In the mornings as I am driven through Delhi's streets to JNU, I pass hundreds of uniformed school children on their way to school. Each school has its own color combination: Blue blazers, maroon blazers, green sweaters, traditional kurta-style uniforms in navy and white, and on and on; the boys have short, neat haircuts, girls have tightly braided hair. Some ride to school 8 or 9 to a van, some ride big yellow school buses, some ride crammed 2 or 3 boys behind their father on a motorcycle. Most of the ones I see are walking to school, and it's a lovely sight.
But as in most poor countries, some children in India don't go to school and have to live in makeshift "housing." Many work hard for a living; many don't have shoes or pants or a hair comb.
But as in most poor countries, some children in India don't go to school and have to live in makeshift "housing." Many work hard for a living; many don't have shoes or pants or a hair comb.
For many weeks, I watched a family living on the sidewalk on the commute between the Adelaide and Owen's school and the university. They were camping out in the midst of the city, two tents side by side on a wide section of sidewalk. In the mornings, the mother would be squatting on her heels near the opening of her tent, making tea over a small fire. Three or four children would be waking up and stretching in the adjacent tent, the 6- or 7-year old girl tending to the little ones. After a heavy rain a week ago, I worried about them. We couldn't pass their sidewalk on the day of the rain because the street was flooded. When we passed by the next day, the tents were sagging and few pieces of cloth (or clothing?) were hung on the fence railing. The next day, the family was gone altogether and some dogs were asleep in the sagging tent.
Another family seems to live on the corner of Africa Marg and Olaf Palme Marg on my ride home. They don't have a tent, just some thin blankets (not mats or mattresses, as many do). There is a baby in the family, a small one who can sit up but not walk yet. The baby seems to stay put, seated on the sidewalk while the adults (3 women and a man, I believe) sit or squat nearby and talk to one another. Friday, the baby was sitting with a small thin branch in his hand, tapping the sidewalk. The adults were asleep. Today again, three adults were asleep at about 4:00 in the afternoon, and the baby was sitting there, alone, with six lanes of traffic whizzing by.
On the JNU campus, there are many campsites of construction workers. I understand that many of them are from the poor state of Bihar. They are building a new structure at the Indian Institute of Mass Communication. The women work on the construction site wear saris and plastic sandals. Each seems to have a gold nose-ring or two and perhaps some gold bangles. Their job is to mix sand and a reddish dirt for mortar and carry it in baskets on their heads to the bricklayers. When the bricklayers need a new shipment of bricks, the women in their saris carry bricks on their heads, 9 to a load, up the wooden ladders to the men. Children are on the worksite, with no one paying particular attention. This morning at 8:30, two little toddlers (walking or not quite yet) were positioned on a bench, playing with the flowering bush behind the bench. The adults were busy on the worksite and apparently expected the toddlers to stay put where they were placed.
Another family seems to live on the corner of Africa Marg and Olaf Palme Marg on my ride home. They don't have a tent, just some thin blankets (not mats or mattresses, as many do). There is a baby in the family, a small one who can sit up but not walk yet. The baby seems to stay put, seated on the sidewalk while the adults (3 women and a man, I believe) sit or squat nearby and talk to one another. Friday, the baby was sitting with a small thin branch in his hand, tapping the sidewalk. The adults were asleep. Today again, three adults were asleep at about 4:00 in the afternoon, and the baby was sitting there, alone, with six lanes of traffic whizzing by.
On the JNU campus, there are many campsites of construction workers. I understand that many of them are from the poor state of Bihar. They are building a new structure at the Indian Institute of Mass Communication. The women work on the construction site wear saris and plastic sandals. Each seems to have a gold nose-ring or two and perhaps some gold bangles. Their job is to mix sand and a reddish dirt for mortar and carry it in baskets on their heads to the bricklayers. When the bricklayers need a new shipment of bricks, the women in their saris carry bricks on their heads, 9 to a load, up the wooden ladders to the men. Children are on the worksite, with no one paying particular attention. This morning at 8:30, two little toddlers (walking or not quite yet) were positioned on a bench, playing with the flowering bush behind the bench. The adults were busy on the worksite and apparently expected the toddlers to stay put where they were placed.
Older children work, whether as street beggars, street performer/beggars, car-to-car vendors of books and magazines and trinkets, food sellers, ice cream sellders, or animal tenders.
The beggars are typically barefooted, dusty, and wild-haired. The street performer/beggars may have some black face makeup on and might have on bright (but dirty) clothes while they perform some acrobatics or drumming. They work in heavy traffic, coming out to the cars during the red lights and darting back to the median when the light turns green. They work in groups, most often groups of sisters, who might range in age from 3 to 10. The oldest sister often carries a little one on her hip.
It's very tempting to hand a few rupees to these children. They are taught to smile and be persistent. Some of them enact the fact that they are hungry; some indicate that their baby sister is hungry. We don't want to encourage the children to make a living on the streets, and we certainly don't want to encourage the parents to allow their children to make a living running in and out of traffic for them. So, 3 times out of 4 I ignore the child beggars, and about every fourth time I give in and hand out a few rupees.
Like children everywhere, they smile and laugh at the coin in their hands, then run off to "play" some more.