This blog is written by a journalist based in Mumbai who writes about cities, the environment, developmental issues, the media, women and many other subjects.The title 'ulti khopdi' is a Hindi phrase referring to someone who likes to look at things from the other side.
A
gated community surrounded by a sea of deprivation, called Mahagun
Moderne – modern with a meaningless extra “e”. On one side were people
living within high gates, protected by security personnel and closed
circuit television cameras. On the other were occupants of tin sheds on
vacant lands.
They connected without really connecting: everyday,
from the surrounding squalor emerged women and men who “helped” those
living in these luxurious enclosures of privilege. Yet for the people
they help, these women and men were virtually non-persons.
When Mahagun Moderne in Noida sector 78 burst into the news
on July 12, this hidden world of invisible workers and insensitive
employers came into view. On that day, there was a riot-like situation
in the posh society located in the National Capital Region after Zohra
Bibi, who worked in one of the houses there, went missing the previous
night. She was found in the basement, police claimed at the time, even as her compatriots were virtually breaking down the gates. In photographs, she appeared dazed and near-unconscious.
Though
both sides traded charges and police cases were filed against the
workers as well as the residents, only the group of workers who stormed
the society were detained. Of these, 13 were charged with attempted
murder even though none of the FIRs
filed over the incident mentioned a physical attack on residents. About
81 workers were “blacklisted” and barred from entering the society for
protesting on July 12.
But beyond the particulars of the Noida
case is the riddle of why a country like India continues to tolerate,
even justify, the exploitation of domestic workers. In fact, the “e” at
the end of “Moderne” in the name of the Noida gated complex signifies
the pretension, the unreality, the make believe that attempts to hide
the feudalistic mindset that continues to justify the exploitation of
domestic workers. Zohra Bibi shortly after she was found on July 12. [Photo: Nilanjana Bhowmick/via Facebook]
Hidden world
The
millions of women, men and even children employed in domestic work in
India, who cannot be accurately counted because most of them not
registered are a daily reminder of how far we are from becoming the
modern society we aspire to be.
The very concept that these women
and men who sweep, swab, clean, cook, serve and sustain us are our
“help” is vulgar. It is we, the employers of these invisible people,
who occasionally help them, not the other way around.
The problem
goes beyond the poor wages and the lack of legal protection. It extends
to the very attitude we hold towards domestic workers that is so
entrenched that it doesn’t even change with the generations. We commonly
call them “servants” and we want them there to serve. She has a name
but we care little about where she lives, what she eats, whether she has
children and if yes, then do they go to school and how do they survive.
What happens when someone falls ill? How many people does she support
with her meagre wages? A hundred questions, never asked, by the people
this woman helps.
It is also interesting that even as the Supreme Court debates the extent of our right to privacy,
privileged Indians are willingly relinquishing their privacy because
they want someone else to do their household chores. So, a stranger
lives in our home, knows our likes and dislikes, cleans up after us,
cooks what we like, overhears all we say, watches us watching TV,
listening to music, arguing or talking on the phone. Yet, we pretend
this person does not exist. Except when something goes missing. Then
suddenly the, person comes into view. Without a moment’s hesitation,
she is the first suspect. She is poor, you are rich; therefore she must be the thief.
Ironically,
with the notion of safety, the rich are even willing to equip their
homes with closed circuit cameras so that they can keep a watch on their
help without seeing these as an intrusion on their private space.
So, while what women like Zohra Bibi do has to be recognised as work and not help, there have to be laws
that guarantee her a fair wage, institutions she can approach if she is
mistreated, there also needs to be a drastic shift in the perspective
of those who employ domestic workers.
Exploitation and cruelty
What happened in Noida is not the first time a domestic worker has complained of mistreatment. In my memory, one of the worst such incidents took place a little over a decade back in Mumbai.
Ten-year-old
Sonu from Bhopal was employed by an affluent family in the Lokhandwala
area. There were three adults in the family for whom she worked – the
mother, father and a grown up son. A married daughter lived in the same
complex.
In June 2006, the daughter found Sonu trying out
lipstick that belonged to her mother. For this supposed crime, the child
was tortured, beaten and left to bleed to death. More horrific still
was the cold-blooded way in which the family cleaned up the mess and
suspended Sonu’s inert body by a rope from the ceiling fan. They then
went to the police and reported it as a suicide.
Fortunately, despite their privilege, they did not get away. For this sickening case, all four members of the family were sentenced to life two years later.
Whenever
an incident like this comes to light, there is some discussion about
the conditions of domestic workers. But little changes. We need to stop
and ask: why does this happen? Why does the Indian society turn a blind
eye to such crass exploitation? How do generations of Indians grow up
accepting that there are some people whose life’s mission is to serve
and clean up after them? Why do we accept the concept of a “servant”?
Commenting on Katherine Stockett’s book The Help about black women domestic workers in the American South in 1962, Harsh Mander writes in his seminal work Looking Away:
“What
deeply troubled me after I read the book was that the humiliation and
exploitation suffered by domestic workers in southern US half a century
earlier was, in fact, in many ways less oppressive than the daily lived
experience of an estimated three million domestic workers in
middle-class homes across urban India in the second decade of the 21st
century. And that this causes us so little outrage.”
Indeed,
there is only momentary outrage, until another Sonu is tortured or
another group of workers break down the gates of our burgeoning gated
communities.