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A few years ago, Parbhawati Devi, Bichiya Devi and Meena Devi were landless farm labourers, fully at the mercy of landed farmers for their survival. But things have changed since then. Today, hundreds of women in dozens of villages in Patna district of Bihar, mostly from the marginalised Mahadalit community, have turned to community farming for self-reliant livelihoods. This has rid them of the fear of hunger and merciless exploitation from powerful landlords.
The endeavour was facilitated by initial support from a local organisation that encouraged and inspired them to transform their lives for better days in the true sense of the word on ground zero.
Unlike the government-supported village grain banks, which have become virtually defunct, the Anaj bank established by the women to help themselves and others is a rare success initiated by the poorest of people.
This has freed them to some extent from the age-old clutches of powerful landed upper-caste farmers, who force them to work as bandhua majdoor (bonded labour).
The Anaj Bank provides 5 kg of rice on credit to a man or a woman, who has to return 6 kg, so the charge is only 1 kg per 5 kg. In cases of marriage, the bank provides 1 to 2 quintal of rice to the poorest of poor. The women have taken farming land on a contract that has changed their lifestyle entirely.
“It encouraged us to take land on contract to start community farming with the help of family members to grow our own grain,” she added.
In Muhammadpur, there are nearly 100 households belonging to Ravidas and Paswan castes, considered untouchables by Hindus. Parbhawati, a Ravidas woman, recalled that she used to work as an agricultural labourer. “Today I am doing farming in 2 acres of land with the help of my husband and other family members.”
Bichiya, in her early 40s and a resident of Chichourha village, is proud of doing community farming on nearly 3 acres of land after she received help from the Anaj Bank.
A mother of seven children, including three daughters, Bichiya said that before the Anaj Bank was established, she would get rice from landed farmers on their terms and conditions, locally known as deorhiya. “If I took 5 kg rice from a farmer, I had to return 7.5 kg under the deorhiya system. It was pure exploitation,” she says.
The story is similar in more than 50 households in Chichourha village, mostly belonging to the Musahars community that is derided for eating rats. Like Bichiya, 36 year-old Meena Devi of Sunderepur village said she still does not own land but is doing community farming on 2 acres of land thanks to the Anaj Bank. “I have taken land on annual lease from farmers and am happy that my drums are full of grain. There is no tension of hunger,” she said .
“Action Aid has stopped its support in 2013. Since then, groups of women in dozens of villages have been managing it successfully without any support from outside,” he said.
For setting up the Anaj Bank, groups of women in each village were initially given Rs 5,000 cash to purchase rice and Rs 2,500 to purchase big drums for storage. “Every year during January, February, and March, people return rice that they have taken on credit as per its terms that enable us to store enough rice for giving again on credit during the lean season,” Kumar says.
More than 500 women are associated with the Anaj bank in dozens of villages.
The Anaj Bank was set up in 65 villages — 30 in Bikram, 20 in Pali and 15 in Naubatpur. According to Kumar, no hunger deaths have been reported in these villages of Dalits after the Anaj Bank started functioning.
(This story was first published in Village Square.)
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