Missing from cow welfare minister’s election campaign speeches — cows
Rajasthan’s gaupalan minister is campaigning in Sirohi to seek a third term as an MLA. Otaram Dewasi, 54, has helmed India’s only ministry for welfare of cows for four years but doesn’t talk about cattle during his poll meetings.
The man, who wraps a white cotton cloth with red border around his bare torso, wears a white dhoti and a maroon turban, looks anything but a politician but when he gets down from his grey Innova to address public meetings in Barewda and Sagalia village, he rattles off number of works he has done as an MLA like a seasoned politician.
Cow finds no mention in his speeches.
A triangular gold earrings dangle from his earlobes and two thick gold bangles on each wrist stand him apart. “This is my uniform,” says Dewasi, who is pujari (priest) of a temple of Chamunda Devi in Mundara village in neighbouring Pali district.
Dewasi is a rabari, a pastoral community, and has natural love for the livestock. When chief minister Vasundhara Raje set up the department of gaupalan in 2014 to fulfill a promise BJP made in its manifesto for the 2013 Assembly election, Dewasi was the obvious choice to head it.
“In 4 years, we have spent 450 crore as grant to cow shelters. Initially the grant was for a maximum of three months; we increased it to six and my plan is to make it for nine months,” says the minister. However, in village meetings, he only mentions works related to those areas.
Dewasi is the 11th generation priest of the Chamunda temple in Mundara, where he lives in a joint family of his three brothers. Mundara is about 100km from Sirohi city where he has set up his election office. Dewasi doesn’t have a house in his constituency and is put up in a hotel for the campaign.
During his campaign on Thursday, people shout, “Dekho dekho kaun aaya, Chamunda ka sher aaya [Look who’s here, the tiger of Chamunda]. Women rush to touch his feet, clutching the shins with both hands. Some even lower kids in their arms to seek the blessings of ‘baapji’. “They call me baapji out of reverence for my position as the pujari,” he says.
In a small crowd gathered to listen to his poll pitch in Morli village, there are men with maroon turbans who are rabaris. As an aside, Dewasi’s driver says, “The colour of the turban tells you about the people’s caste in this area. The Kumawats wear light maroon colour and the turbans of the Meghwals is almost pink.”
Dewasi carries a file from which he reads out the works that he has done for a particular village, a pair of reading glasses precariously perched on the middle of his nose bone. Between public meetings, he calls up people from a Samsung phone with a cracked screen.
“10 days are enough to know a person – I have been here for 10 years. You know me enough now,” he begins the address in Van village, before making fun of key, the election symbol of an Independent candidate who has rebelled from the Congress after he was denied ticket.
“There’s rust on the key; it can’t open any lock,” he says as people break into smiles. The message is conveyed without naming the candidate.
Dewasi speaks in the local dialect and instantly connects with the elders, especially those from his community. Sirohi’s 33-yearold Zila Pramukh (head of district panchayat body) Payal Parasrampuria makes the introductory pitch for the party. The woman in starched cotton saree is a big draw among the girls.
Dewasi carries a bunch of marigold garlands and a turban in his car, to be used in meetings by the locals and then packed for the next destination.
He came into politics at the behest of former chief minister Bhairon Singh Shekhawat. Shekhawat contested from Bali constituency and Dewasi marshaled his community’s support for him. Later, Vasundhara Raje made his chairman of the Rajasthan Livestock Board. Dewasi contested his first election in 2008 from Sirohi and has represented the constituency for two straight terms.
“I was the first chairman of the livestock board and the first minister of the gaupalan department,” he says as a matter of pride.
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