In late March 2020, the national highways number 19, 65, and 48 branching out of Delhi, Patna, Mumbai, Bangalore, and Kolkata were crammed with a different kind of traffic바카라 instead of the rustle of rolling rubber on the scorching asphalt, a thud of marching human feet, a clatter of trolly suitcases, push carts, bicycles, and make-shift wheelchairs carrying the young and the elderly met the curious eyes of the onlookers, let alone the news-hungry camera lenses.
The cars took a break from the roads; and the roads became migrant highways. The images travelled faster than the virus that put them there in the first place. From the Grand Trunk Road to NH16, these are the highways of the footloose labour바카라to use the words of Dutch sociologist Jan Breman바카라 of conquerors, pilgrims, traders, horsemen, migrants and vagrants.
Critics dubbed it as the greatest movement of people since the partition, some regarded it as a humanitarian crisis, but for many, it was a failure of imagination on part of the policy makers. The images of the throngs of hungry bodies, swollen feet, dehydrated infants, and emaciated men carrying loads double their weight invited, among others, what John Rawls would call, moral feelings. Unlike non-moral emotions such as jealous, rage, or spite, moral feelings are based on our inner impulse for justice, and have significant uses to public reason바카라indignation and guilt of those watching from the safety of their homes.
For the scholars in mobility and migration studies, these 바카라homes바카라 of ours are no more than the markers of immobility; the signs of social stasis in a runaway world. Those who do not venture beyond homes, as the late Edward Said has passionately argued, tend to align their ideology with those of freeloaders, conquerors, raiders, nativists and fanatics. But migrants and exiles are those who learn to be both homeless at home and at home in the world. By virtue of being on the margins of their host societies, they develop a knack for moving away from the gravitas of power towards the periphery, 바카라where you see things that are usually lost on minds that have never traveled beyond the conventional and the comfortable.바카라 (Edward Said, Intellectual Exile: Expatriates and Marginals)
But in the Indian media, the COVID migrants themselves were neither at the centre nor the centre of the debate, though their photos were. The images were used to conjure up the usual ideological suspects바카라the left, the right and the liberals. The left did their thing바카라blame the State for its apathy towards the migrants. The State blamed it on the 바카라fake news바카라 for triggering panic. The liberals were moved by the images they shared on their WhatsApp groups and retweet handles; sand artists crafted sculptures and songwriters wrote dirges.
For the average onlooker, though, it wasn바카라t quite clear what they should do with these images, and what sort of emotions they바카라d felt, or should feel. But what was clear, for many, was that something did not feel right about the migrants바카라 foot march under the searing sun in an age of wheel power. It did not feel right that a seventeen-year-old boy had to walk from Bengaluru for twenty-five days to reach his village in Gorakhpur district, with scabbed and swollen feet in worn out slippers; it did not feel right that a fifteen-year-old girl should cycle 1,200 kilometres from Gurgaon to Bihar to bring her sick father home; it did not feel right that the migrants should be sprayed with disinfects and be treated like pests; and it did not feel right that the only shelter they could find along their journey was the exposed roofs of the traffic bridges.
Beyond the ideological blame game of who was right and who was wrong, and beyond the political bickering of the ruling and the Opposition, what could the plight of the migrant workers teach us바카라us, the readers; us, the consumers of the images; us, the homed and homely with sufficient wheel power to allay the pain, and avert the tragedy of the foot-bound migrants바카라and what sort of ethical, affective injustices and enabling feelings it might expose us to?
Let me drift my focus away to the migrants of other nations to bring my point home. If there is anything the twentieth-century migration could teach us바카라especially those of us who dangerously flounder in, and flirt with the ideological staple of stable, fixed, originary and organic homes, those of us imprisoned by the inertia of immobility바카라it would be this: learn to leave our homes a little, as epitomised in the German philosopher Theodor W Adorno바카라s ethical maxim 바카라it is part of our morality not to feel at home in one바카라s home바카라. (Theodor Adorno, Minima Moralia)
Does this mean we should have left the sanctuary of our homes during the pandemic and joined the migrants in solidarity for a day or two, in their long walk to freedom? That is not the implication of Adorno바카라s call for metaphysical homelessness; it is the fiction of organic homes we are so invested in that produce the homeless and nationless others in the first place.
This homelessness is more about the lessness of our homes than the lack of a home, for it is neither simply a despairing fate nor a damaged condition of those on their feet and flight. Instead, it is an ethical dictum to do away with the idea of providing large shelters to the homeless and turn the whole world into a large homeless shelter. This radical idea of erasing the distinction of home and homelessness through radical effacement of foreignness (and homelessness) is what the contemporary migrant condition calls for.
I wish to draw attention to the installation work of the South African artist William Kentridge in this regard. The work in question is called Shadow Procession; behind a white-lit canvas, the dark shadows of migrant and refugee figures stage a procession바카라a worker with his tools, a wedding party on the go, an Ebola patient on the back, a dead child in arms, two prosthetic legs and a flailing crutch, an overbearing plough, the dangling carcass of an animal, each body carrying what belongs to them, and they sing, they march, they dance, they turn the tide, they kill, and they carry the house on their shoulder, they carry the city, and then they carry the whole civilisation on their back: 바카라All of history being carried on heads and shoulders and feet바카라. (Processional Ethics, Homi K Bhabha on William Kentridge's More Sweetly Play the Dance, Artforum, October 2016)
There are several affective trajectories to be traced from this poignant edict of Kentridge. The COVID migrants are the epitome of history-carrying subjects between their heads and shoulders and feet in gunny sacks. They are the stark reminder of our intertwined histories and pickled pasts; how vagrant and porous the trails of their footsteps had been before our regimes of home and immobility kicked in바카라be they in the name of nation, tribal or linguistic boundaries. There were many misconception that many of the COVID migrants from the megacities are returning to their 바카라homes바카라바카라their villages. This could be farther from the truth; most villages in the Ghaziabad district, or the Nalanda district of Bihar, or even the famous Palamur labourers from Telangana, would not consider their villages 바카라barely kept alive by the overwhelming presence of the elderly, past their prime on their feet바카라as their 바카라homes바카라.
On many occasions, the villagers, fearing infection, did not allow the migrant returnees to enter the village. So much for homecoming! And for many, suicide was a better option than the prospect of returning to villages with hardly any prospects, which made it all the more exigent to find a sense of home in flight, and in their refuged shelters in Mother India바카라s underbelly.
We have heard multiple outcries of the migrants on the road바카라바카라we don바카라t want to be on the roads, but if we don바카라t leave now, hunger will kill us, let alone the virus바카라. These are the migrants who are neither home in their villages, nor at home in their new settlements. They are at home everywhere and homeless everywhere. They are at home wherever they can perch the gunny sack of their entire history 바카라 reduced to a handfull of belongings 바카라 and find the means to stave off starvation.
Does this mean that we, the serene subjects of immobility, must emulate the sorry condition of their homelessness? That would hardly be the solution. But the least we could do is make our homes less homely by opening them to the foreigner and the stranger, thereby learn 바카라not to be at home in one바카라s home바카라. Even better is to become the participant of transit migrancy, as it is known in South America, where the locals provide en route migrant caravans temporary shelter and support and help them reach their destination (Alejandra CĂĄrdenas, 'A Pueblo'Â that Walks Together바카라Š University of Essex, 2018)
Such ethical and affective gesture(s) on parts of the host and host cities may have prevented the many migrants setting themselves on the perilous journey to their villages in the first place. Rather than relegating our responsibility to 바카라empathy fatigue바카라, or desensitisation of the other바카라s suffering, we could have prevented the refuge of those who carry our city바카라s refuse, of those who carry the entire civilisation on their backs:
"foot power remains, in the twenty-first century, the motor of movement 바카라Š the foot power of refugees fleeing, of populations moving across Africa, of displaced people crossing borders at the end of World War II and during our own migration crises in Eritrea, Iraq, Syria, Greece, the Mediterranean. All of history being carried on heads and shoulders and feet." (Bhabha)
The poetic truth of Bhabha바카라s words is almost tragical바카라for the COVID migrants, foot power prevails over the wheel power of modernity, not because they chose to walk, but for many the public transport (fares of Rs 1,500-3,000) was beyond their means. Yet, it is in transit, being on foot, being caught up in the regimes of waiting바카라waiting for food, waiting for security cardon to clear, waiting for news, waiting for the transportation to arrive바카라that social bonds, trust, the spirit of a community and the capacity of new public sphere emerge.
Consider, for instance, the so-called road families in South American migrant caravans (Alejandra CĂĄrdenas, 'A Pueblo'바카라Š), which are on the move along with children, are likely to bond and share resources with other migrants with children. It is on the road, being on the flight, that migrants find company, companionship, and matters of trust become paramount than they would in the presumed safety of our homes.
But are we to say that our homes are free of oppression, repression, depression, patriarchy, domestic pathos, sibling rivalries, caste feuds, clan wars, internal hierarchies and inverted colonialisms? The opposite, indeed, is the case바카라it is because of the troubles at home that most migrants find roads to be safer than homes, and waters safer than land. (Warsan Shire바카라s poem 바카라Home바카라 and Polly Pallister Wilkins 바카라Walking, Not Flowing바카라)
It is thus no wonder that the COVID migrants of India, like all other involuntary migrants, move in throngs, in overloaded trucks and boats, as if the physical act of being crammed together is a safety mechanism that produces corporal intimacy and affinity:
바카라in contrast to modernity바카라s quest for faster, more convenient, more efficient modes of travel to overcome the limits of the body as it encounters and moves through space, the migrant caravan바카라s mode(s) of travel바카라walking, stopping, starting, bus hopping, sitting, waiting, sleeping바카라bring into sharp relief the ways that for those excluded from privileged mobility regimes, the body is in intimate concert with the material world it encounters.바카라 (Polly Pallister-Wilkins)
In turn, these material worlds that the migrants encounter transform the infrastructural grids laid out by the State(s) to contain the movement of its citizenry, and carve out new routes of movement through forests, rivers, mountains and rugged terrain often at a great cost to their safety and even lives, like the deaths of sixteen migrants sleeping on the railway tracks in Aurangabad district in June 2020.
Many of my friends and academic colleagues raised logical questions like 바카라were the migrants so suicidal (바카라stupidity바카라 was the implied suggestion) to sleep on the railway tracks?바카라 But logic alone cannot explain why almost 8,700 migrants died on the railway tracks in .
Instead of blaming the exhausted, half-dazed migrants who collapsed, thinking that they would be safer on the tracks than the roads patrolled by the police바카라like waters were safer than land, and roads safer than homes바카라they should be questioning both the absent State and the absent state of our solidarity that did not venture beyond our gated homes and immobility regimes.
Those of us who seek spatial continuity by rooting for the right to belong to our originary homes, also seek continuity of oneness, stasis, and communal creed that have gripped this nation like a pandemic more dangerous than the one we have just survived. It is more dangerous for the simple reason that it is in the name of home, we other the neighbour; it is in the name of the nation, we wage wars; and it is, in the end, in the domestic pathos of the home that we learn to kill our brothers and sisters. If countries and homes were diseases that call for a cure, the antidote is right in our faces바카라rather than seeing the migrants as the objects of debate between the right, left or the liberal, it is in the foot power of the footloose that we find the brave and burnt mantle of our own homelessness.