In old
times, they tickled the earth with a hoe, and it laughed with a harvest. But
the Punjabi farmer tickled it a bit too hard and in many desperate ways. In an
ironic mirroring of meaning, cancer, the malignant growth of cells, has become
an apt metaphor for what has happened to agriculture in Punjab, writes Dharminder
Kumar in The Indian Express
About a dozen
men, both old and young, sit by the road outside the village, gossiping in the
sun. "How many cancer patients do you have in this village?" They
turn their faces away. An old man breaks the silence: "There were a lot of
them two-three years ago. Now there is no cancer. The last death took place two
years ago." That's odd for Giana village of Talwandi Sabo block, the
buckle of the bimari belt. A youth speaks up, "No, no. One or two die
every month." The old man shouts at him, "Oye kanjar deya, eh khangh
taap naal mare hoyan baare thoda puchhda (Rascal, he is not asking about deaths
due to fever but cancer!)." The youth gets the cue and falls silent.
Fifty years
ago, Rachel Carson imagined in her book Silent Spring a future ecological
dystopia where no birds sang because they had died of pollution. The Malwa
region of Punj-ab is nearing another ecological dystopia where cancer has
become an evil which thrives in a web of silences. Here, instead of the birds,
it's the people who have fallen silent. Families don't want to tell patients,
patients don't want to tell families, families don't want to tell relatives or
other villagers, and villagers don't want to tell the outsiders or the
government. And the government wasn't too keen to tell anyone—at least till two
weeks ago when the state health minister came out with the first credible
government survey on cancer, which shows a big spurt in the disease in the last
few years. The government decided to break its silence when it saw cancer
becoming the biggest issue in the Malwa region.
When Ranjeet
Kaur, the wife of Kaka carpenter of Bhangchari village in Muktsar district—the
worst affected, according to the government survey—was diagnosed with cancer,
the family hid it from her. "We thought telling her would put her under a
lot of pressure. But she was educated. She could find out. When her hair
started falling, she knew what it was," says Kaka. Mehma Singh, a fellow
villager, says, "Women used to scare her, saying who would take care of
her son after her. Kaake di bahu taan hauke naal hi mar gi (Kaka's wife died of
grief and shock)." Mehma Singh himself has lost five of his relatives to
cancer—father-in-law, mother-in-law, two brothers-in-law and a nephew.
Iqbal Singh,
an ex-serviceman of nearby Tamkot village, says even when government
representatives come, many people don't tell them the truth. "When the
ANMs (auxiliary nurse midwives) conduct surveys, they go back with clean
reports," he says. "People hide cancer from others because it stops
all kinds of social and business transactions. Everyone starts waiting for you
to die. But most can't hide it once the chemotherapy starts." These days,
he says, more people are coming out at early stages because of the financial
assistance offered by the state government.
"Len-den
ruk janda (the dealing stops)," says Inderjit Singh, sarpanch of
Jhabelwali village in the same district. "No one is going to lend you any
money. People count you out. For the society, you are dead well before you
actually die." He says a youth from a neighbouring village was diagnosed
with cancer but did not tell his family about it. "He wanted to die after
having a son. He told others about the disease long after the wedding and did
die after producing a son," he says.
Silences are
easy to maintain, Inderjit explains, because most of those who are dying are
children, women and the elderly, whose loss is not too difficult to bear in
material terms. "Fewer youths and family bread-winners are dying so there
is no hue and cry in the villages," he says.
Beera Singh,
a Dalit youth of Tamkot village, says his father died of cancer three years ago
but doctors did not tell him about the cause. "We had taken him to Muktsar
government hospital. We were not given any reports," he says. Beera says
he admits he is illiterate and wouldn't have understood much but doctors should
have at least told him about it. Bohar Singh, another Dalit villager, says his
son too died of cancer 10 years ago but doctors did not tell him the cause.
"Later, when I came to know from the hospital and asked the doctors why
they hadn't told me, they asked me, 'What could you have done with that
information?'"
While Beera
is angry at one more kind of social exclusion he had to face, Bohar says if he
had the hospital reports, he could have got some financial compensation.
At
Bhangchari, villagers talk at length about people who died of cancer in the
last three years but clam up at the mention of cancer patients. Perhaps they
are afraid to locate cancer in the present, as if acknowledging it in the
present will invoke it and make it more active. It is somewhat reassuring if
cancer is imagined only in the past. In the present, it is addressed only in whispers
or just wished away.
l l l
As far back
as in 1995, a study by the Guru Nanak Dev University, Amritsar, had found
alarming amounts of uranium in water samples from Bathinda and Amritsar
districts. South African toxicologist Carin Smit found unusually high uranium
in hair samples of children in Faridkot district in 2009. For years, hundreds
of cancer patients took a train daily to a charitable hospital in the
neighbouring state of Rajasthan. But the state remained in denial. Only about
two years ago, it started speaking. It took the state more than a decade just
to tell the people roughly how many had died and how many are suffering. Today,
the Akali government is in an overdrive. Perhaps, it hopes to make a visible
difference by the next Lok Sabha polls. The government has collaborated with a
big private hospital at Bathinda. It is also building modern cancer treatment
facilities at its own hospitals. There are RO plants in a large number of
villages. People have started benefiting from the Mukh Mantri Cancer Rahat Kosh
which offers Rs 1.5 lakh to a cancer patient for treatment.
But when the
state and science were keeping themselves scarce, cancer grew bigger than them
in the minds of the villagers. As the state refused to acknowledge the extent
of the epidemic, people were left to understand the disease the way they could.
Cancer was no longer a mere fatal ailment. It became a magical, malevolent
evil, so unpredictably dangerous that it could not even be named. Even today,
most villagers don't use the word cancer. They call it bimari or dooji bimari
(the other disease), as if it were a phantom that would turn on them if they
even named it.
For many,
cancer is also infectious. Mehma Singh of Bhangchari village says when women
visit a cancer patient, many cover their faces with dupattas. Karamjit Kaur of
the same village, whose four-year-old daughter, Rajveer, died of cancer in the
eye, is worried about other kids in the joint family. "Children used to
wipe secretion from her eye. Now we are afraid they might also develop the
disease," she says.
If cancer is
understood in magical, tribal ways, sometimes it is also tackled in that
manner. Fearing that the parent's disease may pass on to the child, many
villagers have a special way of burning the body of a cancer patient—they also
burn a peerhi with the body. Peerhi, a low, woven stool, also means a
generation in Punjabi. For the villagers, the burning of the peerhi with the
dead ensures that cancer does not descend to the next generation. Ex-serviceman
Iqbal Singh of Tamkot village recalls he couldn't understand when they fished
out a peerhi to put on the pyre of his sister's father-in-law who had died of
cancer a few years ago. "I have also noticed people take great care to
avoid the smoke from the pyre of a cancer victim," he says.
What made
cancer an insurmountable evil for villagers were the deaths of many VIPs from
cancer in the last few years. At Bhangchari, people are hopeless because the
wife of the numberdar (a village official), Basant Singh, has died recently.
Jaswinder Kaur, 50, had throat cancer and the numberdar spent Rs 10-12 lakh on
treatment. "Where did he not take her for treatment! The numberdar spent
crores on his wife but she died. How do we poor people matter?" says a
Dalit labourer.
With not
enough medical and environmental solutions, villagers caught at whatever came
in sight. At Bhangchari, old women with aching bones make a beeline for an
acupressure camp. Organiser Sukhbir Singh Tamkot, a social worker, uses on them
machines that have various ways of pricking, massaging and heating the head,
neck, knees and feet. Handing over a bottle of water to a woman, Sukhbir says,
"This is special, magnetised water. The water treated in an RO plant loses
vital minerals. That's why old women have pain in joints." The women who
come to his camp say they do get relief from pain. The whirr of an electric
machine working on a knee or neck is quite assuring. Perhaps the shiny, plastic
gadgets inspire more confidence than ramshackle government dispensaries the
villagers are accustomed to.
If ignorant
villagers mythologised cancer, educated people found urban legends. Rahul Rupal
is a young, progressive farmer of Ramditte Wala village in Mansa district who
has diversified into growing guar (cluster beans). He had read in the papers
that it had low input cost but fetched a high price because it was used in
petroleum exploration. He says one reason behind the spread of cancer might be
the Bathinda thermal plant using coal from Australia which has high uranium
content, and then spewing out the ash. Earlier, there was the talk that uranium
dust was blown into Punjab by winds from Iraq and Afghanistan where the US
forces used low-grade nuclear weapons. How else would Carin Smit find uranium
in the hair samples of children? You could not argue with these people. If they
could not cite any study, nor could you. There is no large-scale survey that
links or delinks high amounts of uranium in water with cancer.
Though the
health minister said while releasing the survey report that cancer was due to
excessive use of pesticides, the government has conducted no definitive study
yet that links pesticides to cancer. Ask Surinder Singh, the father of four-year-old
Rajveer who died of cancer in the eye, how she came to develop the disease. He
thinks cancer happened after she fell down and hurt her eye. His brother says
sometimes people get injured, blood clots and a tumour forms. Cancer, he says,
mostly happens after an injury. Of course, he adds, the highly saline water in
the village might also be causing it. Since the state was in no hurry to count
the dead and the suffering, it also did little to find out the exact cause of
cancer.
Surinder and
his two brothers own an acre each, which makes them subsistence farmers, but
it's hard to notice. A shiny tractor is parked in the courtyard and the
children wear nice clothes. The cost of agriculture and lifestyle has gone up,
narrowing the profits. Surinder and his brothers live from crop to crop. The
yield has to be had at any cost, even if it means an overdose of pesticides,
fertilisers and other inputs. In the absence of diversification, farmers have
to force the maximum out of wheat, paddy and cotton. The government has
realised the problem but little has been done to wean the farmer away from
input-intensive wheat and paddy crops. In old times, they tickled the earth
with a hoe, and it laughed with a harvest. But the Punjabi farmer tickled it a
bit too hard and in many desperate ways. In an ironic mirroring of meaning,
cancer, the malignant growth of cells, has become an apt metaphor for what has
happened to agriculture in Punjab.
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