over the country demonstrates that caste conflicts become more endemic in situations of Mathurbhai's work also shows how one can be well rooted in one's caste and biradari and yet not be a casteist. scarcity of natural resources and opportunities. However, non-partisan efforts for common good, when initiated by even a small group of people, spontaneously set into motion unifying processes which promote collaboration and cooperation between different groups. In addition, this sets off far-reaching social and economic changes. Mathurbhai s work also shows how one can be well rooted in one s caste and biradari and yet not be a casteist. This report also illustrates that true democratic participation can arise when various groups and castes collaborate among themselves to work for common interests rather than have the government machinery constantly mediating between them. Over-much dependence on the state engages communities in perpetual competition for status and power. The current forms taken by electoral politics is also adding to social fragmentation and conflicts. In forthcoming issues of MANUSHI we intend to publish other reports on such work in Rajasthan, Gujarat and elsewhere. We invite our readers to send us reports of similar initiatives in different fields from their regions. No. 121 11