Barefoot - The Other Side
of Life!
C an anyone
really live on Rs. 26 a day, the income of the officially poor in rural
India? Two youngsters try it out.
Late last year, two young men
decided to live a month of their lives on the income of an average poor
Indian. One of them, Tushar was the son of a police officer in Haryana.
He had studied at the University of Pennsylvania and worked for three
years as an investment banker in the US and Singapore. The other, Matt,
had migrated as a teenager to the United States with his parents, and
had studied in MIT. Both decided at different points to return to India,
joined the UID Project in Bengaluru, came to share a flat, and became
close friends.
The idea suddenly struck them
one day. Both had returned to India in the vague hope that they could be
of use to their country. But they hardly knew the people of this land.
Tushar suggested one evening, ‘Let us try to understand an "average
Indian", by living on an "average income".’ Matt loved the idea. They
began a journey which would change them forever.
To begin with, what was the
average income of an Indian? They calculated that India’s Mean National
Income was Rs. 4,500 a month, or Rs. 150 a day. Globally, people spend
about a third of their incomes on rent. Excluding rent, they decided to
spend Rs. 100 each a day. They realised that this did not make them
poor, only average. Seventy-five per cent Indians live on less than this
average.
The young men moved into the
tiny apartment of their domestic help, much to her bemusement. What
changed for them was that they spent a large part of their day planning
and organising their food. Eating out was out of the question; even
dhabas were too expensive. Milk and yoghurt cost a lot and,
therefore, were nused sparingly. Meat was out of bounds, as was
processed food like bread. No ghee or butter for them; only a little
refined oil. Both Matt and Tushar are passionate cooks with healthy
appetites. They found a wonderful food in soy nuggets-affordable and
high on proteins-and worked on many recipes. Parle G biscuits also cost
very less: 25 paise for 27 calories! The two friends innovated a dessert
of fried banana on biscuits. It was their treat each day.
Restricted Life
Living on Rs.100 made the
circle of their life much smaller. They found that they could not afford
to travel by bus more than five km in a day. If they needed to go
further, they could only walk. They could afford electricity only five
or six hours a day; therefore, lights and fans were sparingly used. They
also needed to charge their mobiles and computers. One Lifebuoy soap was
cut into two. They passed by shops, gazing at things they could not buy.
They could not afford the movies, and hoped they would not fall ill.
However, the bigger challenge
remained. Could they live on Rs. 32, the official poverty line, which
had become controversial after India’s Planning Commission informed the
Supreme Court that this was the poverty line for cities (for villages it
was even lower, at Rs. 26 per person per day)?
Harrowing Experience
Keeping this stricture in mind,
Tushar and Matt they decided to go to Matt’s ancestral village
Karucachal in Kerala, and live on Rs. 26. They ate parboiled rice, a
tuber and banana and drank black tea: a balanced diet was impossible on
the Rs. 18 a day which their briefly adopted ‘poverty’ permitted. They
found themselves thinking of food the whole day. They walked long
distances, and saved money even on soap to wash their clothes. They
could not afford communication, by mobile and the Internet. It would
have been a disaster if they fell ill. For the two 26-year-olds, the
experience of ‘official poverty’ was harrowing.
Yet, when their experiment
ended with Deepavali, they wrote to their friends: ‘Wish we could tell
you that we are happy to have our "normal" lives back. Wish we could say
that our sumptuous celebratory feast two nights ago was as satisfying as
we had been hoping for throughout our experiment. It probably was one of
the best meals we’ve ever had, packed with massive amounts of love from
our hosts. However, each bite was a sad reminder of the harsh reality
that there are 400 million people in our country for whom such a meal
will remain a dream for quite some time. That we can move on to our
comfortable life, but they remain in the battlefield of survival—a life
of tough choices and tall constraints. A life where freedom means little
and hunger is plenty... It disturbs us to spend money on most of the
things that we now consider excesses. Do we really need that hair
product or that branded cologne? Is dining out at expensive restaurants
necessary for a happy weekend? At a larger level, do we deserve all the
riches we have around us? Is it just plain luck that we were born into
circumstances that allowed us to build a life of comfort? What makes the
other half any less deserving of many of these material possessions,
(which many of us consider essential) or, more importantly, tools for
self-development (education) or self-preservation (healthcare)? We don’t
know the answers to these questions. But we do know the feeling of guilt
that is with us now. Guilt that is compounded by the love and generosity
we received from people who live on the other side, despite their tough
lives. We may have treated them as strangers all our lives, but they
surely didn’t treat us as that way...’
So what did these two friends
learn from their brief encounter with poverty? That hunger can make you
angry. That a food law which guarantees adequate nutrition to all is
essential. That poverty does not allow you to realise even modest
dreams. And above all-in Matt’s words-that empathy is essential for
democracy.
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Featured in The Hindu on February 11, 2012
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