Lokayat Demonstrates Local Ingenuity
That Can Bring About A Global Change

*By Devinder Sharma*

28 September, 2010
*Ground 
Reality*<http://devinder-sharma.blogspot.com/2010/09/lokayat-shows-local-ingenuity-to-change.html>

*At a Lokayat meeting*

People's participation is a catch phrase that every donor, NGO and civil
society group uses. In fact, we have become so used to the usual NGO way of
'people's participation' that I think the word has lost its true meaning. I
wasn't therefore expecting anything different when I went last week to
address a conference on education at Pune, organised jointly by Lokayat and
the Pune University Teachers Association (PUTA).

Arriving a day earlier, I spent some time speaking at a management school,
and then went to talk to the Lokayat members. It is here that I met a group
of youngsters, all volunteers, who changed my perception of what constitutes
people's participation. I had forgotten if people's participation could ever
be without donor's financial support, and outside the reach of a project. I
am not talking of people's movements like the continuing struggle against
displacements in the Narmada valley and the likes, but when enterprising
young people come together to create awareness about the inequalities that
are being perpetuated.

They meet every Sunday at 4 pm. They sit through the evening discussing
various crucial local, national and international issues, often till 7 or 8
pm. They thrash out the issues, plan strategies, take responsibilities, and
plan activities to reach the people in the street. Someone makes posters,
someone writes the pamphlets, others get involved with printing. They all
walk to a busy street corner one planned day, and stand with the posters.
People walk by, some stand and take a look. They get involved in talking,
and more often than not, a new member joins in.

This has been happening for the past five years, week after week, year after
year. It could be simple street campaigns, poster exhibitions and street
plays, and sometimes protests and dharnas.

It could be 'boycott Coke-Pepsi' one week, 'no more Bhopals' the next. "We
organise public awareness campaigns on various issues of deep concern to
people. We have organised campaigns on issues like rise in petrol and diesel
prices, destructive effects of nuclear energy, privatisation of
health-education and electricity, decaying public transport system, and
harmful impacts of Bt Brinjal," says Neeraj Jain. His wife Alka Joshi, in
addition focuses on women issues. Between both of them I think they have the
energy to move mountains.

Lokayat team is drawn from all walks of life. I met young lawyers,
engineers, software engineers, school teachers, college lecturers,
technicians, government employees, film makers and you name it. Believe it
or not, each member contributes 10 per cent of their monthly salary, and
some even contribute 20 per cent. "Lokayat does not draw any funding from
donors. It is entirely built on the members contribution," says Abhijeet.
His wife, also a member, tells me that they have been contributing ever
since they joined some three years back.

I haven't seen any other similar initiative which is being run only on
members own contribution. This is simply amazing, and provides hope in a
society which is increasingly becoming self-centred and of course selfish.

They wanted me to explain how the nation-wide movement against Bt brinjal
evolved, and asked me several questions. Such was their interest, that the
question-answer session seemed never-ending. But when I asked them as to
what draws them to the Lokayat tradition, it was so inspiring to listen to
most of them who raised their hands. In essence, what I learnt was that they
had consciously adopted a lifestyle that takes them away from greed, which
in other words means consumerism. They were committed to fight the global
issues from a local perspective. "We can't change the world, but we can
change ourselves, and ask people to make the difference at their own
individual and family level to begin with."

It is after long that I see a ray of hope. I have often felt that when
people become sensitive and aware, society begins to change. The change can
be local, but gradually it begins to spread far and wide. I am aware that it
is a long process, but it always the first step that sets the pace for a
long march. Lokayat has taken that first step, and shown that it is possible
to involve people to participate on their own for building a just and
equitable world. It has to start with a local struggle, and another local
struggle, than another, and a revolution is born.

Before we concluded, Lokayat members were keen to end with a song. "Apne
liye jiye to kya jiye (What is the use of living for yourself).." they sang
in chorus. The Hindi song still reverberates in my mind, but more than that
the energy they exhibited still flows in me. I have come back recharged.

Contact: Neeraj Jain at *[email protected]*

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