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On a hot April afternoon, Bhetwadi village in Mokhada administrative block of Palghar wore a deserted look. The hills surrounding this tribal village of 72 families, about 150 km north of Mumbai, were bare with patches of dry grass. All water bodies had gone dry with only one dug well having enough water to last the next 10 days.
In such heat and desperate situation, residents of Bhetwadi walked everyday for half a km to a nearby bone-dry rivulet to construct a cement embankment through voluntary labour. The bund, they claimed, was the gateway to water-sufficiency.
“This monsoon we won’t let excess rainwater flow away,” Manjula Ganga Mirki, a 60-year-old Warli tribal resident of Bhetwadi, told VillageSquare.in. She, too, was daily donating voluntary labour for construction of the bund. According to her, every day at least one person per family came to the site to build the embankment, and more than 60% of the workers were women.
Sanvaji Gurav, Mirki’s neighbor from Bhetwadi, said the villagers were tired of depending on government water tankers for drinking water during the peak summer months. “We will create our own water,” Gurav told VillageSquare.in.
Mokhada is a tribal-dominated taluka of Palghar district in Maharashtra that receives an annual average rainfall of 2,500 mm. However, the entire terrain is hilly basalt formation and does not hold water for long. Rainwater cannot seep into the ground and gets washed away in no time.
During the monsoon months, Bhetwadi village comes alive with several nullahs and rivulets flowing with turbulent water. However, by January, all the water bodies dry up.
“We could not even sleep in the night and had to be always alert about the arrival of water tanker,” she said. “With this new bund on the rivulet, our miseries should end.”
Aadoshi village is about 4-5 km from Bhetwadi. Till three years ago, its residents used to face acute drinking water scarcity in the summer months.
In 2014, a local non-profit, Aroehan, raised funds through a philanthropic initiative of Mumbai-based EdelGive Foundation to construct a check dam across a local river near Aadoshi. Apart from providing safe access to villagers trying to cross the river during the rainy season, the check dam also solved its drinking water problems. Similar check dams have been constructed in Kurlot, Butoshi and Shirasgaon villages of Mokhada.
Last November, villagers contacted Aroehan to explore the possibility of constructing a check dam on the rivulet near Bhetwadi village. Thereafter, its village council passed a resolution to contribute voluntary labour to build the water harvesting structure with technical support from Aroehan. A no-objection certificate was obtained from the gram panchayat. Baburao donated a part of his farmland for the construction of the embankment.
On 20 January this year, the construction of the bund started. For the next three months, about 100 residents of Bhetwadi laboured daily to harvest rainwater through creation of the bund.
The site selection for the check dam was done in consultation with the villagers. “Our technical team worked with the local people to finalise the site as villagers know the flow of water during monsoon. They are also aware of the areas where water dries up the last,” Rahul Tiwrekar, consultant with Aroehan, told VillageSquare.in.
The design of the cement bund at Bhetwadi is unique as it is meant for a high rainfall zone.
This not only ensures availability of enough water in the downstream villages, but also protects the bund from being washed away with high velocity water.
The cement bund at Bhetwadi is 80 feet long, 6 feet wide at the bottom and 3 feet wide on the top.
All the existing cement bunds at Kurlot, Butoshi, Aadoshi and Shirasgaon villages have water throughout the summer months, he added.
Harvesting rainwater in a cement bund will also help raise the water table of Bhetwadi’s village dug well located upstream of the bund. Villagers have already drawn up the next-level plan of drinking water supply to their village.
The same 3kW off-grid solar-powered water filtration system will be used to pump water from the cement bund to the village well. There will be an additional cost of motor pump and pipeline. The cost of the entire project at Bhetwadi is Rs 20 lakh, which Aroehan has raised through corporate social responsibility (CSR) of private companies.
Apart from creating water infrastructure at the village level, Aroehan’s drinking water project provides employment to the local villagers who are unable to get rabi (winter) crop due to water scarcity. Post Diwali, majority of the villagers in Bhetwadi migrate to Mumbai and Nashik in search of livelihood.
Each villager involved in construction of the check dam is paid a daily wage Rs 200, which is part of the money raised through corporate social responsibility programs.
Out of the total number of days put in by a villager for construction of the cement bund, each villager deposits two days wage into a common bank account of the village. This seed money is later used for the maintenance of the cement bund.
Meanwhile, Mirki cannot stop smiling. She is confident that next summer she won’t have to toil for water.
(This article was first published on the VillageSquare.in and has been republished with permission. Nidhi Jamwal is a journalist based in Mumbai)
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