advertisement
Video Editor: Prashant Chauhan
Twenty-one eminent artistes, including Padma Vibhushan Birju Maharaj and Guru Jayarama Rao, who were handed eviction notices on 9 October, have called the decision taken by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs ‘saddening’ and ‘humiliating’.
These artistes, most of whom are senior citizens, have stayed at their government-allotted accommodations in New Delhi for over four decades. They will now have to vacate the houses by 31 December, 2020. Allotments are made on the recommendation of the Ministry of Culture by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs, through the Directorate of Estates, for a period of three years. With no permanent housing, artistes are uncertain about their next steps in a prevailing pandemic.
According to the terms of the last written policy of allotment from 2008, there is a reevaluation of accommodations every 3 years. Artistes must be between 40 and 60 years of age and their income must not exceed over Rs 20,000 a month to be considered.
Sources in the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs told The Quint that since the last extension had ended in 2014, artistes’ stay had been regularised from 2014 till September 2020 by the government.
These damages have been accumulated by 27 artistes, but 6 of these or their families have already vacated allotted homes in the last few years. Several artistes told The Quint that they were not intimated about these damages but have been paying the licence fee as per rules.
Kuchipudi maestros Vanashree Rao and Guru Jayarama Rao, who have previously been given eviction notices in 2004, 2014, and 2018, say that no written policy has been formulated after 2008.
Artistes feel that eviction has always been a ‘sword hanging over their head’.
Not just shelter, these accommodations have also acted as a workspace to pursue their art form, as in the case for Odissi exponent Mayadhar Raut, who has trained several gurus and dancers at his allotted home.
These senior Padma and National awardees have written to the government and PMO on several occasions regarding their allotment under the general pool of residential accommodation for artists. In all these representations, artistes have demanded a dialogue with the concerned bodies and the prime minister as well.
The same plea was put forth in a meeting with the Secretary in the Ministry of Culture on 17 November.
Artistes hope that the move to evict is rethought on compassionate grounds, given their national contribution to the arts and the international repute brought to the country. Without this, they will be rendered homeless.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)