Saturday, February 21, 2015

Rat-eating Indian politician resigns

Editor's note: This Shark cannot help being touched by this Untouchable. A true man of the people.  Lucius Verenus, Schoolmaster, ProbateSharks.com

Rat-eating Indian politician resigns

Jitan Ram Manjhi, a former rat-catcher, is an idol to millions of India's poor. But ten months after becoming the chief minister of Bihar, he has resigned after losing party backing


Facebook
92
Twitter
168
Pinterest
0
LinkedIn
7
Share
267
Email

Jitan Ram Manjhi meeting Narendra Modi
Jitan Ram Manjhi meeting Narendra Modi Photo: BIGJOLLY9
When Jitan Ram Manjhi, a former rat-catcher from the lowest of India’s “untouchable” castes, became chief minister of the eastern state of Bihar last year, it was hailed as the most meteoric political rise since the country’s independence.
But on Friday, Mr Manjhi resigned after weeks of political termoil, hours before a confidence vote he was certain to lose.
Brought in as a puppet to secure the vote of Bihar’s 20 million mahadalits, the "untouchables" who are key to controlling the state, Mr Manjhi bravely began making his own policies.
“I started taking independent decisions in favour of the downtrodden, minorities and backward castes,” he said.
His temerity infuriated the head of his political party, Janata Dal (United).
Mr Manjhi’s Musahar caste is a landless community of India’s poorest, hungriest and most illiterate people, many of whom live in semi-slavery and survive by eating rats.
In an interview on the eve of his resignation, Mr Manjhi recalled the extreme poverty of his childhood and said Bihar’s political leaders, including some in his own party, still refuse to accept that a rat-catcher could be an able leader.
He described how his family had lived in a tiny jhopri, a hut made of mud and straw, and survived by catching rodents and eating fried rat curry.
His father worked on their landlord’s rice paddies for below subsistence wages. “It was not sufficient for a day and morning meal. We had one meal per day, in the week we had to live on empty stomachs,” he said.
“He caught rats, brought them to the house in place of pulses and vegetables, and that rat meat was supplemented bread and rice. This was our common meal... my mother and father fried it on the fire, cut into pieces, fried up in mustard oil, turmeric, garlic, whatever was available - fine taste.
“Super taste is when [the rat] is caught, prepared in fire, we cut into pieces and put salt, oil, green chilli - that mix with fried rat is very tasteful. It is a unique taste, not like chicken, not like mutton,” he said.
He attended the village school sporadically but when his father told the landlord he wanted him to attend full time, he was ridiculed: “The landlord said: ‘Don’t educate him, spare him for my cowherding, he will be bonded labour to me.’
"My father did not agree and was many times abused and beaten and asked to leave the house where we were living. I saw him beat my father and you can imagine how I felt. We were helpless and I asked my father to be silent, have patience and we will overcome these maladies," he said.
In 1980, after several years campaigning for the Congress party, he fought and won a seat in the state legislature but his "untouchability" often saw him overlooked in favour of less able but higher caste colleagues.
His fortunes changed under Nitesh Kumar, the Janata Dal (United) leader credited with wresting Bihar from gangsters and improving governance after he became chief minister in 2005.
Mr Manjhi came to national attention in 2008 when he urged people to eat rats to ease a food crisis caused by rodents eating food grain. They had the same nutritional value as chicken, he said.
After he succeeded Mr Kumar in May last year he was derided as a “dummy chief minister” who would be controlled by his predecessor. The claims were true, he admitted. But when he started to take his own decisions, he said, his former patron waged a campaign to oust him.
He believes Mr Kumar feared that some of his measures to improve education and land allocations for the poor were making him too popular.
Mr Kumar told the Economic Times it had been a mistake to stand down in favour of Mr Manjhi. “Instead of doing his duty, he started following his personal agenda and kept making controversial remarks which embarrassed the party,” he said.
Mr Manjhi said his former leader had indeed misjudged him. “He mistook that I might become more popular than him. He underestimated my performance and me as a person,” he said.
On Friday, Mr Manjhi said he had decided to resign after his position became untenable and his supporters began receiving death threats.
Soon after Mr Manjhi was formally expelled, Mr Kumar was unanimously elected as leader of his party.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Thank you for commenting.
Your comment will be held for approval by the blog owner.