Khaleej Times

Film sheds light on landless workers in S. India

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bangkok— Plantation workers in southern India are the unlikely subjects of a Tamil language film whose director said he wanted to draw attention to their struggles, which remain largely unchanged despite the country’s fast economic growth.

Merku Thodarchi Malai (The Western Ghats), shows the daily lives of workers on cardamom estates in the hills on the frontiers of Tamil Nadu and Kerala states, and explores themes of landlessne­ss, migration, caste and human-animal conflict.

The film is the latest regional-language flick to focus on social issues that India’s big-budget Bollywood movies generally shy away from.

Director Lenin Bharathi said he grew up in villages like the ones in the film, with his parents working on a cardamom estate. He said he was influenced by the tough lives

of the labourers.

“Nothing has changed for them, even though everyone says globalisat­ion has improved everyone’s lives,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation over the phone.

“In fact, conditions are worse, because there is automation — so there are fewer jobs, and most workers have no job security. There are also more migrant workers who get lower wages and are too scared

to complain,” he said. About twothirds of India’s 1.3 billion people depend directly or indirectly on the land for their livelihood­s.

Farmer unrest has risen recently over poor output prices and the lack of adequate government subsidies.

Workers on India’s tea, coffee and cardamom estates are generally indentured, and often face exploitati­on and harsh conditions in remote areas with limited access to welfare services, rights groups say.

Landlessne­ss in India is tied to an entrenched caste system, Bharathi said, despite laws banning caste discrimina­tion, and government efforts to redistribu­te land.

More than half of India’s lowercaste population is landless, official data show. Landless Dalits are at the bottom of the age-old social hierarchy, making them vulnerable to bias and deadly attacks by upper-caste Hindus.

Bharathi said keeping some of the population landless is in the interest of the wealthy class.

“If they get land, then who will do the dirty, low-paid work?”

While politician­s and corporatio­ns speak of improving the lives of future generation­s of poor people, widespread prejudice continues to hold them back, he said. —

 ??  ?? A poster of Tamil language movie Merku Thodarchi Malai (The Western Ghats) shows the daily lives of workers.
A poster of Tamil language movie Merku Thodarchi Malai (The Western Ghats) shows the daily lives of workers.

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