Ludhiana teacher donates tubewell for Maharashtra's tribals
Orissa,Environment/Wildlife,Features,
Wed, 27 Jun 2012
IANS
Nagpur, June 27 (IANS) Hundreds of tribals living in the remote
forests of Maharashtra's Yavatmal district rejoiced when fresh and cool
water started gushing out in full force from a tubewell in the parched
Nandgaon locality.
The tubewell, among four drilled this week out
of donations from school and college students, was the brainchild of
Manish Dedhwal, a teacher of the BCM High School, Ludhiana.
The
Nandgaon tubewell is dedicated to the memory of 11-year-old Monu Kapoor,
who succumbed to leukemia and was denied water in his last few moments
as he had lost his lungs.
"His mother Rama Kapoor, an English
teacher in the BCM High School, was heartbroken as Monu was her only
child. She made an instant donation of Rs.51,000 for this project,
saying no child should be deprived of water," Dedhwal told IANS.
The
newly-drilled tubewell was inaugurated Monday at a solemn prayer
ceremony with Monu's picture garlanded and all tribals standing in
silence. The donor, Rama Kapoor, is expected to visit the place soon,
Dedhwal said.
Dedhwal, and Jitender Kumar, a student of the Guru
Nanak Engineering College, had visited Yavatmal last December on a field
trip after hearing of the large number of farmers' suicides in the
region.
"We were shocked to see women and children trudging with
vessels on their heads for 8-10 km for collecting drinking water from
wells or polluted water sources in the forests," Kumar told IANS.
They assured the villagers that they would do something for them and returned to Ludhiana.
"We
formed the 'Friends of Vidarbha Club' in our city and appealed to our
students, colleagues and others for donations. People started chipping
in as per their capacity and we collected around Rs.200,000, including
Rama Kapoor's generous donation," Dedhwal said.
Armed with the
financial resources, last week they travelled over 1,500 km from
Ludhiana to Yavatmal and identified four villages in dire need of water.
They are: Kundi, Ambazari, Hivara, all falling in the Zari sub-district and Nandgaon in the Kelapur sub-district.
Local
contractors were hired to drill tube-wells in each of these parched
villages and struck water at average depths of 400 feet, since it is the
height of summer and monsoons have eluded the region so far, Kumar
said.
"Besides, we have installed submersible pumps, electric
motors, and connecting pipelines at strategic locations in these tiny
hamlets to enable people get ample water daily," Dedhwal explained.
Each
tubewell cost in the range of Rs.50,000, all inclusive, and the last
bit of the work was completed Monday evening, Dedhwal told IANS.
"We
are happy that we could fulfil our promise of bringing drinking water
to the doorsteps of these villagers and hope that we are able to do
more," said a pleased but weary Dedhwal.
Fortunately, the Friends
of Vidarbha Club has got the endorsement of a leading medico and social
worker, Shantakumar Verma, and donations are still coming.
"So,
after collecting sufficient funds, on our next trip, we plan to
construct a small hospital for the benefit of the tribals here as they
badly need good medicare," both Kumar and Dedhwal said.
The duo
admitted that this would require huge funds but were confident that the
people of Ludhiana and other parts of Punjab would chip in for the noble
venture.
Suresh Bolanwar, a local villager who is also
coordinating the project, said that this is the first time people have
seen water in such abundance right next to their homes.
"For
decades our story has been the same. During monsoon, we collect
rainwater flowing from the roofs, small streams and seasonal rivers and,
after monsoons, walk up to 10 km to collect water for our daily basic
needs," Bolanwar said.
He said that the Nandgaon tubewell,
dedicated to Monu Kapoor, has virtually become a pilgrim place and
people are coming from other hamlets to collect water from it,
considering it to be holy water.
Local NGO Vidarbha Jan Andolan
Samiti chief Kishore Tiwari said that the organization (VJAS) had raised
the issue of malnourishment and starvation among the Kolam and other
tribes in the region, problems of water scarcity and related issues with
the Bombay High Court, Nagpur Bench, in 2001.
Later, a team of
the National Human Rights Commission visited the region and promised to
initiate necessary steps with the state government, but nothing has
happened so far, Tiwari said.
(Quaid Najmi can be contacted at q.najmi@ians.in)
No comments:
Post a Comment