(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist)
Vol. XXXIV
No.
20
May
16,
2010
Do You Know
What It Takes To Be A
Anganwadi Worker?
G Mamatha
I
WAS full of emotions as I was writing this. I was angry, I was happy
and I was
inspired. A whole range of emotions were in play. I was angry – at the
government, at the media. Happy, that so many women workers had come to
Delhi,
braving many
hardships to protest the government inaction. Inspired, because of
their -
resolve to struggle, determination to fight, courage to fight
adversities and
will to overcome whatever obstacles that may come up in their way. I
heard
their stories, if you can call their life a story. If their life is a
story,
every page in it would be illustrated with struggles. Struggle for
survival,
fighting the might, burning their blood and sinews. All of this to
ensure that
the future of the country is safe and sound.
I
am talking about the more than 20,000 anganwadi workers who had come to
Delhi
representing lakhs
of their sisters. 20,000 people coming to Delhi
and organising protest demonstrations is not something new. But Delhi had never
seen
20,000 women workers coming to protest for realisation of their
demands. Delhi
had never seen
20,000 women sit on the road for more than 24 hours and warning the
government
to ignore them at their own peril. This is what happens when workers,
women
workers, working hard to death decide they have had enough.
Overworked,
terribly underpaid and mistreated, the anganwadi women came to Delhi to remind
the government of its
promises and demand it to show them the respect they deserve. They were
here on
the call of the All India Federation of Anganwadi Workers and Helpers.
These
20,000 individuals, coming from 20 states and speaking as many
languages were
united in their demand: “Provide
pension, gratuity and provident fund to all anganwadi employees; pay
minimum
wages; regularise anganwadi workers; save ICDS from privatisation..."
It
is this that had bonded them together in the two day mahapadav
held on May 4-5.
Just
in front of the Jantar Mantar, where they sat in protest is a five star
hotel
which sees a steady stream of customers – both to dine and dance. For
them
these protesting women who had stayed on the street are 'crazy', a
'bloody
headache' an 'irritant before the party'. “They spoil our day, and now
even our
nights! Oh No! My Gawd, somebody stop this” rued one among them.
Intoxicated
with money, they look down upon them as flies, and think that the world
would
be better without them. Alas, all their study, knowledge and the
intellect they
have acquired does not teach them a simple fact – it is these workers
that make
the world and not the other way round. Brushing off 'this irritant',
they go
inside the hotel to spend, “come on yaar, without a minimum of 10K
(10,000)
would I go inside...after all it is not every day that you come”.
Shanta
Ghante from Gulbarga
district of Karnataka, one of these 20,000 women was seen eating jowar
roti,
which she had cooked and packed 3 days earlier as she could not afford
to buy
food. For the thousands sitting in front, for those 'crazy' women, 10K
is more
than their seven months wages. India
shining, dining and dancing for some while India
suffering, starving and
struggling for many! For the former eating is fun, for the later it is
struggle. And it is the simple realisation of this fact that brought
them here
braving many adversities.
Standing
for nearly 28 hours in a very crumpled space in the train, huddled with
other
comrades-in-arms, N Bhagyam travelled
all the
way from her village in Prakasham district in Andhra Pradesh to attend
the mahapadav. She says, “The prices of all
basic food items are touching the sky, while our honorarium (yes, the
government 'honours' them so does not give them salaries) is touching
the paatal in real terms. We don’t
even get our wages regularly. We feel very fortunate if
we get them at least once in six months. How do we eat, how do we feed
our
children, how do we send them to school and how do we survive, in such
situations? The government does not care to understand our problems.”
The union
government pays an 'honorarium' of Rs 1,500 and Rs 750 per month to the
anganwadi workers and helpers respectively. For her, the hardships she
had
endured while coming to Delhi
are nothing compared to what she endures throughout her life. For us
'standing', 'crumpled space', are 'hardships', for her it is a journey
to a
better life!
Concurring
with her, Kaushalya from Mandi in Himachal Pradesh says, "We provide a
vital front-line service in remote rural areas. Every other employee
under ICDS
scheme is recognised as a government employee and receives government
benefits,
except for us. They call us social workers or part time workers,
despite the
fact that we often work longer than full-time workers, our work begins
at 7 am
and continues till late in the night, sometimes up to 10 pm.Sometimes, we even work on Sundays. The
government says our services are voluntary and honorary, to deny us our
due
wages and exploit us”.
Hanging
a title of 'honorary' and 'voluntary' work around their neck, the
government
robs them of the minimum wages. Forget all those glossy advertisements,
the
truth walks in front of you in every village and town, if you dare to
question.
“If the government is serious about arresting child morbidity and
mortality,
why does it treat the grassroot functionary with such apathy”, other
workers
from the state ask.
Esther
Rani from a village in Bihar says,
"The
panchayat is given the responsibility of releasing the honoraria. This
enables
panchayat functionaries to exercise control over the workers. Some of
them,
including the sarpanchs and CDPOs took "percentage" from the workers
as a precondition for releasing their honoraria, of about Rs 5 for Rs
100.”
Sudha
Khedule from Nagpur
asks, “Why a retirement age of 60 is stipulated for us, when we are
considered
social workers. The government should regularise us as employees and
give us
social security benefits.” Sarla Meshram from another village in Maharashtra says, “We get honorarium once in six
months.
We borrow money from Saukar who charges exorbitant interest rates, to
meet the
basic expenses incurred during the days when we are not paid. The
government
should take measures to release our money regularly every month.”
Vasanthi
from Vellore
in
Tamilnadu asks, “Why are we denied government employee status when we
are
entrusted with almost every government responsibility at the village
level. We
do the work for 36 registers, including immunisation under the pulse
polio
programme. We are required to promote small savings and group
insurance, form
self-help groups, conduct surveys to identify below-poverty-line
families and
diseases such as leprosy and phylariasis, and even help in cattle
census. Under
the ICDS, we are required to work for four hours a day but usually we
put in
ten to twelve hours given these extra responsibilities. We get no
holiday or
leave apart from the statutory government holidays. Worse still, we are
summoned at any time. The government does not pay us a single paisa for
the
extra amount of work we do".
Phul
Devi from Jodhpur
in Rajasthan says, “There are not enough buildings for anganwadi
centres. If we
carry on activities from our homes, we are not paid any rent. If we
hire a
place in the village, the government only pays an amount of Rs 200.
These days,
nobody rents a house for such a paltry amount. Houses are rented for
not less
than Rs 800. The extra amount incurred for paying the rent is borne by
us. The
government should build pucca houses for anganwadi centres.”
Champa
Devi, an anganwadi worker from Jallandhar in Punjab
says, “In spite of our high social relevance, job security eludes us.
Many of
us are deserted, separated or widowed middle-aged woman, who work right
in the
midst of the village community. In the absence of proper service rules,
we face
many cases of sexual harassment by the panchayat pradhans, when
we are
asked to get the pradhan's signature to get our honorarium or
annual
leave sanctioned. This is one of the reasons why we are opposing the
handing
over of the management of anganwadi centres to the panchayati raj and
nagarapalika
institutions ". Experience had taught them that it is only through
struggle that they could achieve anything. They reminded that even
their meagre
wages have reached their current level only due to the long-standing
struggles
of their union.
The
National Advisory Council of the UPA-1 government had estimated that Rs
17,000
crore is required to universalise the ICDS, and another Rs 16,500 crore
if the
workers are to be regularised. This is still only 0.6 per cent of GDP.
Also, by
using anganwadi workers as "unpaid labour" for various tasks
unconnected with the ICDS, the government is already saving Rs 1,000
crores!
And if only the government would restore the tax:GDP ratio to its
1990-91
level, it could fully provide for the ICDS, the midday meal and
employment guarantee
schemes. This UPA government led by the Congress says it has no
resources for
making provisions for this allocation, but on the other hand, in the
current
budget itself, it has doled out Rs 80,000 crore as tax concessions to
the big
corporates. This is more than double the amount required to meet the
demands of
anganwadi employees. Clearly, it is the lack of political will and not
the
resources which is responsible for the present state of affairs.
With
their patience growing thin, these women workers had come to Delhi, the seat
of political power, to remind
of peoples' power. Their indomitable spirit earned unprecedented
respect. Their
action inspired many and renewed the belief that wherever workers rise
in
consistent struggles, they would definitely win the world. They
reminded
everyone that women are not just a tough lot, but a mighty force to be
reckoned
with.