Food
and Dignity
By Harsh Mander
A major life-need
for urban homeless and migrant populations is of nutritious wholesome and
affordable meals. But sizeable numbers among them have no home or opportunities
to cook. Instead they spend around anything between a third and three quarters
of what they earn each day – by picking rags, pulling rickshaws, casual daily
wage work, vending or begging - on food
bought from carts or wayside eateries. This tends to be poor in nutrition and
hygiene.
Soup kitchens are integral
to the urban landscape in many modern cities in other parts of the world. Yet
except Tamil Nadu, no government runs large programmes for free or subsidised adult
feeding. Such food would make destitute and migrant working populations
healthier, and enable them to save money to fight their impoverishment. One reason
why states do not invest public resources on subsidised meal programmes is the
assumption that this life-need is being attended to by private, and mainly
religious, charity. We therefore decided to investigate religious food
charities in Delhi.
We found that only
4 per cent of homeless persons depend completely on these charities for food. These
mainly are destitute homeless persons, disabled and elderly men and women, and
younger street children, with no occupation or income except alms. Working
able-bodied homeless persons also occasionally resort to charity food only as a
last resort, at times of utter economic distress, when they completely exhaust
any savings to arrange for food through other means.
Feeding the hungry is
deeply valued in all Indian religious traditions – Hindu, Islamic, Christian
and Sikh. But we found these traditions eroded, mutated or abandoned in shining
21st century Delhi. We were surprised to find no destitute feeding
centres run by churches in Delhi. Other religious establishment ran some
feeding programmes, in small measure, but few catered to the real needs of the
homeless, of a sustainable source of wholesome food, offered with dignity.
We were curious why
such small numbers of homeless people depend on food charity, and prefer to
spend their scarce resources on purchased food, or even to remain hungry. The
first answer that they gave us was that the food is served sporadically, and is
not the simple wholesome food that they seek or need. Charity forces persons to be dependent on the timing, menu and
availability of food at religious places, determined by the wishes of
the donors, rather than the needs of homeless people. Waiting uncertainly for charity
food curtails work hours of labouring
homeless persons; many of whom are casual job-seekers, for whom reaching the
job market early in the morning is imperative for getting employment for the
day.
Many Hindu temples
serve food, but this is usually oily, sweet and served only on fixed days. (There
are fine exceptions, like the Hare Krishna temples.) The ‘giver’ seeks divine
merit, but is not interested in serving the receiver’s needs. Homeless
populations develop an aversion toward this greasy sugary food. They crave instead
- the old and disabled as much as working people - simple and easily digestible
food.
But the most
important reason why homeless people and single migrants reject food charities
is that these routinely assault their dignity and self-hood. They are compelled
to jostle with out- stretched cupped palms, and eat what they get squatting on
a pavement or under a tree. Often they are forced to be pitted against each
other in an effort to access the limited food that is served, and the old and
infirm invariably fall by the wayside.
More dignified
forms of charity we found in the Nizamuddin Dargah and the Sai Baba Temple.
Here food tokens are purchased by donors from hotels, with a validity of a
month, and distributed to the destitute. A person can later exchange these
coupons when hungry and in need at the eatery, and is served food worth the
cost of the coupon. Less dignified, in Jama Masjid, we found many people
seeking food charity patiently seated on their haunches outside dhabas which
line the mosque, waiting for persons who pay the dhaba owner for every person they
wanted fed.
Traditionally, the
most wholesome food served with greatest dignity has been in the langars in Sikh gurudwaras. People are
seated together on mats laid out on the floor in single lines, and food is served
in this dining space in unlimited quantities. The langar is at the heart of Sikh egalitarian teachings, in which an
emperor and a beggar are mandated to be seated side by side and offered the
same food, with the same respect.
However, we found
that these egalitarian traditions abandoned in the capital’s main gurudwaras.
Seesganj Gurudwara in Chandni Chowk, at the centre of the largest concentration
of homeless people, actively bars the ‘dirty poor’ from entering the langar. Bangla Saheb, near Cannaught
Place, also blocks them from entering the temple and eating at the main langar, but it has a separate langar for them at the rear, outside the
temple precincts, serving the same food but without the same respect. We enquired
from the managers about this departure from the core of Sikh teachings, and
they justified it by claiming that the homeless defile the temple, because they
smoke and drink.
This investigation into
religious food charities in Delhi became a fascinating journey, not just into
the survival strategies of Delhi’s poorest, but the shrinking spaces in the
hearts of India’s middle class.
2 comments:
Dear Shaheen,
I totally agree with your sensitive observations about langar. I wrote a piece recently about religious food charity in Delhi today, and observed precisely what you see: the lack of dignity in giving, and the shift of the focus from the perceived needs of the receiver, to the supposed ‘spiritual’ needs of the giver. In our work with destitute people, it has been our repeated observation that it is indeed dignity which they most seek, and which we are most reluctant to offer. I think it would be good for Ark and the Aman team to meet the dargah management, and offer to take responsibility for the distribution, where people are seated and respectfully served. It is precisely this which we have done with food which was similarly served in Yamuna Pushta.
Warm regards,
harsh
manderharsh@gmail.com
Dear Harshji,
Thank you for sharing the article" Food and Dignity". I can connect the findings of the article with Dargah's Langar in Mehrauli.
I found interesting Langar system in another Dargah in Mehrauli. It is Dargah of Hz Ashiq Allah RA. It is less known and not popullar among outside world of Mehrauli.
I regularly visit this Dargah and observe its langar system. What I really liked about this Drgah is that
(1)people are not made to stand in Q.
(2) Enough steel plates are there-
(3) the receivers themselves wash their dishes after eating the food.
(4) The quantity of food is not limited. One can go twice or thrice and request for more food, which given with joy (a smiling face)
(5) The taste of the food is reasonable better- I have eaten here and tried for more to confirm my observation.
(6) There are daries and chataaies spread near Langar Distributing Counter. People take langar from the counter and sit on the daries or chatais.
(7) The counter is like Self Service Centre. People get there plates, take food, eat and then wash it before leaving the place.
(8) The langar timing is quite large- probably about 2 hours. So there is no rush to reach 1st. People take food at their own convenietn time.
(9). The quantity of food is also enouhg. That makes people wait and go at their time because they are assured that the food will be there.
(10). I guess it is running in this system as number of visitors may be less or limited as in the main Dargah- Khwaja Qutbuddin Bkhatiyar Kaki RA.
[Just for information: Kaki was the title given to the Khwaja by people visiting his Khankah. Word "Kaki" is a Turkish word which means Bread (Roti). It is said he would offer every visitor Bread. And people started calling him Kaki- probably the bread giver. ]
We can meet Aman Team and discuss about it and see how we can bring positive change in the lamgar system.
Thanks and regards,
Shaheen
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