There are three issues that have been on my mind, but I wanted to be a little removed from them, emotionally, before writing about them.
The first is about this couple that sits on the lane near our home. The lane ends in a cul-de-sac, so there is very little traffic here. They are ragpickers - they come to their spot at 4 in the morning, every morning. When I go out for my walk at 5.30, I see them sitting huddled over a small fire near the pile of discarded stuff and garbage, they had left here the day before. Sometimes, they sip tea from the little tea stall that some other displaced persons have set up at the end of the lane where it meets the main road. Often they chat in low tones with each other, but sometimes, they sit in companionable silence. There are only gentle, positive vibes that they emanate. No one touches their bags. Then, the wife settles her husband who is bent and old near the huge bundles, and taking an empty one, she sets off, while the husband sorts out the stuff in the other bags. Very methodically he sorts out the papers, bottles, and all the other stuff that people have discarded. Periodically, the lady comes back with her full bag, leaves it, and sets off with another one. This goes on till the afternoon. By which time the old gentleman has sorted out all the bags, and cleaned up the place so that there is not even a single scrap of paper around. Then, in the afternoon, when the lady brings in her last bag, they sit together and chat and sort... sometimes, she tells him things that make him laugh. One can make out that she is telling him all that she has seen and heard during the course of her roaming around looking for stuff to bring back. While we so carelessly chuck things away, these people, and there are many like them, collect and sort everything. Sometimes, a deaf and dumb lad, comes around and helps them. At these times, he too sits down with them in the afternoon, and while the lady talks away, the two men sit and look at her, one listens, and one feels...The young man has a wheelbarrow and when there is enough recycled stuff, he puts it into the wheelbarrow, and takes it away. Sometimes, there is so much stuff that he gets a cart and takes it all away. To say these people are destitute is to say less, but when you see the way they care for each other and the companionship that exists, there are only tears in your eyes....
The second one is about a group of women who were brought to the road where I walk, by a man who was giving instructions as he walked with them. He left them at a crossroads. The women were clearly new to what they had set out to do. I wondered what it was that they had to do. And then I saw it. There was a huge pile of pipes in one of the lanes leading off the road. Their job was to steal the pipes, break them into pieces and take them in the bags they carried. The women could hardly lift the pipes. But they toiled, pipe after pipe. As soon as it got light, they disappeared. They came again, and again, and the pile of pipes diminished slowly. One morning, an elderly walker saw this and kicked up a huge cry, calling them thieves and chased them away. Frightened out of their wits, the women fled. However, about 2 weeks later, they were back. It was obvious that they had been told to get the pipes or else....They stood huddled together and whispered, and from their tone of voice and body language, you could make out that they were scared, but were planning what to do. Anyway, off they went and a couple of pipes were broken and put into their bags. However, as luck would have it, as they were going away, the para dadas stopped them and asked them to empty their bags. Para dadas are the big dads of the area. Their word is the last word. They defend their territories, and are very helpful to those who live in their para. They kind of keep an eye out for their para people. Now, the women started crying and pleading with the dadas - to no avail. After much shouting on the part of the dadas and pleading on the part of the women, the women emptied their bags. They said if they were not allowed to take these to wherever it was they were supposed to sell them, their families, their little children would starve, They begged to be given a last chance and that they would never ever come to this area again - on and on it went....finally, I don't know what happened, but I do hope they were allowed to take those pipe bits....
The third is about the tea stall at the end of the lane. It is amazing the way this displaced couple has created this space for themselves. Their cycle cart has been set against the boundary wall of a housing complex, and the cycle has been propped up with bricks, so that the cart forms a table of sorts. The good lady keeps her cups and various cans on this. Next to this, they have erected a mud platform which has an inbuilt chulha, and a small area, where while one kettle is on the chulha, the other is kept close by so that the water in it remains warm. A part of the platform has a shelf propped up on it which has jars of the local biscuits. Another part of the platform is not as high as the chulha platform, but there is a seat made for the lady to sit or curl up on. The lady lights her chulha way around 5 in the morning. Opposite this 'stall', the couple has made 2 seating arrangements for people to relax. There is a long board fixed in the ground on which the daily communist newspaper is pasted. Above this is another board which features some political person or the other. So, while having tea, you can read the paper, and engage in the ongoing discussion. The whole place is kept spotlessly clean. That small bit of the road is their cafe...When I go for my walk at 5.30, the taxiwallahs and some security guards are having their first cuppa. In the cold of the winter mornings, someone would collect dry leaves and paper and bits of wood, and light a fire around which everyone would stand and discuss the chat in low tones. Companionable silence and talk over an early morning cup of tea! Sometimes, a lorry would stop by, or a car, and the drivers add to the group standing around. Everyone is welcome. There is a kind of peacefulness that pervades the area. Throughout the day people stop by for tea - small cup, half glass, full glass and special chai, with the inevitable bishkut! Around breakfast time, the good lady kneads dough. I'm not sure whether it is besan for sattu, or atta for rotis. But she makes these, and this forms the breakfast of many a worker. What is fascinating is that there are 2 small children who come sometimes in their clean, neatly-ironed school uniforms and bags for their morning milk and bishkut. They belong to the family, and are treated with great affection by all who are there. Today is Republic Day and you should see the little cafe. There are streamers of the National Flag decorating the crossroads, and there is even a decorated flagpole in front of the newspaper board. At 9 I could hear the crowd of taxiwallahs, security guards, ironing-wallahs, cleaners, redi-wallahs, Bihari, and Bengali, poor, poorer and poorest, and all those who society has marginalized, singing the National Anthem and shouting Jai Hind. The Government, mind you, has done nothing for these people, and yet, what is it that makes them sing Jana Gana Mana so proudly, and lustily? The emotional pull of the eternal motherland, I suppose...
What strikes me every day, is the caring that exists between these people, the dispossessed, the displaced and the destitute. They have their own code of conduct, and their own understanding of fair play and justice. Their only condition for living is that they are treated well by those who happen to be more fortunate. And why not? They too have a place under the sun, as much as anyone else.
This is our reality, much as we would like to not see it or recognize it...