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In November 2018, 45-year-old Mohammed Jiyavudeen had come to his village in Pudukottai district for a short holiday with his family. He had worked as a heavy equipment supervisor in Saudi Arabia for two decades, but he knew in his heart that the village of Seriyalur Inam in Keeramangalam was his home.
That is perhaps why when he witnessed the damage wrought by Cyclone Gaja on the district and neighbouring villages in 2018, he quit his job to stay back and aid rehabilitation efforts.
And now, over a year later, the people he helped have rewarded him for his selfless service by electing him as Panchayat President. The Panchayat, which has a majority Hindu population, left behind any communal differences as it decided to march towards development with the candidate who proved that he cared.
Mohammed Jiyavudeen's victory comes at a time when the country is protesting against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA) and the Centre's alleged efforts to polarise citizens. And the villagers who have voted him to power are well aware of the significance of their decision.
"When we were struggling for basic amenities after Cyclone Gaja, it was Jiyavudeen who came to rescue the people," says Kamaraj, a farmer from the village. "At that time the people we voted for - MLAs and MPs, all Hindus, did not even give us a piece of cloth as we struggled.”
Despite all this work, however, his election was still a challenge. "A group of village elders had chosen a man named Shankar as the Panchayat chief in an auction that was held before the elections," reveals Jiyavudeen. "But a huge portion of the villagers were unhappy with this development and insisted that I, and the youngster who worked with me, contest the election. We didn't do all that work for a position or power, but realised a post would mean more ways to help people," he adds.
By then, the elders who wanted Shankar to be elected had already collected Rs 10 lakh to 'build a temple'. The elders then proceeded to allegedly bribe villagers and claimed that electing Jiyavudeen would lead to communal issues in the village.
"In fact, they went house by house with a kuthuvalakku (lamp) and took a promise that the family will vote for the Hindu candidate," says Kamaraj, a farmer and resident of the village, who helped Jivyavudeen in his campaign.
"We told people that religion doesn't matter in the face of basic requirement," says Kamaraj. "Jiyavudeen was the right person for the job and people couldn't deny it. They were ready to give up money and face threats, to make sure he was elected," he adds.
In fact, Jiyavudeen says, one family head came to him and told him that he would have to vote for Shankar as he had promised to do so but informed him that four others in his home, will vote for him.
"Youth and women were my biggest support," says Jiyavudeen. "They wholeheartedly stood by my side," he adds.
And this was evident when he secured 554 of the 1,360 votes polled in the village. And not only this, the four others from his youth group also won the elections in neighbouring villages.
For the villagers, Jiyavudeen's victory has been a moment of celebration of their efforts and the victory of secularism in their Panchayat.
"Our village will be an example for the whole of India," says Kamaraj proudly.
(This article has been republished in an arrangement with The News Minute.)
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Published: 09 Jan 2020,12:13 PM IST