Recovering Budhni Mejhan from the silted landscape of modern India
by -
Of late, a childhood friend's 80-year-old mother has
taken to writing. Emboldened by her single-mindedness, memories dulled
by a lifetime of contingencies now respond readily to the daily rustle
of pen on paper.
One memory stands out in Surjit
Kaur's mind. In 1957, as a fresh eyed schoolteacher from Delhi she went
on an educational tour to Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar and West
Bengal. It was 10 years after Independence and she was 25 years old.
As
she rattled off her vintage itinerary for my benefit, I glimpsed in her
account the fascinating glimmer of a narrative that we now soberly dust
off the history shelves as India's Nehruvian past.
The
teachers' orientation trip included predictable destinations such as
Kanpur, Allahabad, Lucknow, Banaras, Ayodhya, Sarnath, Kolkata and
Gwalior which conjured old, civilisational trails of history, culture,
commerce and faith.
But some other halts pointed to a
new map, a new trail of faith: a dam of the Damodar Valley Corporation
(DVC) projected to transform the face of eastern India — then in Bihar,
now in Jharkhand; the Chittaranjan locomotive works in West Bengal; a
cement refractory plant in Katni and the limestone mines in Satna, both
in Madhya Pradesh — all adding up to an image of nation-building through
Nehru's temples of modern India in the young schoolteacher's mind.
It
was to individuals like her that the image of a boyish Sunil Dutt
striding across a dam site in ‘Hum Hindustani' (1960) appealed through
an evocative background song:
‘
Chhodo kal ki baatein, kal ki baat purani, naye daur mein likhenge mil ke nayi kahani, hum Hindustani
(let go of the past; yesterday's talk is old; in this new age, we
Indians we shall write a new story together'). The core of this
nayi kahani
was an idea of progress and development resting on an urban-industrial
vision of a socialist society. It was powered by an abiding faith in
science and technology, including the most significant element of
scientific economic planning.
For Surjit, whose life
had been marked by the splinters of Partition, there was perhaps
something assuring — and non-threatening — about perceiving development
as the yardstick of a new nationalism and modernity.
A
few months ago, the retired schoolteacher's story became a part of my
present when she asked me to gather information on the places she had
visited in 1957. I want to write a detailed account of my best trip
ever, she said with a glint in her eye.
Sometimes an
innocuous request leads you to the past only to snake back into the
present as a story sounding like a sigh, waiting for more than 50 years
to be told. Who was to know that a straightforward task of collecting
dry facts about a dam visited 54 years ago would bring me face-to-face
with the story of Budhni Mejhan, a Santhal tribal, whose life became a
testament to nation-building in a way that could never have been
imagined; who lived all her life like a pebble trapped under a huge
boulder?
I chanced upon Budhni while ferreting out
information about the Maithon dam in Dhanbad district (Jharkhand)
bordering West Bengal, which was a high point of Surjit's itinerary. The
third dam of the ambitious, multipurpose DVC, established in 1948 on
the lines of the Tennessee Valley Authority, it had been inaugurated
around the time of the schoolteachers' visit.
After
Maithon I could have moved on to Surjit's next destination. However, a
predisposition to stray from the highways of search engines lured me
towards material on DVC's fourth dam at Panchet in Dhanbad district,
near its border with Purulia (West Bengal). The dam was built across the
Damodar river known as the ‘sorrow of Bengal.' Not only was this Rs.19
crore dam DVC's biggest until then; its inauguration on December 6, 1959
had been graced by Prime Minister Nehru himself.
After
his own fashion, Nehru had insisted that 15-year-old Budhni Mejhan, a
worker on the site, press the button at the power station to signal the
start of operations. Many search words later, I found a tiny photograph
of this occasion sourced to the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library (NMML)
in Delhi. The mustiness of time had not managed to quell the palpable
excitement of the moment in that blackened, indistinct image; it showed
the teenager pressing the button, flanked by a broadly smiling Nehru and
others.
However, when Budhni returned to her
village, Karbona, the village elders told her that by garlanding Nehru
at the function she had in effect married him. Since the Prime Minister
was not a Santhal, she was no longer a part of the community. She was
told to leave the village. The inflexibility of the community ensured
that the excommunication was complete.
The youngster
was given shelter by a resident of Panchet, Sudhir Dutta, from whom it
was said she had a daughter, born to a destiny of exile like her mother.
In 1962, Budhni was fired from her job at DVC and reduced to doing odd
jobs.
In the 1980s, she travelled to Delhi. She met
the then Prime Minister, Rajiv Gandhi, grandson of the Prime Minister
she had garlanded, with a request: she wanted to be reinstated at DVC.
The
last trace of Budhni was found in a 2001 news report uploaded on the
website www.ambedkar.org. Headlined ‘Tribal ‘ wife' of Nehru is outcast,
driven to poverty' it recounted these details of Budhni's life. Stating
that the 58-year-old was working at DVC, the report quoted Budhni as
saying, “I wish they would allow me to go back to Karbona.”
Assailed
by a feeling of unreality I decided that Surjit's task would have to
wait while I searched for Budhni in old newspaper records and photo
archives at the NMML.
I wanted to see her face. The
clarity of the inauguration photograph granted me that opportunity. I
noticed the ornaments in her hair and the fine silver bangles on the
burnished ebony of wrist. Most of all I was struck by the look of
intense concentration in Budhni's eyes as her hand grasped the switch,
the soft contours of innocence suffusing her face.
The
Panchet dam inauguration had notched a euphoric lead in many
newspapers. ‘Nehru: India marching to prosperity; Big projects a symbol
of our resolve,' went the
National Herald
.
The Statesman
gave Budhni top billing along with the dam: ‘DVC's biggest dam in
commission'; ‘Ceremony at Panchet; ‘Worker switches on power house.' Its
reporter started on a breathless note: “Mr. Nehru, as he invited Mrs
Budhni Majhi (sic), a young Santhal worker, to switch on the power
station here, said it was right that those who had worked on a project
should have the honour of declaring it open.” In doing so “Mrs. Majhi
became the first worker in the country to declare a dam in commission
when she switched on the power station.”
The same
report added that “She spoke in Santhali, dedicating the 134-feet-high
dam to the nation …” The image of a 15-year-old tribal girl dedicating a
dam to the nation in a tongue not even officially recognised by the
nation was somewhat ironic, but that detail seemed not to bother the
writer. (Santhali was included as an official language in the Eighth
Schedule of the Constitution only in 2003.)
But try
as I might, I could not locate even a passing reference to the split
second turn in Budhni's life which sucked out the very meaning of her
existence. The headlines of the month moved from one high to another:
from the Panchet dam to the inauguration of the Durgapur steel plant
blast furnace by President Rajendra Prasad, with a momentous visit of
U.S. President Ike Eisenhower in-between.
At another
level, a constant flow of reports showed up an all-pervasive sense of
mission: ‘India needs 49,000 engineers for Third Plan,' ‘Scientific
farming of potatoes,' ‘Progress in fertilisers,' ‘Self sufficiency in
steel by 1961' and ‘Progress of Bhakra operations,' among others.
Against
this spate of cold print, Budhni's fate almost seemed a figment of
one's imagination. Her story sank in the media, just like the Santhal
villages and historic old temples which got submerged by the waters of
the Damodar river impounded by the Panchet dam. (Tribals constituted
56.46 per cent of the population displaced by the Panchet and Maithon
dams, says a 1999 paper on ‘Dams, Displacement, Policy and Law in
India,' authored by Harsh Mander, Ravi Hemadri and Vijay Nagaraj for the
World Commission on Dams.)
Interestingly, in
1959-60, the term displaced persons referred more to the refugees of
Partition; the uprooting caused by dams started becoming an issue of
debate a decade later.
Of the many links fanning out
from the Panchet dam page, one led to an article by well-known political
psychologist Ashis Nandy on South Asia's first modern environmental
activist Kapil Bhattacharjee. In his time the activist was dubbed a
traitor in some quarters for speaking out against the immensely popular
DVC project.
Yet, paradoxically, the displacement and
impoverishment of tribal populations caused by the DVC did not figure
in the writings of Bhattacharjee, who became a human rights activist in
his later years, writes Nandy. He is of the view that this anomaly
perhaps resulted from the environmental activist's basic faith in the
idea of large scale industrialisation and science-based progress.
On
reading this, a gust of childhood memory stirred my mind. I remembered
an institution known as G.K (general knowledge) tests which loomed large
in schools in the 1970s. From G.K digests printed on splotchy paper and
sold at neighbourhood shops and roadside newspaper stalls, my
generation religiously memorised a map of India characterised by exotic,
faraway sounding names. Each name signified a factory or plant
promising self-reliance, or heavy industries and multipurpose projects
epitomising the sinews of development. The most awe-inspiring names
conjured a vast concentration of mineral deposits; they held aloft the
vision of industrialisation. Their bounty placed India among the top
five or 10 nations boasting one or the other mineral resource in the
world.
There was a measure of solemnity with which we
committed these names to memory: Sindri (fertiliser), Pimpri
(penicillin), Chittaranjan (locomotive), Perambur (coach factory);
Rourkela, Bhilai (steel); Bhakra Nangal, Hirakud, Damodar Valley, Kosi,
Tungabhadra, Koel Karo, Sardar Sarovar (multipurpose projects and dams);
Ankleswar (petroleum); Narora (heavy water), Tarapur (atomic power
plant)… so they went.
Then there were the sing-song
names which flagged India's mineral wealth: Jharia (coal), Hazaribagh
(mica), Singhbhum, Bailadila, Gadchiroli (iron ore), Neyveli (lignite),
Keonjhar (manganese), Koraput, Gandhamardan (bauxite)… Questions on
mineral resource areas were a huge hit with the teachers. An image of a
teacher like Surjit talking animatedly about her visits to such places
crossed my mind.
In an age of few distractions, the
act of memorising embeds a grid in the mind which is not easy to
dismantle. For years, the mention of one location would automatically
revive the entire list in the mind — like they were one.
A
thought came from nowhere that my classmates and I had grown up
thinking of these places as heroic territories full of resources the
nation needed to power ahead — huge expanses awaiting that magic
prospecting touch to fulfil their destinies, and curiously devoid of any
human presence. Not once had it occurred to us to ask if these areas
were inhabited by people, which indeed they were.
Perplexed
by this flashback, I mentioned it to an academician friend. She tossed a
name at me — sociologist Satish Deshpande — saying that an essay whose
title she did not remember, from his book
Contemporary India: A Sociological View
(Penguin, 2003), might help me grasp the pattern of my observations.
She
was right. In his essay, ‘The nation as an imagined economy,' Deshpande
outlines Nehru's visualisation of the nation primarily as an economic
space. Disseminated through schools and state media, the nation became
“a space of production … imagined via economic associations” — be it
through a clear mapping of resources or projected targets through
economic planning. That sounded so familiar.
The
sociologist also tells you why this was so. The idea of “enshrining the
economy as that part of the nation which stands for the whole” was one
of Nehru's “distinctive personal contributions” to the nationalist cause
— a way of overcoming the centrifugal pulls of “culture, language,
religion, caste or ethnicity.”
The mystery of the
powerful emotions aroused by the word development in our minds as
youngsters was also solved for me by the don. The physical planning for
development made it easier to anthropomorphise or to attribute human
form to the economy — “… and to treat it as a sort of person writ large,
in much the same way as Hindu gods and goddesses are thought of…”.
Naturally, the nation was the most clearly and dramatically visible in
giant projects such as dams and steel plants. After all it was from the
Bhakra Nangal site that Nehru asked, “where can be a greater and holier
place than this'.
No wonder
The
Statesman's
report on President Rajendra Prasad's convocation address at the Indian
Institute of Technology, Kharagpur (December 28, 1959), was headlined
‘Too much stress on rights deplored'; ‘Dr. Prasad warns against
neglecting the call of duty.' (About 50 million people were displaced by
big projects in 50 years of independence, according to N.C. Saxena,
then Secretary, Planning Commission, quoted in ‘Dams, Displacement,
Policy and Law in India', 1999.)
Further, these
“sites of development invited the citizens to see themselves reflected
in the mirror of technological progress and development.” That was us —
Surjit, Budhni, and I as a representative of my generation which through
the compass of G.K. had memorised the nation as a geography of
developmental shrines.
A historical juncture had
brought the schoolteacher and the young Santhal tribal selling her
labour on the same plane of Nehru's vision, but at different ends of the
spectrum. The vision was of a modern economy “paired,” as Deshpande
puts it, with a modernised culture unshackled from its conservative and
moribund beliefs of the past. Except, the reality was vastly different
at the grassroots and Budhni fell through the gaps in this vision with
searing consequences. Surjit and I had never known of her existence.
In
a way it was fitting that a simple enough assignment to collect
information about a 50-year-old inspiring developmental trail should
throw up a shadowy presence: a tribal girl who remained outside the
radar of an entire generation attuned to the idea of building the nation
through development as the highest act of patriotism.
Certain
ways of seeing remain convenient even after the fading of a dream, such
as the temptation to perceive areas solely in terms of its resources.
For instance, on the occasion of Republic Day some years ago,
Chhattisgarh created a tableau of the breathtaking Kotumsar caves with
abundant limestone deposits in the mineral rich tribal region of Bastar.
Only, the Bastar tribal was missing from that landscape. This gaze has
only strengthened with the shifts of time — aided by an ideology of
growth fuelled by private enterprise in a globalised world.
As
lessons in citizenship have given way to lessons in consumerism for
many of us, the temptation to dwell on economic geographies has
intensified. But here's the change: these very economic geographies have
metamorphosed into cultural and political topographies. There are
people everywhere and that complicates things. For the hills we see as
bauxite reserves they intimately know as the abode of their gods, the
lineage of their ancestors and grove of medicinal plants. Wherever
people live, they create intensely compressed layers of experience,
expressed through a delicate ecology of connectedness. One needs to
‘see' them; that much I have learnt after becoming aware of Budhni's
presence in an older narrative.
All this while, I had
debated the merits of meeting Budhni. Last week, through a friend's
friend in Ranchi I got news that Budhni died last year, disconsolate to
the end. She was in her late 60s.
The Panchet dam
that Budhni operationalised with the flick of a switch, too, has gone
through its own vicissitudes. During my online
parikrama
around the dam I came upon an article written by Bulu Imam of the Indian
National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage (Hazaribagh chapter) for
the 2006-07 report of the International Council on Monuments and Sites.
Imam describes how the ruins of at least one historic temple of Telkupi,
submerged for decades under the waters of the dammed Damodar, have
become visible due to the silting up of the Panchet reservoir. To my
fanciful mind, the timing of Surjit's request, the retrieval of Budhni's
story, her death and the re-emergence of temple ruins are a strong
signal for a new G.K. of collective imagination which sings a land as
well as its people into existence.
It would be
interesting to know what Surjit makes of this narrative. I am yet to
gather the courage to meet her gimlet gaze having delayed her work
considerably. Though, knowing her feisty temperament she might want to
revisit the landscape of her memories once she hears me out. This time I
shall accompany her.
(Chitra Padmanabhan is a writer based in Delhi.
Email:
cpadmanabhan@gmail.com
)
It's
important that the Santhali worker who inaugurated one of Nehru's
temples of modern India is resurrected in the national memory. She is a
reminder that this land can be separated from its people only with
tragic consequences
( courtesy - The Hindu : Today's Paper / OPINION : Recovering Budhni Mejhan from the silted landscape of modern India )
( courtesy - The Hindu : Today's Paper / OPINION : Recovering Budhni Mejhan from the silted landscape of modern India )
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