THE STATES
A community's plight
W. CHANDRAKANTH
in Hyderabad
PEOPLE of the Lambada tribe lead peripheral lives in thandas (hamlets)
sprinkled across Andhra Pradesh. Some of them still follow a nomadic lifestyle.
But whether they are on the move or settled in a hamlet in the poverty-ridden
Telengana region, life has always been harsh for them.
Lambadas hardly own anything in terms of land or property. Their culture
is different from the mainstream cultures. Lambada rituals have nothing in
common with the rituals of the plains people. Traditionally, Lambadas or
Banjaras have moved in groups.
Community celebrations were in vogue. Hardworking and sincere, they depended
on forest produce and odd jobs for a living. Work was equally shared between
husband and wife. A strong family bond and a strong thanda bond were
the hallmarks of Lambada life.
Oli or bride fee was prevalent in the earlier days. Each Banjara youth
had to pay both in cash and in kind to secure the hand of a girl. A couple
of milch animals often served as bride fee.
All this changed in the last decade when thousands of Lambada families
transformed themselves into agricultural workers and adopted the ways of
the mainstream population. Lambada labour comes cheap and they never shy
away from work. Often they take up annual contracts at low rates. Landowners
find in them a hardworking and undemanding workforce.
H. SATISH
A Lambada
woman receives training in sewing work.
A Lambada employed as a farmhand earns less than Rs.3,000 a year. A little
paddy, maize or jowar and a set of new clothes once or twice a year are enough
to make a Lambada worker content. Lambada women supplement the family income
by working in fields and as domestic help. Illiteracy and ignorance about
family planning practices among the Lambadas result in large families. Curiously,
most of them have female children. The anaemic and ailing mothers find it
difficult to take care of their children. Infanticide was known to be practised
by members of the tribal group.
The Lambadas have benefited from very few welfare programmes implemented
by the government. Neither social workers nor non-governmental organisations
(NGOs) paid attention to their plight until recently. The literacy rate is
an abysmal 1.8 per cent among females; among males it is at best five times
that figure. Teachers absent themselves from schools for Lambadas, ration
cards are not issued to them (even if they are issued, local merchants
appropriate them for a paltry sum) and health workers rarely work with them.
Living in remote rural areas - Katravat thanda, Palepalli thanda, Peddamungala
thanda, Kuralakshmi thanda, Dubba thanda and so on - the Lambadas of Devarakonda,
Dindi and Chandampet mandals of Nalgonda district have not gained from the
community welfare programmes that have been launched in the past 50 years.
Hundreds of Lambada families, which settled down in these areas after the
completion of the Nagarjunasagar project, were promised that they would be
rehabilitated by the State Government. But so far nothing has come of the
rehabilitation package.
Efforts to attain social acceptability began after the Lambadas settled down
in Nalgonda district. Tribal culture and rituals gave way to non-tribal and
brahminical rituals and along with this came financial burdens. The
oli system gave way to dowry and the demand for boys, who were far
outnumbered by girls, rose steeply. A dowry of Rs.30,000 and more is in vogue
now. Educated Lambadas turn away from the lifestyle of their families and
seek respectability elsewhere.
The girl child soon became an expendable commodity and the arrival of racketeers
doubling as social workers began around the same time. Adoption agencies,
which needed little by way of investment, mushroomed in the region. All that
they needed was a few social workers to go about the thandas convincing
Lambadas to sell their infants. The offers constituted a source of income
for the poverty-stricken community, and many parents struck deals with the
agencies. Children became commodities to be booked in the womb.
The business flourished and kept both sides happy. But for the Lambada girl
child, it was a choice between going from her mother's lap to the cradle
of the NGO or to the grave.
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