Knowledge As Weapon

Ordinary working people have the capacity to learn, to collect
information, to look at it analytically, and eventually use it for
bettering their own lives. This is, or should be, the central objective
of "education". Instead, we have didactic instruction, memorising by
rote, and vomiting out useless information for futile examinations...
Dunu Roy



It was some 30 years ago, in the mid-70s, that we got a glimpse of what
the future might hold. We had just purchased 2 acres of land to build a
workshop on, in the district of Shahdol in Madhya Pradesh. There had
been some argument with the neighbouring owner about where exactly the
boundary lay. So one day we dragged out the iron chain that surveyors
use, and began measuring the land ourselves. A curious shepherd boy must
have witnessed the proceedings, because next day a delegation of solemn
farmers from the nearby village paid us a visit. They had heard that we
were engineers, they explained, so could we teach them how to measure
land? Why, we asked, whatever will you do with it? Well, they explained,
the patwari (the government revenue functionary at the village) had been
demarcating their lands and they were never sure whether he was doing it
right. So we spent the next four hours demonstrating how the chain
worked and how to calculate the area. In the process, of course, we
began to learn that the chain was called a jareeb, the area was rakba,
the khasra number referred to the record in the revenue department,
their title was the patta, and the patwari presided over a khatauni in
which all secrets were well documented. 

A week later, the same delegation was back, but looking less solemn and
more brashly conspiratorial. Could they borrow our jareeb? We handed
over the chain and then, not a little puzzled ourselves, we followed
them at a discreet distance. In due course, we arrived at the village
and a curious spectacle greeted us. On the farms of the village, the
patwari was laying out his chain, and wherever he went, the farmers
followed with their borrowed jareeb and laid it out in exactly the same
manner. At every halt they would watch the patwari and when he began to
enter figures in his notebook, they too would whip out a pencil and
scribble on a piece of paper. Rarely had we seen a more harassed looking
patwari! At the end of the day, the delegation was back again, beaming
from ear to ear. Thank you for the hathiyaar (weapon), they told us, and
handed back the jareeb. Can we, we asked them, see what you wrote? They
took out their smudged piece of paper and showed it to us. It was
covered with a series of numbers in meaningless disorder. But, they
grinned, they had taken care not to show it to the patwari! 

This theme of knowledge as weapon has come back to us many times in the
last three decades. In the mid-80s, a small party from the Palamau
district of Bihar knocked on our door. Could we come to their village
and see what the proposed dam on the Auranga river was going to do to
their area? We said yes, but provided they were able to wrangle a copy
of the DPR (Detailed Project Report) of the dam. Oh, no problem, they
remarked, the irrigation department chaprasi (peon) was from their
village. So, three weeks later, we were rambling across the farmlands of
Palamau inspecting the river and its catchment and comparing it to what
was written in the DPR. We were faced with a battery of questions. Look
at that river, exclaimed the villagers, do you think it can carry as
much water as to irrigate all the lands the department is claiming it
will? And can you see the silt in it; how long will it take for the dam
to fill up? The department says that this village will come under
submergence, and that one will not, when we can clearly see that this
village is higher than that one! How can we challenge their views? 

We took four days to instruct a batch of 20 young boys from the
surrounding villages how to measure the flow in the river, the silt load
that it carried, and the slope of the land.With that, they said, they
would be able to take on the project’s claims of projected irrigation,
the life of the dam, and the extent of submergence. On the last evening,
as we were packing to leave the next morning, they eyed us suspiciously.
Where, they asked, pointing to the "dumpy" (a kind of telescopic
instrument that is used to measure levels), are you taking that? Well,
we said, this is our instrument and we are taking it back; if you want
one you will have to get it for yourselves. How much does it cost, they
queried, and where is it available? The nearest place, we explained,
would be Ranchi and it would cost about Rs 3000. And then we retired for
the night. Only to be woken up by an exuberant hammering on the door
very early the next morning. Here, they said, is Rs 3000 collected from
donations by all the villagers, and you can go and buy the dumpy
yourself; otherwise how will we fight a yuddh (war) without an astra
(weapon)? 

That the yuddh was joined became clear to us when, four months later, a
parcel arrived with the postman. It contained a sheaf of papers
containing the records of three months of daily measurement. We went to
work on the data and came up with some very interesting findings indeed.
The river, for instance, carried only half as much water in the monsoon
months as the DPR claimed it did. This water also bore a silt load
one-and-a-half times that of the figure reported in the project
proposal. 25 villages were actually coming into the submergence zone,
demarcated by following the full reservoir contour, as compared to the
19 acknowledged by the project authorities. When all these were factored
into the calculations the benefits actually came to less than the costs!
This was going to be one very unviable dam indeed, we informed the
people of Auranga. They, in turn, took the report and propagated it all
over the area through posters and leaflets, while the English version
was duly sent off to the governments, the media, the courts, and even
the World Bank. Today, fifteen years later, the Auranga river remains
unbound. 

In the mid-90s, we had another set of visitors, but this time from the
high ranges of Kullu district in Himachal Pradesh. Their villages and
hamlets were being threatened by the declaration of the Great Himalayan
National Park. What exactly was this Park, they asked, and how could
they protect their families? So, two months later, armed with the
relevant documents and reports, we pitched camp in their village. A
young bunch of grazers and farmers listened attentively as we explained
how the government had commissioned a study in the 80s and how this
study, conducted by a pair of specialists from the Pheasant Society in
the UK and Canada, had come to the conclusion that only by declaring the
Park as a protected area could the rare Western Himalayan Tragopan (a
ground-dwelling bird) be saved. And then, as we presented the details of
the study, the listeners grew restive. No, they protested, it is not
possible for the Tragopan to be disturbed by our herds because it nests
in late winter and our grazers go up only in late spring. Even that
figure of 25,000 animals is wrong, they objected, our numbers rarely
cross 12,000. And it is not us who destroy the herbs, but the Nepali
labourers from the Terai, who are unfamiliar with alpine ecology and are
hired by the traders in the plains. 

We suggested to them then that they should do their own study and
compare their findings with what had been reported by the foreign
experts. Very well, they responded immediately, tell us how to do the
study. So, for the next two days, we demonstrated to them how to draw
transects and conduct animal counts, how to document the diversity of
grasses and shrubs, and how to systematically record their
observations.As soon as the snows melted, six of them headed towards the
alpine meadows, following the same route that the scientists had taken
ten years earlier. Two porters who had been taken along to ferry the
supplies to base camp (at heights of over 3000 metres, one does not run
into the occasional tea shop or restaurant!), became so familiar with
the routines of measurement that they eventually became part of the
study team. Six weeks later they returned, armed with a range of
documented observations. A detailed examination of their records showed
that they had successfully challenged every one of the findings of the
government-sponsored study. In addition, their measurements indicated
what was the carrying capacity of the meadows, how ruminants were in
fact controlling weed infestation, and how the herbs could be harvested
within the boundaries of conservation. 

This much, then, is certain: people fight their struggles for survival
based on what knowledge they can create. Each one of the reports and
studies cited above (and numerous others that have not been documented
in both rural and urban areas) indicates that ordinary working people
have the capacity to learn, to collect information, to look at it
analytically, and eventually use it for bettering their own lives. This
is, or should be, the central objective of "education". And yet, these
are simple (and yet very complex) tasks that are not undertaken by our
educational institutions. Didactic instruction, memorising by rote, and
vomiting out useless information for futile examinations constitute the
fundamentals of what passes for education in our schools and colleges.
Perhaps there is a purpose to it all. Perhaps another Macaulay is
required to explain it to us in yet another Minute. And perhaps, in some
not too distant future, a group of young labourers will learn to
document their own lives to tear this farce to pieces.

  _____  

A graduate (and post-graduate) from IIT Bombay, Dunu Roy heads Hazard
Centre in New Delhi.



  _____  

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