"... What do you know about CK Janu? Ever tried composting? Or protesting
against manual scavenging? How much does a farmer earn on a crop? ...
Turning the Pot, Tilling the Land will prove vital in empowering our
children to respect all kinds of peoples and their work, and to understand,
and hopefully work against, the atrocious machinations of the caste system.
..."

The Work of Our Hands

Vatsala Kaul has high praise for Kancha Ilaiah's book for children on the
values of 'simple' work

Tehelka, June 23, 2007

The cavernous divide between those who 'labour' and those who 'work' in
India has always inhabited the shaky bedrock of our social system. Labour is
work that leads to no accumulation of wealth, though it often perpetuates
its own impoverished struggles. Its devaluation, as scripted in Hindu
religious texts and fostered by years of selfish conditioning, has only
worsened, aggravating the disengagement between the historically privileged
and those banished to the fringes as 'lower castes', 'Backward Classes',
'Scheduled Tribes' and 'untouchables'.

Flung into such compartments without escape, millions of Indians - adivasis,
potters, weavers, dhobis, farmers, cobblers and domestic workers - are
regarded as a lobotomised, unskilled mass, providing 'services' it seems
they have no choice but to perform. As Ilaiah points out, the modern
education system - in continuance of an ideology that considers physical
labour undignified - anoints mental endeavour but is derisive and
disparaging of physical work. Basic productive services are neither valued
nor well-paid. It is to this work and to those who perform it that Ilaiah
seeks to restore a core of long deserved respect.

The book is presented as a possible course book for children of classes
7-10, their teachers and parents. Of the book's 11 'lessons', eight deal
with the scientific temper, artistic abilities, knowledge pool and many
skills of adivasis, cattle-rearers, farmers, weavers and barbers. There is
enough to grip the imagination - how the adivasis discovered and
standardised most of the foods we eat; how leather workers used the tangedu
plant for eco-friendly tannin; how tillers use traditional knowledge in
planning their harvests; how potters improve their clay with smooth ash and
charcoal; how dhobis use fuller's earth to remove stains and kill germs; how
dais - largely the women of the barber community - are able to turn breach
babies in the womb without ultrasounds or other costly techniques. There are
interesting asides, and inventive exercises readers are encouraged to try -
they work as well for adults as for kids. What do you know about CK Janu?
Ever tried composting? Or protesting against manual scavenging? How much
does a farmer earn on a crop?

Grownups who fret over whether to let their domestic help use the ac are
advised to resolve their own conflicts before handing this book to their
children.

The book was sparked off by Ilaiah's shock at students from the iits and
iims protesting against reservations by going out to sweep roads and polish
shoes, clearly demonstrating what little dignity they associated with such
labour.

Through lucid, logical text, Ilaiah places this work in socio-historical
perspective, impressing upon the reader how entire categories of usually
marginalised people have learnt, invented, discovered and created products
we use but take for granted, and how they are as capable as others - often
more so - of becoming teachers, software engineers, doctors, nuclear
physicists or anything else.

Ilaiah's well-intentioned narrative can become simplistic in places, such as
in the chapter on 'Labour and Religion', where he denounces Hinduism and its
caste system. It's an impractical approach - one can not imagine the
relatively privileged suddenly converting to Ilaiah's point of view if they
are not already attuned to caste's heinous unfairness.

By contrast, medieval Europe is described as a blissfully classless society
- an assertion that is simply not true. Admittedly, however, while almost
every religion has had cliques that arrogated to themselves powers and
privileges, neither class nor slavery were sanctified by religion in the way
Hinduism sanctified caste. Even if the word 'caste' were now to disappear, a
vicious complex of reasons helps its long-entrenched effects to survive in
this country and seep even into the lives of converts to more egalitarian
religions.

Although one understands that Ilaiah's case rests on presenting 'labouring'
people as informed, skilled and creative, it is a little disappointing that
he doesn't touch upon the fundamental, intrinsic equality of all people,
skilled or not, learned or not, labouring or not. We may owe weavers a
'historical debt, so they must be given preference in education and
employment', but that should not mean that those whom we do not owe any such
debt should not get, or be enabled to get, the same opportunities. Ilaiah
excludes those who may not be 'skilled' or 'inventive', and new migrants to
the 'labouring' classes who may or may not have traditional wisdom and
learning.

While most of the writing in the book is blissfully straightforward and not
without humour (Manolo Blahnik and Jimmy Choo are 'cobblers', for instance),
academic jargon does creep in. But then, it's always hard labour to build up
debate and easy work to nitpick. The cause is worthy, and the last chapter
on gender issues more than welcome.

This wonderfully designed book is a much-needed resource for both parents
and teachers and anyone else who wants to educate themselves - teeming with
interesting information, yet spacious and uncrowded. It is also beautifully
embellished - one can't use so neutral a term as 'illustrated' - by Durgabai
Vyam of Bhopal, whose Gond-style black-and-white drawings are feisty works
of art. In times when children think cows eat garbage and not grass, and
that flower pots grow one on top of the other on roadsides, Turning the Pot,
Tilling the Land will prove vital in empowering our children to respect all
kinds of peoples and their work, and to understand, and hopefully work
against, the atrocious machinations of the caste system. Class 7 is too late
to start, though; it would be best to share the contents of this book as
soon as kids are old enough to understand the words 'play' - and 'work'.

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