Commentary / Mani Shankar Aiyar
A miracle is being repeated in some one million panchayat wards around the country
There is a small knot of candidates waiting to greet me as I arrive in Sirkazhi late at night to kick off my campaign in the local bodies
elections. I am introduced to the aspirants. Shrinking almost
into the wall to avoid standing out is Damayanti, diminutive,
wispy thin, wizened a little beyond her middle years, her hair
streaked with lines of grey. She is hoping to be elected to the
district council (as the zilla parishad in Tamil Nadu is known)
from Sirkazhi West.
The seat has been reserved for women. At first
sight, she seems a slightly unlikely prospect. Her husband, a
not much more impressive physical presence, does the talking --
or whatever little there is of talking.
We set out next day, she is in the open jeep, her legs held down
by a girl companion, ass if the breeze might blow her away. It
is her unexpected stamina that makes me begin to revise my apprehensions.
Where I simply fade like a wilted flower in the sun, she is quite
unfazed. Through the whole morning and late into the afternoon,
she stands rock-like in the blazing sun, her hands ritually folded
and her smile well within the bounds of propriety, while the pechaalar
(orator) at the mike repetitively calls on the voter to vote for
our Congress candidate.
As the sun starts going down, the size of the audience proportionately
increases. It seems more appropriate to stand alongside her
than be seated in front with the driver. The jeep screeches to a
halt in the middle of a village bazaar. A hundred or so curious
souls gather around to hear what we have to say. I speak my piece.
I end by saying the candidate herself will now say a few words.
She audibly gasps. Apparently, neither she nor anyone else has
thought fit to consider letting a woman candidate herself tell
the voters why they should vote for her. That, they seem to think,
is a man's job. The professional pechaalar has enumerated her
virtues and those of her party. Does she have to proclaim these
herself?
Nonsense, I hiss, she must speak at least a few words. She turns
despairingly towards her husband. I stare at him sternly. He nodes
a dumb assent. She manages a few embarrassed sentences. We move
on. But as we go, and I insist she follow my little speech with
one of her own devising, she gains confidence. Not more than two
or three stops on, she is in full oratorical flow. She still cannot
help seeking her husband's permission every time I invite her
to speak: That is a ritual which will take a while to fade. No
matter. For what she has to say is fascinating.
She has been in the party for over 20 years. All that time she
has been immersed in the women's wing - the Mahila Congress. There
has been little scope for indulging in what her male colleagues
deem to be 'politics' - but plenty of time to have walked virtually
village to village looking to the needs of her gender. She know
half her constituents, the women of the 20 panchayats from where
she is seeking election, far more intimately than her male counterpart
in Sirkazhi East knows his male voters. I think she can make it;
I am not so confident of the man's prospects.
The campaign ends in the wee hours. I have to move on to the next
block but think I should make a more material contribution to
her campaign before leaving. So, I call her aside and give her
a small donation - a fraction of what this column will earn me.
She accepts the money gratefully but immediately turns it over
to her husband. He is supportive and clearly proud of his wife
- although he has some difficulty demonstrating this. But what
I have seen in under 24 hours is a woman politician grow from
out of a housewife. It is a miracle being repeated in some one million
panchayat wards around the country.
No one would have thought to ask Damayanti to contest an election
if they had not been constitutionally obligated to do so. After
all, she has been around for 20 years, harrying the women of the
panchayats where she has done so much good work to vote for a
male Congress candidate, careful for reasons of gender propriety
to remain slightly off-centre the angle of attention, never thinking
of herself as the cynosure of all eyes. It is reservations for
women that has brought her centre-stage.
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