NO PLACE FOR US?
ENVIRONMENTAL
STUDIES
CBSE-V
Jatryabhai
Jatryabhai
was sitting at the door with his daughter Jhimli. They were waiting for Sidya.
It was almost night but Sidya had not come home. Two years back Jatrya’s family
came to Mumbai from Sinduri village.
Here,
they only knew the family of a distant relative. With their help, Jatryabhai began
to repair torn fishing nets. But the money he got
was
not enough.
They
had to pay for the medicines, food, school fees and rent for the house. Here,
they even had to buy water. Young Sidya also had to work in the nearby fish factory
to earn some money.
From
four o’clock till seven o’clock in the morning, he cleaned and sorted the big and
small fish. Then he would come home, take a nap, and go to school in the
afternoon. In the evening he would wander around the vegetable market.
He
would help some memsahib (lady) to carry her bags, or go to the railway station
to pick up empty bottles and newspapers to sell to the kabadiwalla (junk seller).
Somehow
they were managing their life in the city. It was night, but Sidya had not come
home. Jhimli was watching a dance on TV, through the neighbour’s window.
But
Jatrya did not like watching TV. Here, everything was so different. The day
would pass running around for work, but the evening brought back old memories.
Thinking
of old days:
Jatrya
was born in Khedi village, in the middle of thick green jungles and hills. His
people had been living here for many years even before his grandfather was
born.
There
was peace in Jatrya’s village, but not silence. There were so many soothing
sounds – the gurgle of the flowing river, the murmur of trees and the chirping
of birds. People did farming.
They
would go to the nearby forest, chatting and singing together, to collect wild
fruits, roots and dried wood. While working with elders, children also learnt
many things – to dance together, to play flute and dhol, to make pots of clay
and bamboo, to recognise birds and imitate their sounds, etc.
People
collected things from the forest for their use. Some of those they would sell
in the town across the river. With that money they would buy salt, oil and some
clothes.
It
was a village, but people here lived together like a big family. Jatrya’s
sister was married in the same village. People helped each other, in good and
bad times. The elders would arrange weddings, and settle quarrels.
Jatrya
was now a strong young man. He worked hard in the fields and caught fish from
the big river. He and his friends would go to the forest to collect fruits, roots
and plants for medicines, and fish from the river, to sell these in the town.
During
festival time, Jatrya would dance and play the drum, with boys and girls of his
age.
Across
the river:
One
day the people of Khedi heard that a big dam was to be built on the river. For
this, a big wall would be built to stop the flow of the river. Khedi and many
nearby villages in that area would be drowned under water. The people would have to leave their villages
and their lands, on which their forefathers had lived for centuries.
After
a few days, government officials along with the police started visiting these
villages. Small children of the village saw the police for the first time. Some
children would run after them, and some would get scared and start crying.
The
officials measured the width and length of the river, the fields, forests and
houses. They called meetings with the elders of the village. They said, “Villages on the bank of the river
would have to be removed. People having land at Khedi will be given land far away,
on the other side of the river.
They
will have everything there – a school, electricity, hospitals, buses, trains,
etc. They will have all that they could not even dream of here in Khedi.”
Jatrya’s
parents and most elders were not happy about leaving
their
village. Listening to all this, Jatrya would get a little scared, but also feel
excited. He would think that after getting married, he would take his bride to
the new house in the new village.
A
house where he could just press a button for the light and turn on the tap for water.
He could go by bus to see the city. When he would have children, he could send
them to school. They will not be like him, who had never been to school.
A
new place:
It
was a summer afternoon. Jatrya was feeling faint in the hot sun and wind. His
feet were burning on the coal tar of the pucca road. There wasn’t a single tree
to offer some shade.
Just
a few houses and shops. Jatrya was on his way home after buying
medicines.
He had an old tyre on his back. These days, he had to light his stove with just
these rubber pieces of old tyres.
These
caught fire fast, and also saved some firewood. But the smoke and smell of
burning tyres were terrible! In this new Sinduri village, they had to pay money
for everything— medicines, food, vegetables, firewood, and fodder for the animals.
They
could just not afford to buy kerosene. But from where to get the money for all
this? Thinking of all this, Jatrya reached home. The roof made of a tin sheet
made the house hot like an oven.
Jatrya’s
wife had high fever. His daughter Jhimli was rocking her little brother Sidya
to sleep in her lap. After all, there was no other older person with them.
Jatrya’s
parents had been so sad about leaving Khedi that they had died before he moved
here.
In
Sinduri there were only eight-ten families he could call his own, those from
his old village. The whole village had got scattered and people had gone
wherever they had been given land.
This
was not like the new village Jatrya had dreamt about. There was electricity,
but only for sometime in a day. And then, the electricity bill had also to be
paid. There were taps, but no water!
In
this village, Jatrya got just one room in a tin shed. It had no place to keep
the animals. He also got a small piece of land. But that was not good for
farming. It was full of rocks and stones.
Still
Jatrya and his family worked very hard. But they could not grow much on the
field, and could not make enough money even to buy seeds and fertilisers. In
Khedi, people did not fall sick often.
If
someone fell ill there were many people who knew how to treat them with
medicines made from plants. People felt better after taking those medicines.
Here in Sinduri, there was a hospital but it was difficult to find doctors, and
there were no medicines.
There
was a school here, but the teacher did not care much about the children from
Khedi village. These children found it difficult to study in a new language.
The
people of Sinduri did not welcome the newcomers from Khedi. They found their language
and way of living strange. They made fun of the Khedi people by calling them
‘unwanted guests’. Not much of what he had dreamt had come true!
Some
years later:
Jatrya
stayed for a few years in Sinduri. The children were also getting older. But
Jatrya’s heart was not here in Sinduri. He still missed his old Khedi.
But
there was no Khedi now. There was a big dam and a big lake of collected water
in and around Khedi. Jatrya thought, “If we are to be called ‘unwanted guests’,
then at least let us go to some place where our dreams can come true.”
Jatrya
sold his land and his animals and came to Mumbai. Here, he started a new life
with his family. His only dream was to send his children to school, to give
them a better future, a better life.
Here
too, things were not easy. But he hoped that things would get
better.
Jatrya started saving money to repair his one-room shack. His
relatives
would tell him, “Don’t waste money on this. Who knows, we may have to move from
here too. In Mumbai there is no place to stay for
outsiders
like us.”
Jatrya
was scared and worried. He thought, “We left Khedi for Sinduri, we then left
Sinduri for Mumbai. If we have to move from here too, then where can we go? In
this big city, is there not even a small place for my family to stay?”
THANKYOU,
NANDITHA
AKUNURI
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