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Paper trail to nowhere
The lives of members of denotified tribes is uncertain; harassed
by the police, with a tenuous hold on their homes and land, these
people crave permanence and security. DILIP D'SOUZA writes on the
obsession that they have with paper. Strangely enough, they save
every scrap they come across - be it a prescription, a bill, or a
leaflet handed out at a rally - perhaps as evidence of some kind
of respect and acceptance from those around them.
FOR nearly half an hour, Giranwalla Lalla Bhosle searches through
a sheaf of papers in a pink plastic bag. There was something he
wanted to show me, he said. I sat next to him, at times talking
to the other Pardhis in the hut, at times looking at papers
Giranwalla would hand me, at times just watching this
65-year-old-man as he searched. He never did find whatever it was
he was looking for, but then I didn't know how he would have. He
could not read.
So in that half hour, he handed me prescriptions, receipts for
money contributed to one or another organisation, bills for
medicines and other sundries, a letter that had arrived by book-
post from a district office in Satara: "We have forwarded your
letter to the Tahsildar of Phaltan, please approach him", a
ration card, somebody's address and newspaper clippings about the
death in police custody of Pinya Hari Kale, a Pardhi from
Baramati.
Papers of every description, in multifarious colours, carefully
folded and stuffed into this large pink bag. Some were dated 20
or more years ago; many were clearly of no use whatever. But they
were all there. As far as I could tell, Giranwalla had preserved
every single bit of paper that had ever entered his life. To what
purpose, I could not immediately fathom. I could only marvel at
his method, his lifelong certainty that each of those scraps of
paper would one day prove useful. So, as he searched, I watched.
In meeting Pardhis and members of other denotified and nomadic
tribes (DNTs), I have been intrigued by this obsession with
paper. So many have shared the need to squirrel it away, to hold
on to old bills and letters, even if they have no idea what's
written on them. There's a running contrast between the steady
desire to keep these scraps and the uncertainty of DNT lives: the
harassment by the police, the tenuous hold they have on home and
land. It is almost as though they see the papers as an anchor, as
a symbol of certainty and permanence that's otherwise hard to
come by.
Something possibly greater than that, even.
Most DNTs must still carry the albatross the British gave them by
branding them criminal. In the months that I have been pursuing
this project to write about their condition, I have yet to visit
one DNT settlement that has not had tales to tell about
harassment from the police; or abuse from fellow villagers; or
drives by Municipalities that demolish their huts.
In Baroda, a group of Bajanias told me about being pushed off the
land they had occupied for decades, their homes giving way to
mushrooming multi-storeyed buildings for Baroda's growing middle-
class. In Santrampur, Gujarat, a few Vagharis showed me their
huts, beyond the town limits, and spoke of how they must move
steadily further away as the town expands. In Akkarbaid, West
Bengal, I met a young Kheria Sabar widow called Shyamoli, trying
to pick up the pieces of her life after her husband was killed in
police custody last year. In Songaon, Maharashtra, a few Pardhi
families try to cultivate the land they were given some years
ago, but speak bitterly of constant police harassment: some of it
even comes their way courtesy Pardhis from the next village over.
Clearly, life in these little communities is degrees harder and
more unpredicatable than anything I am used to. Hardly an
insightful comment, I will admit. But the extent to which
certainty is uncertain is startling. Almost nothing is given,
nothing can be taken for granted. Where you live and how long you
live there is subject to the whims of the Municipalities, as also
to the residential dreams of those far above you on the economic
ladder. If you set out for the market riding behind your husband
on his cycle, as Shyamoli did one afternoon, you could return
home alone because the police would have stopped you both and
taken him in on suspicion. You could even find yourself
permanently alone, as she did, because the police have battered
your husband to death.
These things happen. They do, because of that albatross the
British hung on your ancestors' necks: criminal is what you are
and will always be. So your fellow citizens speak of you with
fear and derision. You live, always, well outside the village.
The police suspect you in every crime that's committed in the
district. Schools don't like your children attending. In the
press, the name of your tribe nearly always appears with words
like "dreaded" and "criminal" firmly attached.
Labels like these contour, circumscribe, your life.
And in that life, perhaps there is a rationale to squirreling
away paper. Perhaps it is evidence of some kind of acceptance,
some respect, from those around you. Whether just a letter, or a
leaflet handed out at a rally, the sheer ordinariness of it says
that you are really no different from anyone else. After all, one
invoice from the nearby pharmacy is as good as another, whether
it is a DNT or someone else who buys the stuff. Indeed, I even
recognised the medicine named on an old bill Giranwalla handed me
- I once had to take the same drug.
Is it too far-fetched to see a connection between Giranwalla's
bag of paper and a sense of some worth, even some humanity?
Called criminal from the day he was born, at least his papers
testify that he is really like every other Indian - above all,
they testify that to him. They affirm a certain normalcy that
little else in his life gives him reason to hope for.
And yet, this speculation about respect, normalcy, worth - these
might be no more than my own impressions and theories. Two other
experiences with Pardhis and papers suggested that.
In Phaltan, not far from Giranwalla's home village of Rajale, I
spoke to a Pardhi youth called Vasant Zabzab Pawar. He had papers
too. The first one he handed me, very proudly, was his March 1997
SSC marksheet. His scores ranged from 4/150 in Mathematics to
45/150 in Science. Naturally, he had failed; though his proud
smile indicated he either did not know or did not care. Whichever
it was, he was more interested in my reaction to the second paper
he showed me.
This was a certificate in a green and gold frame, presented to
Vasant by the Phaltan Panchayat Samiti in 1994. It certified his
"brilliant success": that Vasant Zabzab Pawar had run first in
the Yashwantrao Chavan High School marathon that year. I
congratulated him and his smile grew wider.
But then Vasant's face suddenly clouded over. "I have all these
papers," he said. "But they are of no use to me at all. Can you
help me get a job?"
Next to him, Hivraj Pawar pushed forward a sheet of paper for me
to read. Before I did, he explained what it contained, or what he
thought it contained. Apparently the police had slapped a false
case of robbery on his wife Shevantabai and his daughter Rohini.
Hivraj and Shevantabai paid a Phaltan lawyer to write a letter
explaining this situation. He wanted to show it to Maharashtra's
Deputy Chief Minister Gopinath Munde, who was to visit the
district, in the hope of getting some help. The paper was the
letter he said the lawyer had given him.
In an untidy scrawl, complete with a 50 paise court fee stamp,
this is what the letter said:
XIth Court. Before the Honourable Judicial Magistrate.
Subject: Application for issue of non-bailable warrant.
Sir,
The applicant most humbly submits as under. That this Hon'ble
Court is pleased to issue summons against accused, but the
accused are avoiding to attend this Hon'ble Court. Their presence
cannot be secured unless non-bailable warrant is issued against
him.
Hence prayer that non-bailable warrant be kindly issued against
all the accused.
Applicant
(Shevantabai Hivraj Pawar)
Baffled, I turned to Hivraj. What was this? Who were these
accused? What were they accused of? He didn't know what I was
talking about. He insisted, again, that this letter was what the
lawyer had given him to explain the false case against his wife.
If that was so, there was only one possible explanation. Aware
that Hivraj and wife could not read, the lawyer had scribbled
some irrelevant nonsense on a sheet of paper, attached an
official looking stamp, pocketed his money and sent them on their
way.
So what had happened when Munde came visiting? Hivraj actually
managed to show his paper to him. "He told me," said Hivraj,
"that there was too much of a crowd here. He asked me to bring it
to Bombay to show it to him again." That was just what Hivraj was
about to do. He was off to the big city soon. He would carry the
same sheet of paper with him.
Puzzled and somewhat despondent, I got up to leave. "Wait a
minute!" shouted Vasant. "Give me your address." He handed me a
crumpled bus ticket. I wrote my address on it and gave it back.
It vanished into a large plastic bag, stuffed in there with his
SSC marksheet and his marathon certificate.
This article is part of the project the author pursued, studying
Denotified and Nomadic Tribes as a National Foundation for India
Fellow for 1998-1999.
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