Dear AID Volunteers,
My yet incomplete quest for the proper balance of action and reflection
makes it difficult for me to still my mind sufficiently to review with
you the past year.
My first few months were largely spent travelling and finding
out my own ways of getting from point A to point B
I travelled over more than half of India…. I certainly benefitted from
this, but all the time I was asking myself uneasily: “Can the coming of
non-violence really be hastened by my travelling about like this?
Is it possible by such methods to bring about the social change that we
desire?” My mind dwelt continually upon such matters as how the railways
had been built, and where I had got the money needed for my journeys. It
also seemed to me that these speedy means of travel tend to excite the
mind rather than to encourage deeper reflection…. Could they ever help
me to reach the common people?
Vinoba Bhave
July – November were months of conceiving and reconceiving approaches
to development in settings which themselves evoked and demanded sensitivity
and alertness to people and people’s issues, movements, and organisations.
Rural education, Tribal Medicine, Traditional Science, Fishworker’s Rally,
NGO Fair, Alternative Development Workshop were some of the occasions to
leap into new perspectives.
Not only our perspective, but our identity also evolves in different
settings. How we introduce ourselves, how we are introduced, affects
our ability to move and talk with people. Often it is a challenge
to live up to the introductions others give us.
On one weekend we met over 100 NGOs in a fair held in Churchgate
and just a few kilometres away sat among thousands of women and men belonging
to the National Forum of Fishworkers. To experience such an instant
connection between the NGOs who, for example are protecting the coastal
environment and the people who are fighting the factory-trawling MNCs is
just one example of the intensive education I availed in the early months.
From December onwards I also began presenting and helping to organize
meetings of different people and groups. In the AID India conference
in Chennai, we brought together village level workers, journalists, national
level conveners of people’s movements, government workers including a former
Union Secretary, and those aspiring to work for village development.
Reading the proceedings of that conference, we can see one message ringing
loud and clear from people in all these categories: local planning
and conceiving of development projects is not an add-on to customize a
general policy but it is essential and must precede the formation of the
policy.
The urgency of this message in the context of India’s New Economic
Policy and the OECD’s plots for a Multilateral Agreement on Investments
increases day by day. At the December meeting of the International
Committee on Dams, Rivers, & People which preceded the South Asia Public
Hearings of the World Commission on Dams, some of us were projecting the
effects of the MAI and resistance to MAI on dams and water and energy policies.
Professor Ramaswamy Iyer, Former Secretary for Water Resources, GoI, whom
I met in the WCD meeting, was responsible for India’s First National Water
Policy. When he spoke in the AID-India conference, he said that the
Policy needed to be revised and reoriented towards participatory planning
and management of water resources. However, in AID-Mumbai’s meeting
with Rajinder Singh of Tarun Bharat Sangh, we learned that the draft of
the Revised Water Policy is very market oriented and makes a mockery of
people’s participation in the places where it does mention this.
Such a water policy is clearly a repercussion of globalisation and a precursor
to a world under MAI. Implementation of this policy will only harden
and hammer in the practice of water export and, as many have predicted,
may result in violence of a large scale.
My experience with nonviolent movements has motivated some of
the projects I have pursued in India. One begins to see the multiple
dimensions of standard development categories such as health, forests,
water, or education. Nonviolent demonstrations for ethnic studies
and reconceiving the “core curriculum” in Columbia University predisposed
me towards the jeevanshalas of the Narmada Valley, in which students are
taught not only reading, writing and arithmetic, but also standing up for
the truth. Primary schools students have led their own processions
opposing the submergence of their jeevanshala hut and grounds, and have
staged plays on issues ranging from alcohol to the history of the Narmada
Bachao Andolan. These students fought and won battles to have their
school recognized, even at the cost of 1 or 2 years for pupils of the early
batches. Another unique effort in education was the Global Peace
March which took information on a recent national policy and its effects
to hundreds of villages. This opportunity for villagers to have informed
discussion on the health effects of radiation and the destructive capabilities
of nuclear weapons would not have arisen from the standard educational
curriculum or the information given in the popular media. The March
evoked solidarity actions around the world, including the signature collection
and rally of AID volunteers in DC and visit to India and Pakistan Embassies.
I came to India with three years volunteer experience in AID US.
While in US we correspond with NGOs all of us are aware that there are
many less equipped groups doing intensive work through grassroots action
who are for various reasons not inclined to request funds from abroad.
I myself was aware of the Narmada Bachao Andolan, ever since I saw Narmada:
A Valley Rises in 1995. Through events AID organised, such as screening
of When Women Unite, lecture by journalist P. Sainath, and talk by Medha
Patkar, we came to know of quite a few more community based organisations
and people’s movements in India. I was eager not only to work with
such groups myself, but to improve the communication and understanding
of such groups among Indians abroad. Therefore it was not sufficient
for me to work individually, but to carry the spirit of AID into this kind
of work. All too often, the prevailing development policy and paradigm
results in exploitation and impoverishment of communities which had once
been living a self sufficient and sustainable life with their natural resource
base. In the past year many AID volunteers have probed the implications
of this. Fundamental questions regarding development – for whom?
at whose cost? with whose consent? sustainable? equitable? honest?
-- are asked with greater clarity and depth by a wide range of AID volunteers
and AID has also attracted new volunteers with more experience and ability
to evolve this perspective in development.
For example, in a letter of 13 Aug 99, Aniruddha of State College writes,
Considering the close relationship between development, redistribution
of power and resources and conflict, we should
perhaps interpret "apolitical organization" to mean that we
are not interested in participation in government or in political
parties etc. but that we do not necessarily
rule out cooperation, persuasion or opposition to specific
governmental or societal policies or actions which affect this relationship.
Such a perspective also calls for a new role from AID volunteers, namely
to build more direct links with the common people and the issues, movements
and organisations of the poor or those facing impending poverty.
What is common about the people? It is their reliance on common resources,
common sense, and their common cause with others who respect these commons.
This implies rejection of patenting of natural items, privatisation of
public spaces and people’s knowledge, and selling of community spaces and
community interests under the force of globalisation. The eminent
farmer Bhaskar Save has written in a letter to the Planning Commission
in 1993:
Exporting Water:
The water used to irrigate one acre of sugarcane can provide the needs
of at least 25 acres of jowar, bajra or maize. One kg of basmati rice requires
300 to 400 litres of water, and large quantities of such rice are
exported. One kg of corn requires only 15 to 17 litres of water and this
crop is imported. In effect, we are exporting our water resources.
The Government is also promoting the export of sugar. Each such kg of
processed sugar requires at least 2 to 3 tonnes of water, which could have
been used to grow, by the traditional organic way, about 150 to 200 kg
of jowar or bajra to feed our own people. Moreover, the monocultures
of sugarcane cause the worst problems of salinisation. While we may be
able to import food, fuel, fertiliser, etc., land is something that can
never be imported. We must be careful that we do not create in India, another
Ethiopia or Somalia. God may forgive our mistakes, rooted in short-sighted
greed, but the future generations will never forgive us.
Now you will not find many in AID who dispute a statement such as the
one Soma Nag made recently, “merely funding projects without understanding
the deeper issues, is unlikely to make a difference.”
These deeper issues are everywhere – around us, within us.
Connecting with people’s movements requires us to internalize the holistic
development that we support.
New skills
? Talking to women in villages. Why is this a skill? Because
more often it is the men who will come out and talk to a newcomer in a
village. Often we find that women occupy the “fourth world” unfamiliar
even with the ways and media of the third world. Nothing in my experience
in AID US could have prepared me to overcome this communication gap.
? Starting women’s self help groups. Thanks to the wonderful guide
United We Sit prepared by Balaji and Sandeep from the basic text of Franco
(TNSF) I found that I could speak with confidence to a group of women and
convince them that whether they had income or not they could save, they
could travel to the bank, they could keep their own accounts, and yes,
they could even lend among themselves. Along with Varalakshmi
of GRASS I spoke to women in Manthina and Buradapeta villages of Srikakulam
District about the social as well as economic benefits of the savings group,
which has now spread under the leadership of Varalakshmi and Suryanarayana
to 8 villages of the district.
? Language activities with children: With no supplies of my own
I can engage children in writing and speaking about the day-to-day activities
of their village and also in asking questions about social issues and imagining
solutions to local problems.
? Talking to police: I remember at my first AID meeting (a GBM)
people were discussing the perennial question “how do we know if an NGO
is honest?” I think one answer is that the honest ones are not afraid
to challenge the authorities when it is necessary. Honesty is not merely
lack of dishonesty, but it is courage to speak the truth. Moving
with such courageous and committed people has taught me to speak to the
police. In the prevailing development policy context, which poses
a threat to the well being of many villages, it is absolutely necessary
for the village worker to be able to speak the truth to the police.
As I have learned in the Narmada Valley, sarkar hmasao DrtI hO, paolIsa
kao Aagao krtI hO “A cowardly government resorts to police repression.”
As long as we do not communicate the truth to the police, that cowardliness
reflects upon us.
? Decentralizing waste: Simple techniques of trash separation
and awareness of bioindicators make composting much more effective
and smart.
Issues I am dealing with currently
Delegating some of my AID US responsibilities: Deeptha Thattai
has taken over the internships program. A slow and steady process
has begun for training others to produce the monthly newsletter.
Promotional Producing the AID canvas bag using unbleached cotton and
fair labour has helped us to reach out to over 100 people with the simple
message “Say No To Plastic Bags” and the deeper truth “If the People Lead,
Eventually the Leaders will Follow.” With inspiration from AID MD
we also produced a T shirt that highlights the injustice in the Narmada
Valley. These products are made fairly, have a social message, and
are sold to raise funds for AID India or for the groups AID India wants
to support.
Magazines As we discover good magazines we try to support them
by encouraging more people to support them.
Communicating with AID US: As I said in Cincinnati, AID India
should not become just another NGO for AID, but it must help to bridge
the gap between AID and the context in which the movements and NGOs in
India are working and the range of issues with which they are dealing.
If AID India simply falls on the other side of the communication gap AID’s
objectives in linking with the most effective and dedicated people and
organisations will be considerably set back.
Integrating the insight gained in India in the activities and publications
of AID US. All of the AID India volunteers do wish to contribute
something back to help address the problems faced by volunteers in the
US.
I thank all of you for your interest in my work.
Sincerely,
Aravinda