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Treating the poor like dirt

It’s mud on the menu as India debates a food security law. What a poverty of imagination.

Updated on: Apr 06, 2010 02:53 AM IST
Hindustan Times | By
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Forget that easy, lazy compartmentalisation of the country into ‘Real India’ and the ‘India We Live In. To tag on to a ‘new’ cliche is to strengthen it and provide the dangerous illusion that identifying a problem is halfway to solving it.

HT Image
HT Image

(We all know where ‘Garibi hatao!’ got us.) When this paper uncovered the fact that children in 2010 India are being forced to suppress hunger by eating mud because not enough food is available to them, it was not an exposé of the way a vast number of Indians live — we just need to go out of our homes to know that the old cliches of poverty are still very much there — but a thuddering confirmation of how the ‘sovereign, socialist, secular, democratic Republic of India’ takes care of its hungry and malnourished citizens.

In the flurry of India’s economic progress and growth of wealth and wealth-creating institutions, starving or malnourished Indians can be such a party-pooper. Which must be the only explanation as to why children in Ganne village, some 45 kilometres away from the hometown of India’s first prime minister — and consequently of India’s first political family — have been left to come up with their own version of a food security programme while an expert group of ministers met to firm up an anti-hunger law. And eating silica-rich mud certainly seems to have been a more effective way of beating hunger than the current set-up that, on paper, feeds the nation’s poorest of the poor.

 
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