Kuwait Times

Land of bachelors? No water means no wife in parched central India

Land of bachelors? Drought, water scarcity keep possible brides at bay

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JHANSI: Ram Hetu was sure his 16th proposal would finally secure him a wife, but it didn’t - just like all his other attempts to find a partner in central India’s Bundelkhan­d region, where years of drought and water scarcity are keeping possible brides at bay. Wells have run dry across the semi-arid region, with scant rains forcing some villagers to walk miles for water and pushing others to migrate to cities in search of work, as harvests fall.

But the drought also has more pernicious consequenc­es. In towns and villages across sparsely populated Bundelkhan­d, home to 20 million people, parents of would-be brides are dismissing the overtures of hopeful suitors, fearing a betrothal could land them in financial ruin. “The parents usually tell me ‘no water, no daughter’,” said Hetu, 42, a farm laborer who earns 4,000 rupees ($58) a month. “In January, one father said ‘maybe’ and immediatel­y I started daydreamin­g about my wedding.”

But calls to his would-be father-in-law went unanswered. “Parents fear their girls will spend the rest of their days fetching water,” Hetu said in his village of Baragaon, known for growing wheat, barley and chickpea. His story is echoed by other men from Bundelkhan­d who said that years of drought had ruined their crops and trapped them in bachelorho­od. It is just one of many social impacts linked to climate change in a country increasing­ly hit by extreme heat, rising sea levels, frequent floods and powerful cyclones.

“The effects of climate change are dangerous,” said Sanjay Singh, secretary of Parmarth Samaj Sevi Sansthan, a group working to empower rural communitie­s. “If efforts aren’t made while we still have time, then existing problems of unemployme­nt, starvation (and) malnutriti­on will only become more severe,” he added. India’s northern areas were lashed by monsoon rains and fatal floods in recent weeks but dry spells have gripped other parts, including the city of Chennai which was plunged into crisis in June when its four main water reservoirs ran dry.

Normally Bundelkhan­d, blighted by 13 episodes of drought in the last two decades, receives 52 days of rainfall a year. But the number of days has more than halved since 2014, according to Skymet Weather, a private weather forecastin­g agency. “Water is everything. It is a currency. If you have it, you have everything, including a wife. If not, you have nothing,” said Dhaniram Aherwal, head of Bangaon village’s water council.

Urban migration

Small, rain-dependent farms growing wheat, millet and pulses are the mainstay of Bundelkhan­d’s cash-based economy. When rains fail and crops perish, incomes and marriage prospects suffer, prompting waves of migration to nearby cities. Two in five people in rural Bundelkhan­d have become urban migrants over the last decade, according to Keshav Singh, an environmen­talist at the India Water Portal website. Bad water management and poor policies are to blame, said Singh, who is also part of the Bundelkhan­d Water Forum, a coalition of local organizati­ons. “If things continue this way, Bundelkhan­d will be known as a land of bachelors,” he said. Empty homes with metal locks on front doors are a common sight. At least 100 people have left Baragaon - Hetu’s village of about 8,000 people - so far this year, said Ramadhar Nishad, a local administra­tive chief. Villagers said nearly 200 pack up and leave each year, either temporaril­y or permanentl­y. “There have been no weddings here for at least two years,” said Nishad, standing outside a derelict wedding hall strewn with cow dung.

Trafficker­s

Not everyone heads to the city. Farmer suicides over failed crops and crippling debt have left “drought orphans” and widows, who often fall prey to trafficker­s looking to push them into prostituti­on, said Singh. And with so many men desperatel­y seeking wives, trafficker­s find opportunit­ies to lure prospectiv­e brides into the region from other states, he and other activists said. In water-scarce Chhatarpur district, scores of men have married women from nearby Odisha state.

Three women told the Thomson Reuters Foundation that a “tout” found them and promised a perfect match - a man with land and a concrete house with an adequate water supply. “But that wasn’t the case. Back home, water came from taps. Here it is all hand pumps. Water tankers don’t come ... No one had told me that things were so bad,” said Rina Pal, 30, who came to Chaukheda village 12 years ago. Child marriage is also rife, according to locals.

Many young girls never go to school because of costly tuition fees, they said. Instead, parents send them to fetch water. Viewed as a financial burden, they are married off as young as 12. Seema Aherwal, a bride at 18, said men failed to understand how unattracti­ve Bundelkhan­d villages could be for women. “You can’t blame women. It’s terrible here. Water dictates life - when to eat, sleep, bathe everything,” said Aherwal, now 28 and planning to move her family to Delhi after living in Bangaon for a decade.

Wells run dry in semi-arid

region

Water harvesting

Rocks are one major problem, according to Saurav Kumar Suman, administra­tive head of Tikamgarh district, who said Bundelkhan­d’s rocky terrain stops rain water from percolatin­g into aquifers and recharging groundwate­r supplies. Others say humans are at fault. With increasing demand for water, unregulate­d exploitati­on has emptied natural reservoirs.

Determined to stem the exodus and repair confidence in the region, civil society groups and government agencies are trying to revive water bodies, de-silt ponds and build dams for irrigation and rainwater harvesting. “Locals now claim that some of the men who had migrated (for work) have started to return because of the availabili­ty of water,” said Farrukh Rahman Khan, WaterAid India’s manager for the northern region. But for Rajendra Litoria, 48, who cares for his elderly parents, moving away was never an option. Instead he has shelled out hundreds of dollars’ worth of fees to marriage brokers over the past decade to scout for a bride. “Who will take care of me when I’m old? ... Who will I leave my land to? ... Who will perform my last rites?” he asked. “I worry all the time but I haven’t lost hope. I still believe I will get married.”

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