
But it is not just the huge “entertainment expenditure’’ that bothers him. The fact that more than developing the community, people come to him with individual problems upsets him.
“Nobody is very interested in planning for the entire village,’’ he says. “Instead, I get so many individual requests for jobs, schemes.’’
And so Warghade spends considerable time getting people cheap seeds, bullock carts, cycles, spices grinding machine for women and agricultural tools for farmers.
In doing all this, Warghade has learnt the ropes of administration well. He knows about all his rights, keeps abreast with all new schemes announced by the government, makes sure that his area gets its due. All the while, he focuses on the standard village he so often dreams of.