Business Standard

Modern villages

A foundation dreams of creating self-sustaining villages to reverse urban migration,

- writes Geetanjali Krishna To learn more, visit swadesfoun­dation.org or follow their Youtube channel

It has been 72 years since Mahatma Gandhi fell to Nathuram Godse’s bullets. However, till date, his dream of empowering villages to become self-sufficient little republics is far from being realised. Which is why at a time when Indian cities are bursting at the seams from rising migrant population­s, the work of the Swades Foundation bears mentioning.

At the heart of their work in rural Maharashtr­a lies the aim of developing “dream villages” — self- contained units with good infrastruc­ture and livelihood opportunit­ies to enable migrants to reverse their decision. In order for their intensive, 360-degree interventi­on model of developmen­t to work efficientl­y, Ronnie and Zarina Screwvala, co -founders of Swades, focus on a small geography — the Raigad district of Maharashtr­a.

“We’d been running SHARE, a small NGO that undertook projects mainly centering around water and sanitation since 1999,” Screwvala says. However, in 2013 after his wife Zarina and he sold their televsion company UTV, to Disney, the couple realised that providing clean drinking water and sanitation was only a piece in the puzzle. “Rural developmen­t has to be holistic; unless community health services, schools, livelihood opportunit­ies, and water and sanitation aren’t upgraded simultaneo­usly, the overall quality of life of beneficiar­ies doesn’t improve,” he says. This is how they developed an unusually intensive model of rural developmen­t, which hinges on four key verticals — health and nutrition, education, water and sanitation, and economic developmen­t. Their impact has been discernabl­e in the 2,513 villages Swades has been able to reach in Raigad.

Consider the case of 57-year-old Abdul Gaffar Rahatvilka­r, who used to be an oil rig worker in Kuwait. He returned to his village in Raigad, learnt innovative farming techniques at Swades and today reaps a lush crop of beans from his small farm. He now mobilises fellow farmers to adopt farming techniques that provide lucrative output in smaller plot sizes. Like him, 27,086 farmers have learnt to implement new farming technologi­es to enhance yields at low costs through Swades. All in all, Swades’ interventi­ons have benefitted over 550,000 people thus far.

“It’s been a challengin­g j ourney,” says Screwvala. Their very first task was to create a profession­al team which could run Swades like a corporatio­n and not an NGO. Since its inception, Swades has trained over 1,000 community volunteers and over 300 full-time staffers to work at the grassroots. Building trust with the community was another challenge, especially as the Swades model entails that each beneficiar­y household buys in to the project with a small monthly amount. But the toughest task remains to create projects with a sustained, permanent impact. “Our strategy is to hand over a project to the community only after every household agrees to contribute a monthly amount towards the maintenanc­e and the community forms a special committee to operate and maintain it,” he says.

Developing community heroes, people who have used their training with Swades to motivate, enable and empower others, is a conscious effort in this direction. Also, Swades has identified 300 “dream villages” — communitie­s they hope will soon become independen­t and selfsustai­ning, allowing them to exit.

Swades works on an initial endowment made by the Screwvalas and individual, corporate and institutio­nal donors. Tata Trusts is a major funding partner. Others include Australian Aid, Oracle, ONGC and IL &FS. The Foundation matches each donation made by its partners. Future plans include expanding to other districts (they have already started working in Nashik). However, they already spend between ~120 and 130 crore per annum, necessitat­ing an ongoing search for more partnershi­ps. “We also want to document our impact,” says Screwvala, “in order to refine our model and make it easily replicable.”

Meanwhile, Manali Sawant, a Swades hero, has set up her village’s first vermicompo­sting unit and has a ready-made market within her community. Young widow Vidya Kule has become a community health worker at Swades and ensures her community gets the medical treatment they need. Among the million people Swades aims to lift out of poverty in five years, they show that Gandhi’s dream of Swades can still be realised, one dream village at a time.

 ??  ?? Swades Foundation co-founders Ronnie and Zarina Screwvala; vegetable farming in Raigad district in Maharashtr­a
Swades Foundation co-founders Ronnie and Zarina Screwvala; vegetable farming in Raigad district in Maharashtr­a
 ?? PHOTOS: SWADES FOUNDATION ??
PHOTOS: SWADES FOUNDATION

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