Prakash Bhagat bends over a large aluminium vessel and stirs the aloo-mutter gravy with a ladle. He puts his weight on the left foot, the right one suspended in the air, using a wooden stick to balance himself.
“I think I have been walking with a stick since I was 10,” says 52-year-old Bhagat. “I used to walk holding my leg ever since I was a kid. My parents tell me I pulled a nerve.”
The disability has not impacted Bhagat’s resolve. When many in Pargaon, his village in Panvel taluka of Maharashtra’s Raigad district, decided to participate in a jatha, a march of vehicles going to Delhi, he did not think twice before joining in. “I am here for a reason,” he says, tasting the gravy approvingly.
In Delhi, tens of thousands of farmers are protesting at three different sites along the borders of the national capital against the three farm laws pushed through by the central government in September this year. To express their support and solidarity with the protesting farmers, on December 21, about 2,000 farmers from Maharashtra assembled in Nashik to participate in the jatha going all the way to Delhi, roughly 1,400 kilometres away.
From Pargaon village, 39 decided to join in as well. “The farmers of this country are being cheated,” says Bhagat. “More and more of them should get assured rates for their produce. These farm laws will push them deeper into debt. Farmers will be placed in the custody of the large companies, who will exploit them. The farm laws may be immediately hurting farmers from Punjab and Haryana, and that is why the agitation is dominated by them, but that does not mean farmers across the country will not be affected.”





