The early winter is pouting like a
dusky beauty in this last week of November, to appease, to assuage, to help, to
strengthen and to make everybody’s smile more charming. Through its mist-laden
cool nights and sun-tanned days, it is trying its best to invigorate the flora
and fauna that usually gets lynched by the weather extremes in North India.
Rambeer is feeling the balmy solace
of this November sun. His eyes are closed and he looks more pensive than a
rough farmer like him should. To be linguistically correct he should have been
called ‘Ramveer’, i.e., brave like Sri Ram, but in the farming community the finer
edges get broken to leave a blunt-faced reality. So for the convenience of the
cattle- and women-abusing tongues, he is called ‘Rambeer’. He has many nagging
thoughts plaguing his simple mind not used to calculations outside the sums and
deductions related to agricultural inputs and outputs.
Like many other farmers
he has also been done in. He is feeling fucked. The other day he had got his
virgin buffalo force-mated with a seasoned male buffalo. There were all signs
that the young animal was ready for mating to be pregnant for the first time.
It was braying all night and had gone romping around flirtatiously, broke its
rope, and when they caught it, it was a ghost buffalo with mud all over its
body, shrubbery dangling from its horns. Typical signs of a mating call, they
say. He was not the one to go missing on a chance to get fresh milk in the
family so had immediately hired the services of a muscular, lecherous male
buffalo belonging to an equally lecherous farmer. Initiations are seldom
smooth. There was quite a scene as they facilitated the act. The unsparing male
buffalo landed with its forepaws on the denying young little filly. The lusty
monster’s nostrils full of guffawing, frothy, salivating, sneezy liquid.
Fearsome sight, but then the street urchins clap at the scene as well like they
are witnessing street circus. The poor animal underneath lost its footing and
fell under the masculine black weight.
He now cursed, spat and
muttered that he has been painfully banged like his young buffalo. He recalled
the eventful scene yesterday and said aloud he himself has been treated in the
very same manner by the bulkier buffaloes, the bigger forces: the weather,
hence the God automatically; and then its representative on earth, the market,
hence to the poor farmers like him, the Government again automatically.
Gentleman, farmers
suffer at two very distinct levels. Either it’s the impersonal hand of God that
simply holds them by ears and smilingly makes them see the mysterious spectacle
of undoing all their hard work. If the God is busy doing some more important
undoings somewhere else, thus sparing the tillers for some time, the Government
does it from His side. Low prices hit the farmers even worse, because here they
complete the crop cycle with certain dreams but return almost empty-handed from
the market. So caught between these two supernatural forces, the poor farmer
gets just one weather-saved and market-saved crop in four seasons. And that
surplus keeps him on the path of survival.
This time paddy has
been fucked by the Government-cum-market force. Rambeer’s face had glittered
like he had struck gold under the hoofs of his male buffalo, 12 years ago, when
he sold Basmati rice at INR 2600/100 Kg. Mind it that was more than a decade
ago. Can you believe the same stuff fetched a paltry INR 1400 this season? Almost
half! That too a dozen years down the line. Meanwhile the costs of farming
inputs had skyrocketed. It indeed defies logic. Some educated farmer might very
well crib aloud, ‘Capitalism how can you leave a certain section in lurch like
this?’
Rambeer as a landless
farmer had taken a portion of some other big farmer’s land on rent for paddy
farming. The sum they agreed upon was just on the basis of the expected price
of at least, in the worst case scenario, INR 2000/100 Kg. Robbed of all his
profits by the fluctuating market forces and stockists’ manipulative mantra, he
returned from the market with just the money that would go into settling the
rental amount. It meant he had simply worked for free. The landholding farmers
have pretty thick skin that makes them immune to any sentimentality born of a
crying landless farmer. So there was no option of sharing the loss. An
agreement is after all an agreement and if you do not keep your word, people
won’t give you land on rent anymore in the coming seasons. So keeping the word
was most important. And why would a better placed farmer get a hole in his
pocket by such acts of philanthropy like waiving off a bit of debt in lieu of
unpredictable market-born losses? So Rambeer had just simply handed over
whatever he had got from the grain merchant to the bulky better-placed farmer. Anyway,
if the market forces and the shining economy of India, for their survival,
presume such acts of kindness from a bit-better-placed farmer, then to the hell
with such a system. Those who have hundreds of millions in Swiss accounts are
better for such philanthropy. The Swami who was recently talking of getting
that money back had been cowed down by the lady with glassy eyes and Italian steely
resolve.
Rambeer’s reverie is
broken by the arrival of another farmer who tills the neighbouring patch of
land. Nursing the market insult, he hatefully stars at the stunted growth of
his winter tomatoes. An ex-serviceman, in late forties, this farmer has been
working with all his army ethics on his small landholding. 'This country is up
for bloodbath, I tell you!' he frets and fumes like an aimless light machinegun.
Rambeer even gets scared. Gosh! Guys there is real fire in the eyes and
practical intent in the farmer-ex-soldier’s words. 'The fuckers have stashed
all the money in Swiss accounts. That’s our money man. While they cheat us
through low agricultural product prices and very high cost of livelihood. The behen****s... ', sorry guys an angry
farmer cannot do without gali-sali,
'have fucked farmers at all fronts.' 'Unemployment...these graduate farmers of the
21st century India are not dumb like their forefathers. Believe me man the day
will come when they will just barge into Parliament and just kill the lawmakers
there!' Dear-o-dear what a stormy spectacle it becomes. He is literally shaking
as if we just now have the first leader of the peasant uprising in this agrarian
belt. He seems to recall his still bigger losses in life, ‘I have never been
lucky, hard work does not pay as they say in the books. Even in army behen****s
fucked my chances of a promotion forcing me to retire just at the age of 40 and
that is when you need the financial back-up for your family, your kids are
growing up, you need more money.’ The dispiriting spectacle of his stunted poor
tomato plants takes him back to his in-service miseries. He is wearing a faded,
coarse-clothed army shirt that helps him in farming like denims did with the
cowboys.
It is the very same
shirt that gave him a chance to become a part of what the common man presumed
to be ‘the liberation movement in independent India’. His ex-army shirt gave
him an opportunity to contribute his common part to the common men’s movement
led by the common man and his team of self-proclaimed common men and women?!
Yes of course it did! It saved his life just a day before he and Rambeer had
planned to add to the weakening voice of Anna from his Ramlila maidan platform as his fast entered the second week in the
terribly hot and humid Delhi in August. It happened a day before they had
planned to see the great Anna who had literally hijacked all forms of media in
the country. The farming ex-soldier was cutting Jowar, the long-stalked fodder crop, moving his sickle with
expertise. The fodder crop had overgrown grass on the ground. His sickle must
have touched the reptile. With its venomously instantaneous hitting prowess, the
cobra struck at the hand wielding the instrument. Sometimes you are unlucky to
fall even on the smoothest of ground, without hitting any obstacle, without
walking carelessly, even while watching your feet. At other times, you might be
lucky not to trip even once while the terrain around might not spare even a
single smooth step. It was one such stroke of luck, the good luck that we need
and aspire for so much. The cobra hit precisely the way it should when provoked
like this. The farmer reacted with the usual not-so-agile reaction of the hand whose
beholder is just cutting fodder lost in so many mundane things. But he was
lucky, an odd chance, an exception. His army background saved him, or more
particularly his army shirt did, or more specifically his habit of wearing his
clothes always with full sleeves, or still more specifically the big cuff
button that you have on army dresses saved him, or still more particularly his
caring wife was the beholder of luck in that only yesterday she had retagged
the about to get off button with her needle work. It was a little chain of good
causes that fetched him that bit of life-saving luck. The cobra’s snout hit the
big button, as providential as a bullet meant to hit the soldier right in the
middle of the heart, hits rather the coin, five rupee coin in the pocket to get
ricocheted. The black hooded reptile’s fang got entangled in the button hole. The
official army wares have big buttons, if you can recall. Both the human and the
deadly reptile panicked out of their wits. The farmer ex-soldier but deserves
more credit in that he did not faint. With death hanging down his cuff button,
he used some odd still-working chamber in his brain to throw away the reptile
with the help of his sickle. The cobra was as longer than his height. When he
had stood, holding his hand at it maximum possible distance from his face,
their eyes meeting for the flash of a second, the reptile’s head still higher
by a few inches, he had stolen a look at its tail still touching the ground,
and then he had just given the best shot of his life in blowing away the enemy
with his sickle. That was the closest he had faced death.
The Anna movement had
caught Delhi in the whirl-wind of many such disgruntled hardworkers! Both
Rambeer and the just saved ex-soldier-cum-farmer had added to the disgruntled
clamour in the Ramlila maidan under
the presumption that they are playing their tiny parts in the new revolution. A
new liberating moment in the country’s political history. But all this would
just end up as a damp squib, the movement just acting like a safety valve to
let out the over-boiling mass angst. There would be just another political spin
out: Kejriwal and his socially active band of non-descript workers who would also
get a ride in the political bandwagon and the great Anna will again go fasting
innocuously at his village in Maharashtra. The mountain turning out to be a
molehill, the future seemed really for some political jerks and pulls by
Kejriwal and group who defected to have a share in the ruling pie.
However, on this sunny November
afternoon, in the year 2011 to be precise, right here in the fields, the real
but always ignored stage of losses and sufferings, there is a mini-storm, a
tiny-revolt in the butter-jug. The soldier still appears to carry that
revolutionary spirit that he mustered up in yelling ‘Bharat Mata Ki Jai’ towing the aged social worker’s clarion call to
set people against the mighty and the corrupt in the country. Two ranting,
aggrieved farmers now at least believe that they have a right to grumble and nurse
their injuries through verbal outpours.
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