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We The People: One Woman바카라™s Campaign To Mobilise Opinion Over Growing Farm Suicides In Punjab

Suicide by her father drove Kiranjit Kaur to educate widows of farm suicides about their rights and eventually built a strong solidarity network.

We The People: One Woman바카라™s Campaign To Mobilise Opinion Over Growing Farm Suicides In Punjab
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Kiranjit Kaur was barely 20 when she saw her father Gurnam Singh바카라™s lifeless body hanging from a tree on their family farm in Punjab바카라™s Jhunir village. This was, just after a white fly infestation had devastated the entire cotton crop in Mansa district. While the family was already saddled with a debt of around Rs 8 lakh, Kaur was bitten by a snake. With the local government hospital lacking medicare facilities, her father had rushed her to a private hospital in Bathinda. Her life was saved only after her debt-ridden father paid a hospital bill of Rs 2 lakh.

바카라œAfter that, he hanged himself as he was finding it very difficult to deal with the growing financial distress,바카라 Kaur tells Outlook, upset that her father didn바카라™t get any help from any quarter. But his suicide brought her face to face with Punjab바카라™s biggest problem post Green Revolution바카라”farm distress. 바카라œWhen I saw even close relatives turning their backs on us, I realised that there are other farming families torn apart by similar circumstances, when people have committed suicide due to growing debt, as agriculture has ceased to be remunerative. I felt that all the distressed families face the same problem, yet everyone is suffering in isolation.바카라

Soon, she started educating widows of farm suicides about their rights, and eventually built a strong solidarity network. A postgraduate in political science, Kaur is planning her doctoral thesis on farm distress. She is the current convener of Committee for Farmers and Families of Agrarian Suicide Victims. 바카라œPeople can get scared of even a needle prick. One can imagine the kind of trauma a farmer undergoes before he decides to end his life,바카라 she says, criticising the government바카라™s apathy towards the plight of small and marginal farmers and landless farm labourers in Punjab. 바카라œA sizable section of society here have extravagant lifestyles. Look at the big fat Punjabi weddings...the sheer wastage of money,바카라 she says. 바카라œThe male farmers dying by suicide are also victims of patriarchy. Men feel they are the sole providers for their families. They see crop failures as their failures. Therefore, they find it beneath their dignity to share it with the women of the family. This mindset needs to change.바카라

Due to her efforts, many farm widows have become articulate. 바카라œWe have held several conferences in the past few years and invited political leaders to listen to the woes of farm suicide widows,바카라 she says, elaborating how her efforts instilled confidence in women like Veerpal Kaur from Ralla village in Mansa district. Veerpal, 43, unsuccessfully contested the 2019 Lok Sabha elections as an independent candidate from Bathinda. 바카라œEven though symbolic, it was a strong statement that a poor widow can challenge the established political parties and the rotten system.바카라

During the protests to scrap the three contentious farm laws, Kaur was at the forefront, mobilising women. Though she is unhappy that the plight of farmers remains unchanged even after the rollback of the laws, she says, 바카라œThe year-long agitation revived hopes that farmers can get their demands met through democratic means.바카라

(This appeared in the print edition as "Farm and Feminism")

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