"Disenfranchise them." This is
the new cry of some middle class people in Mumbai. The poor living in
slums are "illegal" in that they are squatting on land not meant for
that purpose. So deny them the vote. This, they believe, will solve the
problem of slums because politicians will pay no attention to the poor
if they cannot vote and therefore will ensure that they are removed.
Made to vanish into thin air. Half the people who hold up more than)
half the city with their labour should be asked to make way for roads,
shopping malls, cinemas, apartment blocks for people who are "legal",
who can pay for these facilities. Incredible as it might seem, one set
of Indian citizens is actually arguing that another should not be
allowed to vote for no fault of theirs except that they have no place to
live and are poor. And irrespective of the fact that every citizen of
India is entitled to vote.
The people our middle classes
would like to disenfranchise have names, histories and are probably more
committed to a democratic systern than people who can take their shelter
for granted. Take Lakshmi, who was one
of three families who parked themselves on the pavement on Sophia Zuber
Street in Mumbai’s Nagpada area. This is one of the oldest
neighbourhoods, one that has changed little despite the growth of the
city. But Lakshmi’s life has changed. Today there are 50 families living
on the same stretch of pavement where she had erected a lean-to with
tarpaulin in the early 1980s. In those days she could cross the road
without risking her life. The building across the street, Taiyab
Building, allowed her to sleep at night under the staircase. For six
years she slept there. Her son, who is now 21, was born there. Today the
traffic on the street is heavy and relentless. You can cross it with
difficulty. And it does not stop until way past 3 a.m. Lakshmi is immune
to the sound and the fumes.
After living for over 24 years
in this spot, Lakshmi now has a six feet by eight feet hut barely high
enough for an average person to stand straight. Three months ago she got
electricity. This is an extension from a man who has a stall extracting
juice from sugar cane. He has an "official" connection with a meter and
he spreads the bounty by giving connections at a price to the pavement
dwellers living in the vicinity. Lakshmi ends up paying a whopping Rs.
400 per month for this connection which lights one bulb and one table
fan. In contrast, people living in permanent housing would probably pay
only slightly more than this for multiple electrical connections.
As we sit in her small hut, and
breathe in the exhaust fumes that are abundant at street level, Lakshmi
explains how the street gets flooded every monsoon and water enters her
house from the overflowing gutter. When it is not raining, she locks her
hut and goes and sleeps at the gate of the compound whose wall is part
of her pavement dwelling. Needless to say, Lakshmi has never had water
and the toilet is a pay toilet run by the municipal corporation. The
women fought to lower the rate from Rs. 2 to Rs. I for women and
children.
But no bitterness
You would imagine a woman like
Lakshmi has plenty to be bitter about. Far from it. She is a leader of
her community, the only Hindu in a settlement of Bihari Muslims. There
has never been a communal problem. She collects money from each family
for a common saving scheme. And she has taught this skill to women from
near and far. At the end of the day, she says she is proud that she can
vote. She speaks fondly of her 21-year-old son who loves music. His
guitar is strung up on the wall. And she dreams of one day living in a
pucca house.
It is women like Lakshmi who
are the true "citizens" of a democratic society. They expect little from
the State and get practically nothing. Yet, they contribute their labour.
They fulfil their duty by voting. And they participate in community
process that help everyone to get out of difficulties instead of just
lining their own pockets. The question is not whether a woman like
Lakshmi deserves the vote. It is whether the politicians for whom she
votes deserve her vote.
(Originally
apeared in THE HINDU)
E-mail the writer:
ksharma@thehindu.co.in