Photo Credit: CounterCurrent |
Village Dharhara. Many know
it as the ‘village of the mango girls.’ Bihar ’s
chief minister, Nitish Kumar, has often used its example to promote his “good
governance.”
On June 6, 2010, the chief
minister visited the village for the first time. He declared Dharhara’s
practice of planting 10 trees — mangoes and litchis — on the birth of every
girl child, wouldn’t be limited to the
village borders, but be replicated beyond it. The first visit led to the second
— in total, he visited the village four times. On each occasion, he planted a
sapling for a girl child.
In 2010, he planted a
sapling for Lavi Kumari; in 2011, for Rimu Raj; in 2012, for Anjali Kumari and
in 2013 for Rani Kumari — reads the plaque mounted on concrete, to mark every
visit. On his last visit, a Telegraph article recounts how Nitish Kumar took
the six-month-old Rani Kumari from her mother Munni Devi’s lap and commented
that she was very pretty. This month, Rani, a little more than a year, died of
diarrhoea, due to the lack of basic medical help in Dharhara.
Village school teacher Raj
Kishore Singh complains that the health centre is in shambles and is often
locked. “When the CM and his health minister first visited in 2010, we were
promised a six-bed hospital but it hasn’t been constructed yet,” he says. Rani’s
father Pramod Singh believes his daughter would have been alive if the health
centre had been a functioning one. “Last year, the chief minister took Rani in
his lap. Now she is gone,” he says.
Dharhara is a 1,200-acre
village; 400 acres are covered by fruit-bearing trees. It has around 500 homes
and a total of 2,771 voters. Around 75% of the land is owned by upper-caste
Rajputs, and the rest, by the Kushwahas. More than half of the population is landless. The village’s mango
plantation is mainly owned by a handful of families, most of them Rajputs.
In his four trips to
Dharhara, Nitish Kumar has planted two trees for girl children from Rajput
families and one each for a girl born in a Kushwaha and a Mahaldar family. The
dalits and mahadalits in the village were promised land, which hasn’t been
fulfilled. “When the government cannot provide Dalits and Mahadalits with
enough land to set up our houses, how do they expect us to plant trees for our
girls,” says Radha Devi, a Mahadalit from the village. “Forget giving us land, when
the chief minister visited the village, he didn’t even ask about us Mahadalits,”
says Vindeshwari Rajak, another woman from the same community.
The Mahadalits are not the
only ones feeling the pinch. Wahid Ali, another
resident of the village, owns no land except the portion where his ancestral
home stands. He hasn’t been able to plant trees for his two daughters, Ruchi
and Shabana Khatoon. “When parents like us can’t afford land or plant trees, what
is this ideal village everyone’s talking about? Do my daughters get the same
respect as given to others here?” he asks.
Dharhara’s problems are not
just limited to landless parents. After four visits from the state’s CM and
several promises later, the residents
expected some development. But the situation hasn’t improved. Apart from
the non-functional health centre, a crumbling structure has replaced the
village veterinary hospital. Only half of the village gets electric supply. Three
government-installed tube wells have gone dry and a water tank project lies abandoned.
In a state where payment of
dowry by the bride’s family is common, the practice of planting trees at the
birth of a girl child, is, without doubt, a noble tradition. It also helps the
environment. The story of Dharhara has been splashed all over the newspapers. A
documentary, ‘Mango Girls,’ has even been made on the village. During the
Republic Day parade in 2012, a tableau on Dharhara ki Beti (Dharhara’s
daughters) occupied pride of place. But for all the government’s claims, the
tag of a ‘model village,’ has brought this village in Bihar ,
little cause for cheer.
Source: HT
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