Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Bengal beggar builds toilet with proceeds from alms

- Sreyasi Pal letters@hindustant­imes.com

Rahima Bewa is 75 and has spent all her years without a toilet. But now she wants to change it.

“Some people told me defecating in the open is harmful for health. So, I decided to build a toilet in my house. I’m spending some of my savings on it,” said Bewa, who lives in Nowdapara in West Bengal’s Murshidaba­d. The toilet will cost her around ₹15,000 but that has not deterred Bewa, who begs for a living.

Bricks and pipes have been bought and masons have begun work. Once the constructi­on is over, the toilet will be the only brick and mortar structure in Bewa’s mud house that she shares with her 50-year-old daughter, Kamala Bewa. Kamala is physically challenged and it is her mother who takes care of her.

Chief minister Mamata Banerjee is opposed to the Modi government’s Swachh Bharat Abhiyan, or Clean India Mission, aimed at freeing the country of open defecation by October 2019. Bengal has its own Nirmal Bangla (Clean Bengal) plan under which the administra­tion gives ₹10,000 and the beneficiar­y has to chip in ₹900 for a toilet.

KOLKATA:

If a householde­r can’t come up with the share, the person has to work for five days in MNGREGA.

But Bewa is not eligible for Nirmal Bangla.

Her sons, who threw her out of their home, had already taken the subsidy. Hence, she was not eligible for a direct subsidy but the administra­tion would help her, said Rakhi Pal, the block developmen­t officer of Berhampore in which the village falls.

“We will try to deliver to her whatever government aid is possible within the next two days,” Pal said on Monday.

Bewa has lived in Nowdapara for more than 30 years. Her husband, Din Mohammad, was a farmer and died 20 years ago, forcing Bewa into begging.

Bengal has declared eight of its 23 districts open-defecation free but Murshidaba­d is not one of them. “Recently, government officials visited our village and tried to impress upon us the need to build toilets in the house,” Ibrahim Biswas, a villager, said.

Bewa seems to have got the message.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Rahima Bewa (left) and her daughter Kamala sit in front of bricks bought to build a toilet at their home in Nowdapara.
HT PHOTO Rahima Bewa (left) and her daughter Kamala sit in front of bricks bought to build a toilet at their home in Nowdapara.

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