On a dusty morning in Palasani, a village near Jodhpur, 46-year-old Kaburi Mirasi recounted stories her mother told her about the Chhappaniya Akal— the Famine of ’56. The famine occurred in 1899–90, or 2056 in the Bikrami calendar. Kaburi narrated how members of her community of Mirasi Muslims, a historically marginalised caste in Rajasthan, would beg their landlords for spare grain or how water from boiling green pulses was preserved as a source of nourishment. The famine spread through north-western India and, in Rajasthan, brought illness and hunger like never before. “People left their homes forever,” Kaburi told me. “Millions moved away to villages far away in the hope of some work and a meal.”
In Rajasthan, famines are classified into four types: a dearth of water, a dearth of grain, a dearth of fodder and, the most gruesome, trikal, or a lack of all three. A nineteenth-century report about famines in western India noted that “distress came from a ‘famine of wages’ not a ‘famine of grain’” and that the “common peasant” remained impoverished because of their lack of agency over crop and land. So, even as rainfall and floods triggered periods of scarcity, famines were not simply matters of natural intervention. When scarcity arrived, kings did not create irrigation channels, while moneylenders from dominant-caste trading communities further ensnared farmers in debt traps. Little has changed since, causing the community to never forget its traditions of fighting food scarcity.
This story is from the July 2022 edition of The Caravan.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the July 2022 edition of The Caravan.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
HOW TO SEE ART?
BN Goswamy's strategies of seeing
Bitter Crop
Ghana's cacao plantations in crisis
SURVEYORS OF DESTRUCTION
An atmosphere of fear persists in the wake of the Sambhal violence
SITE OF DECEIT
HOW THE ASI FORTIFIES HINDUTVA HISTORY
The Broken Pact
Minority legislators rue the erosion of the Constitution under the Modi government/
Hate by Proxy
How shadow accounts on Meta spread BJP propaganda in Jharkhand
Mob Mentality
How the Modi government fuels a dangerous vigilantism
RIP TIDES
Shahidul Alam’s exploration of Bangladeshi photography and activism
Trickle-down Effect
Nepal–India tensions have advanced from the diplomatic level to the public sphere
Editor's Pick
ON 23 SEPTEMBER 1950, the diplomat Ralph Bunche, seen here addressing the 1965 Selma to Montgomery March, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. The first black Nobel laureate, Bunche was awarded the prize for his efforts in ending the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.