Manish Sabharwal

The second secession


Manish Sabharwal

Démerdard vs L’emmerdeur

Ads by Google

Mails flooding my inbox on 'Poverty is a passive religion' all agreed that charity isn't the solution for dearth. Some readers, however, felt the samosa seller and my early poverty examples in my last fortnight's article cannot cover the massive scale of deprivation our country suffers from. I'm not theorising with poor people, I take responsibility for my message. To chuck poverty out you don't need brilliance, you just need to be demerdard. This French colloquialism refers to a person drowned in merde (shit) who gets rid of it by his own effort. Conversely, there's l'emmerdeur, the person who enjoys troubling others and makes them merde.

Examples are signposts, small in number, but they show the way. A thousand examples can change a million people's lives. That million can inspire 10 million more, and they another 100 million. Somehow the poor in India are not generating enough momentum to become demerdard. Let me narrate an incident, of my father distributing milk and blankets in our refugee colony when Bengal was flooded in 1960. As a mass leader, the Sarbohara Mukti Parishad (freedom for people who've lost everything) he'd formed was given charge of distributing foreign donations for flood relief. After 2-3 days, he discovered that people were selling off the items. He was furious because nutrition was very low amongst children. So he liquefied the milk powder, made people bring containers, and removed the blankets' plastic covers so they didn't look new. A little revolt erupted, but they convinced the poor. This small experience of abusing charity is also an example of both sides being l'emmerdeur to each other, my father for not allowing them to sell and the poor people for depriving their children of milk. Self-urge is what it takes to be demerdard. A farmer's son told me he works 10 km outside his village, so he wanted to hire farm labour to relieve his father. But daily wages have sky-rocketed so he can't afford it. Even in metros it's risen from Rs 50 to Rs 250, sometimes Rs 500. The wage hike and labour scarcity in different pockets of the country opens up scope for anyone who takes initiative to be demerdard. Housemaids in cities have become wise. With an hourly rate, they earn well, working in several homes. Politicians haven't ever taken initiative to teach poor people how to jettison poverty. Gandhiji changed his dress to look like a poor Indian; was that the right direction he gave, inspiring people to reduce their needs and live poorly?

... contd.

Ads by Google
Please read our terms of use before posting comments
TERMS OF USE: The views, opinions and comments posted are your, and are not endorsed by this website. You shall be solely responsible for the comment posted here. The website reserves the right to delete, reject, or otherwise remove any views, opinions and comments posted or part thereof. You shall ensure that the comment is not inflammatory, abusive, derogatory, defamatory &/or obscene, or contain pornographic matter and/or does not constitute hate mail, or violate privacy of any person (s) or breach confidentiality or otherwise is illegal, immoral or contrary to public policy. Nor should it contain anything infringing copyright &/or intellectual property rights of any person(s).
comments powered by Disqus