The Asian Age

MP bonded labourers still live a condemned life

- RABINDRA NATH CHOUDHURY

For them, an occasion of celebratio­n or a tragedy in the family has common fallout, a cursed bonded life.

Welcome to the world of “Barsudiyas” (literally bonded labourers), the “caged birds” of Madhya Pradesh. Almost entire tribal population­s of three villages in Harda district in MP have fallen victim to feudal culture, prevalent in a few backwards pockets in rural hinterland of the state that has rendered them to subjugatio­n socially, economical­ly and psychologi­cally.

And their submission to the “condemned life”, it appears, is complete for they saw in it a comfort zone they do not dare to step out.

Last time a community member had dared to dream a life beyond their world was nearly half-adecade ago, but his “valiant” initiation had left him shattered, financiall­y and morally.

His failed experiment with an alternativ­e life has, tragically, further cemented the fixed mindset, the community has; “Son of a barsudiya is bound to work as barsudiya.”

Manis Uike had opted for bank loan instead of approachin­g the local landlord for money to buy a tractor to do farming in his five acre land in Chirpura village. He feared that his dependence on local money lender would lead him to perennial indebtedne­ss forcing him to turn a bonded labourer for him.

Later, the bank seized the tractor owing to his irregular debt servicing, causing mental agony.

Villagers said he suffered from depression thereafter and died.

“Had he taken the loan from zamindar (landlord), he would have never landed in such a misery. He could have made his son a ‘barsudiya’ to repay the loan if he had failed to pay back the money,” a tribal in the village, who is the third generation ‘barsudiya’ in his family, told this newspaper on Sunday on condition of his identity being concealed.

Barsudiyas, who are either landless or marginal farmers, borrow money from their landlords in their time of needs such as conducting marriages in their family or arranging medical treatment for a sick kin or performing rituals of a deceased member in the family. “The borrowings are adjusted from the monthly paltry wages in phases, leading them to go for more borrowings from the ‘zamindars’ to meet their daily needs, which land them into the trap of a life of a bonded labourer,” Sandeep Kumar Mishra, a research scholar in sociology department in Barkatulla­h University here, told this newspaper.

Many barsudiyas have, thus, been into the system generation after generation.

The “zamindars” have given each barsudiyas a cheap cell phone so that they could call them at any time in day and night. The tribals cannot afford to buy talk time and are seen using the cell phones to interact with their family members with “coded language” of giving missed calls.

Barsudiyas, who are either landless or marginal farmers, borrow money from their landlords in times of need. If they fail to repay, they become bonded labourers, working 24x7 for the zamindar

 ??  ?? A barsudiya (in white shirt) sits near his one-room thatched house.
A barsudiya (in white shirt) sits near his one-room thatched house.

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