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"In the rainy season it is really bad. Water mixes with the shit
and when we carry it on our heads, it drips from the basket onto
our clothes, our bodies, our faces. When I return home, I find it
difficult to eat food sometimes. The smell never gets out of my
clothes, my hair. But then in summer there is often no water to
wash your hands before eating. It is difficult to say which is
worse." This is a telling investigation and indictment of India's
lack of resolve over the past 100 years to get rid of manual
scavenging and transportation of human excrement. Since Gandhi
raised the question of untouchability in 1901 there have been
reports, recommendations, a National Commission in 1994 and
allocation of funds for rehabilitation of the Bhangis, but so far
little has changed. Almost every state government denies the
existence of the problem. The author suggests that there is a
silent and shameful opposition in India to the eradication of
untouchability. The Bhangis are trapped in a system ordained by the
caste structure which impedes rehabilitation and movement into
alternative work. Can attitudes change, or will the dignity,
justice and equality enshrined in the Constitution remain no nearer
for the Bhangis than it was in 1947?
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