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Bihar’s Waterman
It
took seven years and back-breaking work for Kamaleshwari Singh to dig
a pond that would supply water to his village, reports ANAND
ST DAS
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Photo:Asit
Shankar
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When water bodies
in most villages in southern Bihar are shrinking and drying and villagers
have to increasingly seek help from the state government, the story of
a frail 63-year-old man has attracted attention from far and wide —
mostly, however, from the people and nearly none so far from the Nitish
Kumar government.
Kamaleshwari Singh,
a semi-literate farmer of Manikpur village in Barh block of Patna district,
surprised everyone who came to know of his feat. Over seven years, this
man has dug a 60-ft-by-60-ft pond that is 25 ft deep, all by himself,
using only a trowel and a bucket. He had to use a trowel, he says, because
he could not manage to lift a spade.
Manikpur village,
some 100km from the Bihar capital, is a back-of-the-beyond village that,
like most villages in the state, has seen no development over the past
two decades. Even bicycle tracks are non-existent here, let alone electricity
and irrigation facilities in this village that has a population of 2,000
people. But Kamaleshwari’s achievement suddenly pitchforked Manikpur
into the list of famous villages in Bihar. The pond he dug out of his
farmland has been compared with the achievement of the late Dashrath Manjhi
of Gaya district’s Gahlaur village, who carved a wide road from
a hill. Manikpur village had no pond before Kamaleshwari decided to get
one dug, thereby making a permanent source of water available to the residents
of Manikpur.
What makes
Kamaleshwari’s achievement more significant is that his initial
inspiration for the job and his continued determination to keep digging
for seven years came from his frustration with what he calls “nasty
village politics”. He was not a participant in village politics.
A simple farmer who owned 12 bighas of land 15 years ago and now has only
five bighas, he got entangled in the regular tide of crime in his village
and surrounding villages. His elder son, who kept fighting pitched battles
for supremacy with gangsters in the nearby villages, was killed. Kamaleshwari
had to sell seven bighas of his land to fight court cases. Thoroughly
disgusted, he once decided not to fight any court cases and to rather
concentrate on “something constructive”.
“I always wanted
my village Manikpur to have a pond of its own. For years, when I was young,
I tried to persuade villagers and even local politicians to help set up
a pond in the village. But nobody paid attention to what I said. As I
kept witnessing the people of my village finding it difficult to take
proper baths and irrigate their farms close to their homes, something
kept burning inside me as I was unable to do anything myself. I found
myself getting falsely implicated in cases like violent crimes and even
a murder in all those years. After losing my 26-year-old elder son, Siyaram,
to gang war, I decided to forget all bitterness and start doing something
constructive,” Kamaleshwari told TEHELKA. As he started digging
for the pond on a field close to his house in the summer of 1996, the
sun scorching his bare back and sweat lining his body, the entire village
started laughing at him. “Children and elders alike kept looking
at me and laughing. They even ridiculed me by calling me ‘Talabi
Baba’. My own family tried to restrain me from this work, but
I kept ignoring everything and got the pond ready in seven years,”
said Kamaleshwari, who studied only up to Class VIII.
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The 60-ft-by-60-ft
pond has enough water even in summer for the villagers to bathe, wash
clothes and feed their cattle. At the height of summer, the water level
in the pond remains at over 10 ft, say villagers. “It is a boon
that our village has now got a pond. We have only about five hand pumps
in the village, so most villagers face difficulty in bathing, washing
clothes and preparing cattle-feed. Kamaleshwaribaba’s work has made
a big difference to our lives,” said Dinesh Singh, a farmer. In
fact, the village, inhabited by people from various upper and lower castes
like Rajputs and the Yadavs, has deep and complex caste divisions that
disallow people from using one another’s resources. “But there
is no caste division in the use of this pond,” says Rakesh Kumar
Gupta, a villager. Although a river, the Dagrain, flows just 4km from
Manikpur village, its water fails to reach the fields due to the absence
of irrigation facilities. So several villagers find this pond a dependable
source of water for irrigating their farmland close to it.
Kamaleshwari would
start digging from 6 in the morning till about 7 in the evening everyday.
“It was never easy to dig a pond with a trowel. I would dig some
earth, fill it in the bucket and throw it away. I wanted to dig in the
evening, but there was no electricity. There is still no electricity,”
laughed Kamaleshwari. His wife, Draupadi Devi, said Kamaleshwari kept
toiling at the field even when his family had to face grave financial
constraints. “We had run out of nearly all our wealth after getting
our three daughters married off. Then the murder of Siyaram and the false
cases against my husband made us poorer. Jairam, the younger son, had
got no work. But my husband ignored everything,” she said.
Kamaleshwari now
lives with his wife, his murdered son’s two widows and three grandchildren.
His scarce resources make it difficult for him to make both ends meet.
“I want to do fish farming in this pond with the help of villagers
so that we get fish to eat and make some money, too. But there has been
no offer of help from the government so far despite our requests,”
he said. With his love for gardening, he has planted fruit trees around
the pond and there are now nearly 40 trees of mangoes, jackfruit and blackberries
and some teak trees. The pond site often gets visitors from far and near.
Kamaleshwari still works at the pond, trying to prevent it from silting.
He still uses his worn-out trowel and bucket to dig earth and deepen the
pond.
Even as stories
about the pond and the old man’s feat keep being proudly narrated
in various meetings of politicians and officials in Patna, local officials
and elected leaders have hardly visited the pond. Neither the sarpanch
nor the mukhiya have come calling, let alone the MLAs and ministers. There
was some talk about recommending his name for felicitation by the government,
but nothing has happened so far. “I want some development in this
village. We need wires on the electricity poles, good roads and fish in
this pond. I want to meet the chief minister at his Janata Ka Durbar in
Patna soon,” said Kamaleshwari.
Contact
writer at:anandstdas@gmail.com
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