Advertisement
X

Braving Death, Lakhs Of Migrants Return Home To A Tense Future. Will There Be Light After Darkness?

At least a 100 died on their desperate journey back home. India바카라s rural economy will be tested when lockdown is lifted

How do you trace the outlines of pain on a gigantic, subcontinental scale바카라a cartography of pain, if you like? Take as your sketching ink some extremes of the human condition. As it happens, it바카라s available in plenty in the real world. The basic facts will do. On May 23, a 48-year-old migrant labourer died on the Shramik Express바카라minutes before the train from Mumbai pulled into the last station, Varanasi. A fabled last station, civilisationally. But why did Jokhan Yadav die? First, there was the heat. Then, he had gone without food or water for over 60 hours, as he moved over the northern Indian plains, like lakhs of others, trying to reach his hometown Jaunpur. No food or water was served on the train during the entire journey. And stick-wielding GRP personnel wouldn바카라t let anybody get down from the train. It thus became, in a perversion of how it was intended, a moving concentration camp.

Now take such a picture and paint it again and again, or photocopy it a few million times for efficiency. Then we can begin to fathom pain that comes in the size of a country. Of course, given the swiftness with which agony is being cast as heroism, Jokhan too may have been hailed as an icon of endurance, if he had survived. For, trauma is also felt by the classes that have occasion to consume this explosion of dismal news along with their takeway food, delivered by gloved hands, and Dalgona coffee바카라and still have appetite left over for messianic signs of heroism. Only the softest nudge is required. Ask Jyoti Kumari, the 15-year-old who cycled 1,200 km from the parody spires and glass boxes of Gurgaon to her real world바카라Darbhanga in Bihar바카라with her ailing father on the pillion. The Cycling Federation of India offered her a trial! The girl refused the offer citing the primacy of her studies. What can connect the pain in her limbs, the unrequited hero fetish of Indians who can afford to stay locked down, and the sparse economy of north Bihar that her family had fled in the first place? What brand of sociology can unpack the paradoxes?

Something must. For, now we have an embarrassment of riches in terms of samples. India has turned into a giant lab of extreme sociology ever since the lockdown happened: lakhs of labourers in the cities made a dash for their homes, often hundreds of miles away. Braving바카라not braving, suffering바카라heat, hunger and the assault of police batons. On foot, on cycles, on rickety rickshaws, often crossing forests and rivers. At least a hundred died in accidents, run over by trains, hit by speeding trucks, or when their vehicles overturned. Some succumbed to sheer exhaustion바카라in all the glory of the Indian summer.

Photograph by Tribhuvan Tiwari

Amrit Kumar, all of 25, suffered a heat stroke while travelling on the back of a truck, from Ahmedabad to his native village in UP바카라s Basti. His friend from the village, Mohammed Saiyub, got down with him midway and took him to a hospital, but the severe dehydration proved fatal. Other passengers had urged Saiyub to leave the friend. In a sane society, this would have been a story of hardy friendship, but in our minefield of a society, it attained the semantics of religious amity. Amrit, ironically named in retrospect, leaves behind those who had conferred that name on him: his not-so-able-bodied father and mother, besides four younger siblings.

Advertisement

Among those millions in Brownian motion, there were those who made it home and those who could not. There was a third kind too: the likes of Saiyub, who reached home but marked by such deep loss that the torment of the journey paled in comparison. Ram Pukar Pandit, whose weeping face bec­ame a symbol of migrant misery, reached home but could not see his year-old son even in  death바카라he hadn바카라t seen the child in life either. The little body was flown down the waters of the Budhi Gandak by the time he reached.

The loss and the voiding will be evened in the fullness of time. For now, they, and their compatriots in suffering, have reached the villages where they feel safe, and protected, and as Egyptian writer Naguib Mahfouz noted, where all their attempts to escape cease. Out of four crore migrant labourers, 75 lakh have returned homes, we were informed last week. For those who have crossed the hump, questions of more earthly character loom large. What will they do in their villages and towns, the very places they left for reasons of want?

Advertisement

They have the promise of an infinitely basic meal at home, but their needs will mutate. The lockdown might lift soon, at least partially, but will those scarred by this summer ever return? At the other end, the comfort and cushion of home might wear out soon too, and the limitations of the village economy might start gnawing at them. For some, it could be a question of if, but for most, it바카라s a question of when. They are merely waiting for an opening.

Photograph by Apoorva Salkade

Why? Avinash Kumar, assistant professor at JNU바카라s Centre for Informal Sector and Labour Studies, takes us back to the basic driver of migration: the local economy, deficient and unequally distributed, is unable to sustain its working population. 바카라They are forced to go out and work. There바카라s also social mobility: better job, better education, better quality of life. So there바카라s forced mig­ration as well as that driven by a pull.바카라 Mostly, he says, it바카라s the landless and small and marginal farmers who migrate to cities. 바카라Within those classes, we see people from all castes moving. The more privileged castes, however, have a greater degree of choice in work because of their social capital. You won바카라t usually find a savarna carrying bricks at a construction site. You are more likely to find them working as security guards,바카라 says the professor.

Advertisement

Back in the village, one new variable is NREGA: the numbers opting for work under the social security scheme are quite telling. As a basic safety net, it guarantees 100 days of work and a daily maximum wage of Rs 220 to every person in a village. In 50 days beginning April 1, NREGA received applications from 35 lakh new workers across India. Compare with financial year 2019-20: in all its 365 days, there were only 15 lakh new applicants.

The figures are, in a real sense, a statement on the terrible paucity of work options in rural India. It바카라s not only the returnees, even locals who are out of work because of the lockdown are opting for it. Two weeks ago, the Centre pumped in Rs 40,000 crore to strengthen NREGA, in addition to the exi­sting budget of Rs 61,000 crore. In the usual scheme of things, NREGA is often seen only as a means of supplementary income and a viable opt­ion for women who can바카라t go out of the village for work for a number of reasons. It didn바카라t stand up for contest as a primary option because a) the wages are considerably low as compared to city wages, and b) it gives only 100 days of work whereas cities offer plentiful, if irregular, work throughout the year. But in this Covid-bitten season, it has become an option of the last resort.

Advertisement

Rajasthan has the highest number of NREGA workers at the moment: 40.3 lakh, as of May 26. In the first week of March, that stood at only 10 lakh, then fell further to 62,000 by mid-April. That was because guidelines weren바카라t clear on NREGA during the first lockdown (March 25-April 14), which res­ulted in low labour engagement.

But the second lockdown guidelines made it very clear that NREGA work could be opened in non-containment zones. 바카라The numbers have soared since then,바카라 says Purna Chandra Kishan, NREGA commissioner, Rajasthan. He attributes Rajasthan바카라s top rank in enrolment바카라despite having only 1.07 crore job cards바카라to better implementation. UP, on the other hand, has 1.83 crore job cards but lags behind in the numbers enrolled. 바카라Of the 10-11 lakh labourers who have returned to Rajasthan, 7-8 lakh are already working under NREGA,바카라 says Kishan.

The scheme바카라s success in Rajasthan could also be ascribed to the state being the karmabhoomi of the Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathan (MKSS), a people바카라s organisation that spearheaded the campaign for NREGA legislation. Aruna Roy, one of its oldest members, had in an interview to Outlook earlier this month suggested that the government needs to ensure a minimal level of livelihood and income security to labour, farmers and workers in the informal sector, and that NREGA was an obvious tool for it. 바카라There is no alt­ernative to ensuring a regular cash flow to all those affected. The Employment Guarantee Act would provide work with dignity, and perhaps be the most inexpensive way to rebuild a shattered economy,바카라 she said. Roy had also put forward ano­ther interesting idea. 바카라바카라an Urban Employ­ment Guarantee should also be put in place. The shock of the lockdown, and the loss of employment, will be countered only with guaranteed tenure and security of income to help persuade workers to return to their former places of work,바카라 she said.

Returning also means forgetting the injustices. Being sprayed with chemicals, being cooped up for days without even food in ad-hoc quarantine centres and errant trains바카라indeed, their trains being cancelled by chief ministers when wealthy realtors wanted plentiful 바카라supply바카라 of labour. But when have they not forgotten바카라or should we use the moral word, 바카라forgiven바카라? Many are not even angry with the government; their sense of rights and citizenship too have been economised by the economy of their resources. That바카라s the other paradox. Are the ordinary days in the lives of a migrant worker significantly better than these days of lockdown? Their years have been filled with the hardest living바카라the naturalness with which they responded to the crisis, millions opting to walk and cycle for hundreds of miles, speaks of familiarity with physical extremes. Enduring injustice too was perhaps a way of life for them. It was only the accumulated mass of it that made it visible to the privileged classes. Often, the shock and outrage belongs there. As does any sense of the collective betrayal of rights.

***

650km Mukesh Maurya,22, a daily wage labourer, travelled from Delhi to reach Musafirkhana, his village in UP바카라s Amethi district, 650 km away. He set off on March 28, determined to be home to see his baby being born. It took many hours of walking, more hours of waiting and three gruelling, crowded bus rides. 바카라I reached just in time. My wife was in labour and we had to get an ambulance to take her to hospital,바카라 Maurya said.

100km Migrant labourer Jatin Ram바카라s pregnant wife, Bindia, who walked over 100 km from Ludhiana, delivered a girl child after reaching Ambala in Haryana on May 23. But the baby died shortly after birth. It was the first child of the couple in their early 20s. They were on the way home in Bihar.

ALSO READ

Show comments
KR