dinsdag 6 mei 2008

Armoede

Shrikrishna Kalamb's family. His daughter Usha, left, is seeking a publisher for her father's poems

'met de ontzetting en de tranen, ontwaakt daardoor ook het vertrouwen te zijn aangekomen in een land waar mensen wonen; want het vermogen andermans ongeluk in de herinnering te bewaren, zo luidt het lapidaire en overweldigende inzicht, te delen in de rouw, dat is het kenmerk van beschaving, daaruit bestaat het wezenlijke verschil tussen mensen en barbaren.' Joachim Fest in Tegenlicht.

'Suicide of farmer poet highlights the poverty trap in India
JAIDEEP HARDIKAR
By Andrew Buncombe and Jaideep Hardikar in Murtijapur
Tuesday, 6 May 2008

Farming and poetry were inextricably linked for Shrikrishna Kalamb. As he poured his efforts into scraping a livelihood for him and his family from the unyielding land, so he described in verse the scale of his struggle.

It was a struggle he ultimately lost. Confronted by large debts, a mounting sense of futility and worried as to how he would pay for the weddings of his five daughters, Mr Kalamb, 50, hanged himself. In his final poem, written just two days before he took life, he wrote: "My life is different; my death will be like untimely rain."

Mr Kalamb took his life at the end of March, one of tens of thousands of Indian farmers who have committed suicide in recent years. But rather than allowing her father to become another simple statistic, Mr Kalamb's eldest daughter, Usha, has gathered together the 50 or so poems that he wrote and is seeking to have them published. "My father died as a farmer, in perpetual debt and worries. But he lived as a poet, and will remain immortal in his poems," she said.

No one knows precisely how many farmers have taken their lives in recent years but campaign groups say the problem is huge as India's rural community seeks to deal with a downturn in prices and trade policies that have forced them to compete with subsidised products from other countries.

In the Vindarbha district of Maharashtra state in western India, where Mr Kalamb grew cotton, it is estimated that one farmer commits suicide every eight hours. "A mass clinical depression is silently sweeping the farmers of Vidarbha," said Dr Sujay Patil, a local psychiatrist who offers free treatment and counselling to farmers.

"The solution is to help farming. The farmers are feeling hopeless, they are feeling worthless and they are feeling helpless."

The Indian government is well aware of the scale of the crisis playing out in its agricultural sector, an area on which 70 per cent of the population depends for its livelihood. In this year's budget, about £8bn was set aside as a debt waiver for millions of small farmers across the country.

But campaigners say that still enough is not being done. They also claim that farmers are not being protected from the impact of subsidised farming elsewhere and that seed producers are, in effect, holding farmers to ransom.

The group Navdanya, headed by Dr Vandana Shiva, claims that that more 150,000 farmers have taken their lives in the past decade as a result of the impact of liberalisation policies in the agricultural sector.

"It's all related to the land," said Dr Shiva. "When they get into debt ... this is why they are committing suicide. Whatever the government has done issuperficial."'

Lees verder:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/suicide-of-farmer-poet-highlights-the-poverty-trap-in-india-821617.html

1 opmerking:

Anoniem zei

Het is zeer beschamend om, als Europeaan, deel uit te maken van dit probleem.
Economische macht is macht over leven en dood.

Peter Flik en Chuck Berry-Promised Land

mijn unieke collega Peter Flik, die de vrijzinnig protestantse radio omroep de VPRO maakte is niet meer. ik koester duizenden herinneringen ...