One day in 2007, a stranger came to JJ Nagar village in South
India’s Tamil Nadu state, promising girls from the village a chance to
change their lives. The man went from house to house offering to sign up
any girl over 14 to a three-year term in a yarn factory. At the end of
the period, the young women would earn bonuses of $800 (about a year’s
salary), an almost unimaginable sum for a girl from JJ Nagar. The
village is a six-hour drive from Coimbatore, the state’s second-largest
city, but the prosperity of the new India and its almost double-digit
growth rate hasn’t arrived here.
So when the agent came by
Sivagami’s house, she and her friend Sathya made a snap decision to go.
Sivagami was just 14, Sathya was 18, and they knew their parents would
disapprove. “She just left without really discussing it with us,” her
mother recalls. “She and Sathya both took off.” (Like many Indians,
Sivagami has no last name.) For two days, no one in the village could
locate the girls.
As it turns out, they were just about 12
kilometers away at a company called Saravana Polythreads. “Her father
and I went and visited her,” her mother says. “She told us she didn’t
want to study anymore, she wanted to work in the factory.”
JJ
Nagar sits in the shadow of the stunning Western Ghats mountains,
surrounded by coconut trees and lush rice paddies. No one in the village
owns any of the surrounding fields, though. The best that most of the
residents can hope for is a job picking crops, as both of Sivagami’s
parents do. When there is work, they can earn the equivalent of $2.40
per day. The worst-case scenario is life as a manual scavenger, cleaning
the latrines of members of the higher castes. People in JJ Nagar don’t
have high expectations. They are members of the Arunthathiyar community,
considered outcasts among outcasts.
The Hindu caste system is deeply codified. The Rigveda, a text that dates to between 1100 and 1700 B.C., establishes the
varnas,
a social order that explains that the four major caste groups are the
sum of the parts of a man named Purusha, who sacrificed his body to
create humanity. The Brahmans, the priests, were grafted from his head;
Kshatriyas (kings, rulers, and warriors) from his hands; and the
Vaishyas (traders and farmers) from his thighs. The Shudras, artisans
and laborers, are banned from hearing certain religious texts. They are
believed to have come from Purusha’s feet. Below the Shudras are Dalit
communities like the Arunthathiyar, who don’t belong to any of the four
varnas. In Mahatma Gandhi’s day, they were called untouchables. Gandhi attempted to popularize the term “children of god.”
These days, they are commonly called Dalits, which roughly translates
from Hindi as “the broken people.” The Arunthathiyar are just one of
many Dalit communities in India. Dalits are traditionally expected to
perform unsavory tasks like disposing of dead bodies and cleaning
bathrooms. Most live in abject poverty. The Musahar community of Bihar
in Northern India, for example, has gained notoriety for eating rats to
survive.
Dalits and tribals, a blanket term for indigenous
people who live outside of mainstream Indian society and traditionally
don’t practice Hinduism, comprise about a quarter of India’s almost 1.2
billion people. After India’s independence from England in 1947 and
Gandhi’s subsequent movement for greater equality, they were granted
reservations, spots in universities, and set-asides in employment in an
attempt to correct historic discrimination. The practice is similar to
affirmative action in the United States.
Despite the progress
India has made, the legacy of caste remains its most intractable
problem. Those at the bottom of the caste structure “are denied access
to land, clean water, and education, left out by the recent
modernization process and surge in economic growth, forced to work in
degrading conditions, and routinely abused at the hands of the police
and higher caste groups,” according to a recent statement from the
organization Human Rights Watch.
In Tamil Nadu, a state that is
perhaps India’s most economically forward—a leader in exports of cars,
clothing, and electronics—there is also a way out. Dalits and other
lower-caste communities of Sivagami’s generation form the core of the
manufacturing labor force. In the state’s special economic zones, this
has led to a burgeoning labor movement that has pushed back against
multinational companies, like Foxconn and Nokia, that have a presence
there. But for the most marginalized communities, who frequently work in
the garment industry, exploitation is still too common.
For
Sivagami, trading a life in the fields for a job in a factory should
have been considered progress. In some ways it was. Sivagami made
friends—girls from all over Tamil Nadu. For meals, they were mostly
served
idlis (rice and lentil dumplings) and
dosas
(long, thin crepes made from the same batter), two low-cost South Indian
vegetarian staples. While it was the first time in Sivagami’s life
she’d had three squares a day, the diet didn’t provide enough protein to
keep pace with the workload.
Sivagami, now 19, is slight and
shy. It’s early November 2011 when we meet in the hard-packed mud yard
of the small brick-and-thatch home she shares with her family. She is
dressed in a pink
salwar kameez, the traditional tunic-and-pants set. She seems resigned.
The routine at Saravana Polythreads was grueling. Despite the state of
Tamil Nadu mandating eight-hour workdays, there were just two shifts at
the factory: a day shift from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. and a night shift from 8
p.m. to 8 a.m. Sivagami was placed on the day shift. Most of the time,
she was tasked with spinning yarn onto a big paper coil. Sometimes, for a
change of pace, she got to clean out the machinery. Sundays were her
only day off. Lunch and dinner breaks were just 30 minutes long. The
doors of the dormitory where they slept were locked from the outside at
night. “When I felt tired, sometimes they would send me to my room,”
Sivagami says. But “if you left the shift early to go back to your room
they deducted money from the day’s wage.”
Life at the factory grew progressively worse. The girls were hired under a program called the
sumangali scheme. In Tamil, the word
sumangali
refers to a single girl becoming a respectable woman through marriage.
Agents peddle the scheme by dangling a payout large enough to cover a
girl’s dowry or to buy enough gold to wear at her marriage. In September
2010, the Dutch newspaper
de Volkskrant reported that girls
were essentially locked in factories and working as bonded laborers. For
clothing companies doing business in the garment clusters of Western
Tamil Nadu, the fallout was massive. H&M canceled several contracts
with local factories in response to the story.
Sivagami’s
friend Sathya reached her limit halfway through their term. “It was
really hard,” says Sathya, now 23. “I had to stand up 12 hours a day. I
felt tired, my eyes were hurting, and my legs were hurting, so I left.”
One day in August 2010, Sivagami was cleaning fabric waste out of a
machine. Unbeknownst to her, a coworker was still operating it. Her arm
got caught and locked in the machine’s belt. “It took about an hour to
take my arm out because they didn’t realize how to unwind the belt,”
Sivagami says. She shattered her forearm, elbow bone, and part of her
hand. She was in a cast for a month. A scar runs the length of her
forearm.
The factory’s managers paid Sivagami’s medical bills,
but the accident further complicated her relationship with her parents.
“We’re not happy because she went to the factory instead of studying and
now she injured her arm,” her mother says. Though Sivagami came back to
work after six weeks, she had a lot of time to make up. Due to the
injury and her frequent bouts of exhaustion, the factory informed her
that if she hoped to receive her bonus, she’d have to work an extra
year.
After four years at Saravana, Sivagami finally concluded
her service on October 26. She received her payout, but the company
neglected to put any money into her provident fund, the Indian
government retirement plan for which they deducted money from every
check. Sivagami says that the factory has made some small changes since
her injury. “They used to have female workers taking out the waste
without turning off the machine,” she says. “And now they are turning
off the machine and they have the male workers to do the job.”
She is thinking about getting married and excited about the prospect of
returning to work. “I want to go to a similar job but with modern
machinery,” she says. “I am experienced.”
* * *
When Sathya walked out of Saravana Polythreads in 2009, she was aided
by an Arunthathiyar NGO called READ (Rights, Education and Development
Centre. Sathya later got a job at READ, where she met Veran, the man who
is now her husband. Last summer, she left READ and had a baby girl.
Sathya is one of the luckier people in JJ Nagar. According to READ,
there are still 146 people cleaning human excrement by hand. The stigma
of this archaic practice extends to their children, who are often tasked
with cleaning toilets at school, perpetuating the cycle.
In
recent years, there has been a lot of progress for Dalits. There are now
Dalit tycoons, chief ministers, and prominent academics. In states like
Uttar Pradesh, Dalits and other marginalized groups like Muslims (many
of whom are Dalits who converted from Hinduism) wield tremendous
electoral power. Milind Kamble, a Dalit who runs a construction company
in Maharashtra, has taken advantage of set-asides for Dalits to score
lucrative infrastructure contracts. He also chairs the Dalit Indian
Chamber of Commerce and Industry, whose motto is
“be job givers, instead of job seekers.”
Still, India is a long way from fulfilling the promises of equal
protection under law enshrined in its constitution, which was written by
B.R. Ambedkar, a Dalit with degrees from Columbia University and the
London School of Economics. “In India there are two constitutions: the
Indian Constitution, written by Ambedkar, and there is the unwritten
constitution, the Hindu religion, their constitution,” says R.
Karuppusamy, a 39-year-old Arunthathiyar man with a master’s degree in
sociology who founded READ and has dedicated his life to empowering his
community.
Every Sunday, Indian newspapers feature ads placed
by parents looking to arrange their daughters’ marriages that explicitly
state which caste they are willing to accept. The darker side of this
obsession is the more than 5,000 honor killings every year, generally
perpetrated by family members who are angry that a daughter has brought
shame to a family by marrying a lower-caste man.
Having an
honest conversation about caste is difficult when the system pervades
all strata of Indian life. The discourse is further stifled by language.
The language of government and the elite media is English, which most
Indians can neither read nor speak.
Karuppusamy still sees only
token gains in Indian society. He cites the lack of Dalit leadership in
the leading Indian National Congress party and the opposition Bharatiya
Janata Party. “Even the Communist party, the politburo, this buro, that
buro. Where are the Dalit in that thing? We are 25 percent in India.
They are using [us as] only a vote bank.”
Educating girls like
Sathya and Sivagami, who are often the first in their families to attend
school, is fraught with challenges. “Government schools don’t have a
friendly approach,” Karuppusamy says. School is an uncomfortable topic
for Sivagami. When asked about her decision to drop out at age 12, she
demurs and giggles uncomfortably.
“I had troubles in school,” she says. “Even though I tried, I didn’t get it.”
* * *
READ’s offices are on a pleasant middle-class lane, just off a main
road in a small city called Sathyamangalam. Karuppusamy was lucky to get
the place. For a long time no one wanted to rent to a Dalit. After
someone committed suicide in the building, the Brahman landlords felt
that the structure was cursed. He got a good deal on rent, he tells me,
laughing. Dalit activists, academics, and intellectuals take great
pleasure in mocking Brahman superstitions, like the prohibition on
eating meat.
On this day, Karuppusamy has convened a meeting of
the Arunthathiyar Human Rights Forum, a coalition of activists from
around Western Tamil Nadu. One of the activists, a small man from nearby
Coimbatore, approaches me and introduces himself. He seems uncertain
and diverts his gaze from me as we shake hands. The encounter
encapsulates Karuppusamy’s biggest challenge: how to instill a sense of
self-worth in a people who have been systematically dehumanized for
millennia?
READ, with just four employees, has established
alternative structures for empowerment. In its community banking
program, a collective of Arunthathiyar women pool their savings in a
single bank account. They earn interest, which is then made available
for low-interest small-business loans or for emergencies. Through
another program that rescues children from forced labor in agriculture,
textiles, and local tea shops, READ provides them a year of remedial
schooling before enrolling them in formal school. Karuppusamy is also
campaigning to end manual scavenging. “India will be a superpower
country, they are saying,” he tells me on the car ride from JJ Nagar to
his office. “They have a 10-year plan, a five-year plan. But they do not
stop manual scavenging. Why have they not stopped it?”
For
many Dalits, though, there are far more immediate challenges, like where
they will find their next meal. One of the reasons that Sathya was able
to leave Saravana Polythreads while Sivagami was not, Karuppusamy says,
it that there are three daughters in Sivagami’s family, adding pressure
to earn money. “That is why she completed four years."
* * *
Sivagami finally got a new job. She is living at her parents’ home and
working at a T-shirt factory in Tirupur, a little less than an hour’s
drive away. “The bus comes every day to her village,” Karuppusamy
reports. “She is happy. She is living.” She is, however, still looking
for a husband.
Karuppusamy has also made some progress in his
effort to end exploitation of Dalits in local clothing factories. He
recently convened a meeting of NGOs, clothing factories, the companies
they supply, and former
sumangali workers. All sides agreed to work to end the
sumangali scheme. They also pledged to stop employing girls less than 18 years old.
For Sivagami, this is good news. She doesn’t want other girls to suffer. “I think I was too young to work,” she says.