The last time Parvati got work under MNREGA was a year ago, in May 2023. It was for just five days.
Parvati (she uses just this name) spent the time levelling a road in her village of Gaur Madhukar Shahpur. The 100 days a year, assured by the state under MNREGA (Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act) was never on offer to this 45-year-old daily wage labourer who belongs to the Jatav (Scheduled Caste) community. “We are managing to survive by filling half our stomachs,” she says.
The state failed her again when the couple’s application for a house under the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana was rejected in 2020. Unable to wait anymore, Parvati and her husband Chotey Lal took a loan of Rs. 90,000 from relatives for construction of a two-room pucca house.
“If someone comes asking for a vote,
I want to know how my name was missing in the list of beneficiaries for a
house, but appears in the voters' list?” she adds, miffed. Parvati’s husband,
who was also employed under MNREGA, couldn’t work after he suffered a paralytic
attack five years ago. Today he occasionally goes to a labour
mandi
in Varanasi city where daily wages
are Rs. 400 - Rs. 500.
MNREGA guarantees employment of 100
days to rural unskilled labour. But a common complaint across villages here in
Varanasi district is that only 20-25 days’ work is available annually since
“the last two
pradhani
”, referring to
the last two terms of the
sarpanch
,
or roughly 10 years.
Parvati is now saddled with a debt she should
never have had in the first place. With no help from the state, she relies on
wage work in the fields of the Thakur community who give her 10 kilograms of
foodgrains for the roughly 15 days of work during the harvest and sowing
seasons.
The village of Gaur Madhukar Shahpur
in Raja Talab
tehsil
has about 1,200
households of people mainly from the Scheduled Caste and Other Backward Caste
communities. Agriculture for self-consumption happens on small parcels of land,
and labour work is the main livelihood.
The village lies 20 kilometres from
Varanasi city and falls under the Varanasi Lok Sabha constituency where Prime
Minister Narendra Modi is contesting for his third term in the Lok Sabha. He
won in 2014 and 2019 from here.
Elections are on June 1, and
Varanasi is among the most keenly watched constituencies. Saffron posters
stating ‘
Har dil mein Modi
(Modi in
everyone’s heart)’ adorn every nook and corner, pasted on the rear of
e-rickshaws and street lamps. Autos with speakers blaring speeches of the
high-profile candidate and his role in the newly-constructed Ram temple, are a
common sight everywhere.
But here in Gaur Madhukar Shahpur,
there are no campaign posters; a photograph of Modi at the consecration
ceremony of the Ram temple in Ayodhya has been installed right outside a
Hanuman temple in this
basti
(settlement).
Parvati says that she is finding it difficult to feed herself and her family of five and wonders why the state has not stepped in to help, “since the government issues Aadhaar cards and seems to have information about everyone, why can’t they find out who is poor?” She has the blue flag of the BSP (Bahujan Samaj Party) flying atop her house.
The decline in work under the rural
guarantee scheme is confirmed by Renu Devi from the MNREGA Mazdoor Union who
told PARI, “the state of MNREGA has been deteriorating since 2019. Earlier when
we used to write applications on behalf of villagers, a week-long task would be
assigned. Now getting even seven days’ work in a year is tough.”
In just 2021 alone, local volunteers
of MNREGA Mazdoor Union wrote 24 letters to block level officials in Varanasi
requesting that work be allocated in different villages.
That is the same year that Jeera
Devi last got MNREGA work – June 2021.
Jeera is from the same
basti
in Gaur Madhukar Shahpur village.
The 45-year-old wage worker pulls out a
jhola
(cloth bag) she received from the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojana with a
photo of Prime Minister Modi embossed on it. Ironically, it holds her important
papers relating to schemes that have passed her by. “As far as Modi is
concerned, we’ll first have to find the helicopter he’s riding,” she says,
smiling.
Jeera says that the local
pradhan
(headman) asked her to pay a
bribe of Rs. 10,000 in exchange for a house under the
Pradhan Mantri Awaas Yojana- Gramin
. She even wrote a letter to
the District Magistrate of Varanasi to no effect. “See the walls of my house,
made up of gunny bags and posters!” she adds, sitting inside her home under a
thatch roof.
The loss of MNREGA work for this daily wager is
crippling; the family own less than a tenth of an acre of land. Her son Shivam,
and her husband Ram Lal depend on her wage earnings, but now in her forties,
she finds it difficult: “I developed a severe headache and body aches and so
can’t lift mounds of mud [sometimes part of MNREGA work] anymore.”
The family belong to the Bind (Mallah) community, listed under Other Backward Class in Uttar Pradesh. Her
husband doesn't work anymore and their son who is visually impaired, used to
receive a disability pension but it stopped last year and they have not been
able to revive it.
Holding on to a bunch of garlic
stalks she has received as payment for her work as an agricultural labourer
that day Jeera Devi announces to this reporter and those milling around us, “I
will vote for a woman who supports people like us – Mayawati!”
A tough stand in this high-profile
constituency.
But Jeera and Parvati are not alone.
“I haven’t made up my mind yet [about who to vote for]. But we are not happy
with Modi
ji
’s work,” says Ashok,
also a daily wage worker in the same village.
His wife, Sunita, got three days
under MNREGA recently, and five days last year (2023). The couple live in Gaur
Madhukar Shahpur with their three children: 14-year-old Sanjana, 12-year-old
Ranjana and 10-year-old Rajan.
Ashok (he uses only this name) was once a weaver
of the highly-priced Banarasi saris, but the earnings were not enough for his
growing family. Since he quit weaving, he has been working as at construction
sites and the labour
mandi
in
Varanasi city. He gets roughly 20-25 days’ work in a month, and is paid a daily
wage of around Rs. 500. “Somehow we are managing to make ends meet,” says the
45-year-old as he leaves his home in the Harijan
basti
here, stepping past earthen pots and red flags on his way to
the labour
mandi
.
Blue stickers stating ‘
Main hoon
Modi ka pariwar
[We belong to Modi’s family]’ are stuck on the
gates of houses in Rakhauna village, also in Varanasi district. In Santhara
Devi’s home, a poster with Modi and Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister, Yogi Adityanath’s
face announcing their achievement as “
double
engine ki sarkar”
is lying on a cot.
Busy weaving a
mala
(necklace) of Rudraksha beads, she is seated on the mud floor;
swarms of flies surround her in her modest home, only a thatched roof
protecting the family of six from the harsh summer sun. She tells this
reporter, “we have neither agricultural land nor an orchard. If we don’t work
how will we feed ourselves?”
Registered as a MNREGA worker, she
got eight days of work last August (2023), digging a
pokhari
(pond). To make up for the loss of earnings under MNREGA,
women like Santhara have resorted to other low-paying jobs – making rudraksha
malas
fetches them Rs. 2,000 - Rs. 5,000 every
few months. “We are paid at the rate of 25 rupees for a dozen. The wholesaler
gives us 20-25 kilos of Rudraksha beads at a time,” she adds
Santhara’s neighbour, Munka Devi, 50, too, has
been waiting to hear from the
Rojgar
Sahayak
(who helps with the records), regarding MNREGA work for the last
year. Munka has 1.5
bighas
of land in
her husband’s name and she grows vegetables for sale, but also works on others’
fields. “It helps my family get at least
namak-tel
[salt and oil],” she says in a reference to basic food items.
In Khewali village, Shakuntala has
decided not to cast her vote this time. “Since the government hasn’t given me
any employment, I won’t vote for anyone,” she declares. Shakuntala is among 12
women in this village whose names have been struck off from the list of those
with active job cards – a clerical mistake made while removing names of fake
MNREGA workers.
“Modi snatched away our NREGA work. We want at least two months of regular work and 800 rupees as daily wages, “says Shila, another resident of Khewali. “Pulses, salt and oil should also be given in addition to wheat and rice as part of the free rations scheme,” Shakuntala chips in.
Stone idols of nandi (sacred bull), adorn the open space of her house. “My hands get bruised from polishing these but I earn 150 to 200 rupees a piece.” Her fingers are swollen from the effort but for women like her who are not getting regular work under MNREGA, the options are few.