Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Home alone is playing out in the villages of Uttarakhan­d

- Arvind Moudgil letters@hindustant­imes.com

PAURI GARHWAL: The twisty 2km trek from the paved road to a quaint mountainsi­de village in Uttarakhan­d’s Pauri district is hard to detect. It is overrun by thickets, bears lurk behind the bushes; and leopards too.

Besides the wild calls of the jungle, an eerie silence surrounds the trail to Baluni, 50km from Pauri town, which looks like any of the quintessen­tial ghost villages dotting this side of the Himalayan landscape.

“Hark, who goes there?” a deep baritone warns as one approaches the spattering of homesteads at the end of the slog. That’s a resounding warning shot, strong enough to freeze hungry cats and intrepid reporters.

From the vantage point of the village temple, that still stands tall amid the ruins of razed stone-and-wood houses, the voice emerges.

The lone sentinel is Shyam Prasad, a 67-year-old retired soldier, but for whom Baluni would have been any of the more than 340 abandoned villages in the district.

In his youth, Prasad protected the country’s borders. Now he guards his birthplace in Pauri Garhwal — alone for the past four years.

About two decades ago, this village thrived with life with 15 families. But with the passage of time, all of them, save the Prasads, migrated to cities and towns for employment and “better life”.

He stayed put at Baluni with his family after retirement in 1985. When his wife died and his five daughters were married off, he was left alone in the village.

His son, who is also in the army, visits him occasional­ly. The other visitors are people of nearby areas who come to pray at the temple, once in a while.

“Had the government addressed the problem of drinking water, some families would have stayed back,” Prasad said.

The village depends solely on natural water sources that dry up in summer. Prasad has requested the state government, the Prime Minister, and the President for help. “No one cares.”

The government could not lay a 1km water supply pipeline but, ironically plans to build a 2km pathway to connect the village with the state road at Banekh.

Ratan Aswal, a member of Palayan ek Chintan, a think tank that studies the migration pattern, blamed “absurd” government policies and promises for the exodus from the hills.

“It ignored the demand for a road of more than 3,000 people in eight villages of Sarbadiyar valley in Uttarkashi. But want to give a road to Baluni, whose primary requiremen­t is water supply,” he said.

 ?? ARVIND MOUDGIL /HT ?? Shyam Prasad is all alone in Baluni village in Pauri district of Uttarakhan­d
ARVIND MOUDGIL /HT Shyam Prasad is all alone in Baluni village in Pauri district of Uttarakhan­d

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India