“Bihar has nearly 2.2
million Musahars, according to the state Mahadalit Commission’s interim report.
Community activists, however, claim that the population of Musahars cannot be
fewer than three million in Bihar. About 96.3 percent of them are landless and
92.5 percent work as farm labour. Literacy
rates in this community, which upper caste Hindus still consider untouchable,
is only 9.8 percent; the lowest among Dalits in the country.” The Quint, The Musahar Community in Bihar struggles to
educate its children, 23 January 2017
12-year-old Phoolwanti lives with her family in
Lohanipur slum cluster in Bihar. Her family is a small one, comprising her
mother and her younger sister. “My elder sisters are married and have children
my age. They were married at my age,” she says, adding, “My entire family is
into rag-picking. My father was a rag picker. He died of tuberculosis. When he
fell ill and could not work anymore, he was less concerned about recovering
than about getting my elder sisters married. I think, the tension and debts
killed him,” her voice falters. “I cried a lot when father died. Mother tried
her best to save him. She took him to the hospital. She worked extra hours to
pay for the medicine. All of us ate one meal a day to save some money for his treatment.
But we could not save him,” she sighs.
Phoolwanti from Bihar |
Phoolwanti lost her younger brother to a disease she
“knows nothing about. I simply know he would lay curled up in the corner of our
house, clutching his stomach in deep agony.” Her mother works as a rag picker.
“Her day starts at 6 in the morning. I hear the dragging sound of her sack on
the floor and know it is time to get up. She works the entire day, collecting
scrap, walking long, long hours in the sun,” her voice appears strained
recounting a day in the life of her mother.
For Phoolwanti, the squalor of her surroundings is
the only reality she is used to. “We live on garbage. We drink dirty water. We
boil our water sometimes. Most of the times there is not enough money to buy
fuel to light the hearth. On such days, we do not think if the water is dirty
enough to drink.”
Lohanipur is home to a large number of Musahars –
one of the most marginalized castes in India who are routinely forced to live
in subhuman conditions and face rampant discrimination. In the struggle to put
together two meals a day, most of these families do not send their children to
school. Children, like Phoolwanti, either accompany their mothers at work or
stay at home to finish household chores and take care of younger siblings.
“None of my sisters went to school. My parents did not send me to school.
Instead I went with my mother to collect and sell scrap every day. On days I
went to work, mother made 300 rupees a day. Without me, she would only get 200
rupees a day,” she explains.
Phoolwanti had no time for school. But she wanted to
go to school. She imagined how school would look like every single day she set
out to work with her mother.
Prior to beginning sessions in this community, Magic
Bus staff first reached out to enroll parents into the programme. Phoolwanti’s
mother agreed to send her child for the sessions and volunteered to participate
in the parents’ meetings as well. But when both of them failed to turn up on
multiple ocassions, Magic Bus staff, Ritesh decided to pay them a visit.
Phoolwanti’s mother shared her plight with him. “I can’t send her to school. If
she goes to school how would I feed them? How will I return the money I had
loaned to marry off her elder sisters?” she asked. Ritesh reasoned with her,
calmly. But Phoolwanti’s mother remained unconvinced.
What followed was a series of follow up meetings
with Ritesh visiting Phoolwanti’s mother to convince her to send her daughter
to school. In those meetings, he tried to explain how early marriage and lack
of education have been some of the reasons behind their abject poverty. When he
learnt that her mother was planning Phoolwanti’s marriage, he firmly explained
how this would destroy her daughter’s future. “She will never be able to move
out of this suffering if you marry her so young,” he said.
“To me, the best aspect of Magic Bus’ approach is
involving youth from a community to work with children from the same community.
This creates trust in the minds of parents. It was easier for me to convince
Phoolwanti’s mother because she knows I belong to the same community and live
in the neighbourhood,” says Ritesh who has been working in Lohanipur as a Magic Bus Youth Mentor for the last one and
half years.
“Ritesh bhaiya
never gave up. It is because of him that my mother put me in a school and
asked me to study instead of working,” says Phoolwanti. There were many times
when pushed to starvation, her mother considered pulling her daughter out. But
Ritesh always helped her reconsider.
Phoolwanti goes to school today. “I want to take my
younger sister with me too. But every time I get her to the classroom, the teachers
drive her away. She has to have her name registered to attend classes. Next
year, I will get her name in the muster rolls,” she resolves. “I find English
and Maithili difficult. I enjoy Hindi. There are so many stories. I love
reading them,” she sounds excited “I want to be a teacher when I grow up. I see so
many children not being able to go to school. I want to bring them to school. I
want to tell their parents about my story and encourage them to support their
children’s dreams. Just like my mother did. Just like Ritesh bhaiya did”, she
signs off.
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