Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

When nomad mothers work, kids are tied up

- Manoj Ahuja letters@hindustant­imes.com

JAIPUR: A little past 8am on a chilly December morning, Mumal, a Banjara woman, tethers her twoyear-old son with a piece of cord outside her tent as she prepares to leave for work as a domestic help.

For the next eight to 10 hours, the toddler is tied up to a post along with three other children — all two years old or younger. A little distance away, there’s another post for tethering older children. And all this at a settlement for nomadic tribes barely 30km from Rajasthan’s capital Jaipur.

Mumal’s son Bhola cries as he struggles to free himself but other children looked resigned to their fate. There is a nip in the air but most children are not wearing woollens. “The sun is out and it will be quite warm soon,” Mumal explains. Her husband, who sells garlic at a makeshift market, has already left for work. Her motherin-law will leave soon to take the goats out for grazing.

But why tie the children like cattle? “What other choice do we have? We have to go out for work to earn a living and sometimes to fill water. The elderly among us take the cattle out for grazing. We can’t take the small children, and they could run onto the road if we don’t tie them up,” Gaindi, an elderly woman, said. She added, “If we had a house, we could keep all the children in one room.”

Mumal’s family is among 24 of the Banjara community who live in a settlement near Banskho village for the past three months. They live in a cluster of tents covered with tarpaulin and cook food on earthen stove using firewood. There is no water pipeline, so they walk to the nearest tubewell about half a kilometre away.

A few elderly people and those who are unwell are left behind to keep an eye on the kids and give them food and water. Accidents have also been reported. “A child had died of snake bite two years ago. Then, a stray dog had bit a child about a month ago,” Banskho village chief Mangaram Meena told HT. The Banjara community in Rajasthan numbers close to 300,000 and have poor access to schools and health care facilities.

Meena says he approached the local administra­tion several times to get funds released for those whose names figure in the PMAY rolls and also to include other families. Under PMAY, the government sanctions ₹1.5 lakh to build a two-room house with a kitchen and a toilet. The Jaipur administra­tion promised quick action. “We will soon open an anganwadi in the settlement,” Jaipur district collector Siddharthm­ahajan told ht.

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