How The Art of Living gave farmers in Vidarbha a new lease of life

Background

Here farmers are born in debt and die in debt – Old Marathi saying

One thousand nine hundred and twenty* farmers committed suicide in Maharashtra between January 2001 and August 2006, according to Government figures. Unofficial figures put it at three times that number; between 2005 and 2006, there was reported to be one death every eight hours. Most of these were in there region of Vidarbha, the cotton belt of Maharashtra.

Hanging by cotton threads

The cotton sowing season in Vidarbha falls just before the monsoon, when the air is thick with moisture and anxiety. Cotton, also called “white gold”, is a crop that needs water at exactly the right times and in the right amounts. If the monsoon comes too early or too late, it would mean a below par crop: lesser earnings for a farmer who already struggles to meet ends.

Much of Vidarbha is rocky terrain and hilly jungles, and, if not for a generous monsoon, unsuitable for farming. For the 3.2 million farmers here, growing cotton is a high-risk operation. Their dependence on cotton means a huge investment in seeds and insecticides, and overdependence on a capricious climate.

Going hybrid

A few years ago, multi-national companies peddling genetically modified seeds began marketing in rural India, including the interiors of Vidarbha. For centuries, farmers have grown their own seeds, but since 2002, genetically modified cotton seeds, called “BT” have been marketed vigorously. BT promises better yield and more resistance against pests, but needs significantly larger amount of irrigation – dependable irrigation that is available only on 3% of the cotton farms across Vidarbha*. The BT seeds also need a specific brand of insecticide, which, incidentally, is also marketed by the same MNC at high cost.

Whereas traditional organic seeds can be home-grown, BT seeds cannot; farmers who plant BT have to buy the expensive seeds every year to be able to sustain their returns. Changing from BT to traditional seeds is also not possible, as BT seeds have flooded the market and traditional seeds are no longer available.

Socio-economic problems

Despite this, farmers are lured by the promise of higher returns and a hardy seed, and pay huge amounts to buy hybrid seeds. Since they don’t have enough capital to make the initial investment, they take loans from government banks.

Much of Vidarbha is illiterate. Here, frogs are married in the local temple before the monsoons to welcome the rain god, and then let loose in the village pond. If they croak, villagers believe, a good monsoon is promised. Most people here use their thumb prints to sign the hundreds of forms required by a lumbering Indian bureaucracy. Banks also mean that farmers get much lesser than what they really need; money that has to be used not only for seeds, fertilizer and pesticide, but also for labor, and for household expenses.

Three or four children a home is common in Vidarbha. More often than not, they are girl children, and girls have to be married early, or they will remain unmarried. The average farmer is under pressure to perform the marriage in style to save face, and this means high expenses. Then a  huge dowry must be paid.

An ill father or a hospitalized mother also means extra expenses, and the loans given by Government banks do not cover them all. In the face of all these expenses and in desperation, farmers turn to illegal, unauthorized, private lenders.

The web of money

The sahukar (private lender) has long been a feared figure in India. Most often he is portrayed as a well dressed, portly man enjoying the luxury of money without having to move a muscle. Often, sahukars offer easy money to borrowers; instead of the hundreds of forms to be signed in the bank, the sahukar needs only one “stamp paper” – paper usually used for financial contracts, and that can be produced in the court of law as evidence.

The farmers do not hesitate to put their thumb print on a blank sheet of paper as long as the sahukar gives them the amount they ask for. They do not know what they risk: the possibility that the money lender will take over their land.

Once the money is lent, unscrupulous sahukars can impose any amount of interest on the farmers. Sometimes the rate of interest is 100%; sometimes 200%; often they then proceeded to confiscate the man’s land.

With no one to turn to, the farmers commit suicide.

The act

Most suicides happen at dawn, just as farmers begin their day’s work. Most often, they use the same expensive insecticide sold to them by the MNCs, and most often, they die.

The act itself is sign of lost hope. It is a sign of desperation, an act performed because the system has been so unfair that the land tiller thinks he has no other recourse to turn to. Little do they realize that they leave their debts to their widows and children, and because there is no one heading the family now, they become farm laborers, carrying bricks and doing back breaking work on someone else’s land. The Government gives widows compensation – but the Government does not categorize all deaths as farmer suicides. Often suicides are covered up under the guise of alcohol overdose, stomach aches, or various other illnesses.

The widow who does get compensation thanks her good fortune, and takes the money to the nearest agricultural shop to buy a bag of BT seeds.

*Source: DNA India (http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1049554)

The Art of Living Approach

Initial steps

Alarmed by the spate of suicides in the Vidarbha, the Government of Maharashtra invited a few NGOs to initiate motivational programmes to stem the suicide rate. After the first meeting with the Chief Secretary in June 2006 Vyakti Vikas Kendra-India,(The Art of Living) constituted a task force with a mandate to start on  war footing not only the motivational programmes but also other practical time tested rural initiatives of like organic farming methods, water conservation techniques, health and hygiene.

A meeting with the Divisional Commissioner (Amravati Division) was set up in July 2006 based on which the Collectors of the worst affected Districts (Akola, Yawatmal, Wardha, Washim, Amravati and Buldana) were informed to take up the programmes listed below:

  • A group of 35 well trained and motivated youth,(Yuvacharyas) who had undergone the Youth Leadership Training Programme(YLTP) were put together from all parts of Maharashtra within a span of 7 days.
  • They underwent a 4 day orientation programme in Nashik for 4 days after which they assembled in Amravati for their historic mission.
  • They were divided into groups of 5 and were sent to 7 villages in Morshi taluka of Amravati district to familiarize themselves with the people and the terrain. They were also given the task of identifying prospective candidates for the YLTP programme.
  • The Yuvacharyas also conducted “Samargh Arogya Shibirs” -a programme specially created – to create a forum for community oneness and paving the way to live life with self-esteem and dignity.

The initial response was very encouraging, to say the least. In a span of 15 days over 16,000 people were covered in 7 villages – with tailor-made programmes on Organic farming, Hygiene awareness, Ayurveda etc. The response from the local population was highly encouraging to say the least.

The month of August saw the first 10 day YLTP in Morshi taluka with 40 selected  participants. The Divisional Commissioner and the national press were truly astonished at the change in the attitude of the participants. All of them agreed to become the change agent in their villages and promised to bring about the much needed change in Vidarbha. The results were immediate – the next YLTP has more than 110 participants.

The 150 well trained group spread out to interiors taking with them the message not onl  of hope but also practical methods for organic farming to reduce the cost of inputs for farming.

When he visited Vidarbha,  Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar said to the villagers: “I want a Gurudakshina from you. Take a pledge to banish the very thought of suicide.”

The spiritual leader told villagers:

"Committing suicide is foolishness. It offers no solutions to any trouble. If one family has no food and the neighbour has enough to survive for two days, the latter should offer help without hesitation. The country's progress has suffered due to party and caste divisions. Do away with all such inhibitions and help the needy."

"This is just the beginning. I am glad our efforts are bearing fruit. Suicide rates have dipped in 507 villages across the six districts. However, there are thousands of villages where this good work has to be taken. You should take it ahead. Pass on the word."

He said: "Poverty and financial distress are not the cause for suicides. Even progressive states like Kerala and developed countries like Japan have a high suicide rate. Failing self confidence due to lack of spirituality is the major factor behind suicides. “

“Begging is a better option than suicides. Lord Buddha taught his disciples to seek bhiksha (seeking alms). Ask without hesitation. Do not let your egos come in your way to seek help from your neighbor when you need it the most. “

"Let nobody be allowed to commit suicide. It is not a solution to any problem. We have faced floods, droughts and other calamities... we even fought the British to win our independence...yet we never lost courage or resorted to suicides. So why is it that we have this situation now? It is simply because we have forgotten the inner strength that we have."

 Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar stressed upon the need to adopt zero-budget farming. "Excessive use of chemicals has poisoned the soil and it is bringing down the produce. Grow alternative crops. If you are reaping only losses in cotton farming, grow groundnuts and vegetables that can increase your profits while at the same time enriching the soil," he advised the farmers.

Realizing that the troubles of the farmers stemmed from using hybrid seeds which needed more irrigation and chemicals than the farmers could afford, Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar decided to teach the villagers the importance of organic farming and to implement low-cost water harvesting schemes such as tanks, ponds and check-dams. Check dams, in particular, were advocated so as to increase the level of ground water, which can be used even in the dry spells in summer. Besides this, villagers were taught to move from cash crops like cotton to food crops like organic wheat or other grains.

Under the aegis of Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, The Art of Living started the ‘Project Vidarbha-Swavalamban Program’ in August 2006, after the Government of Maharashtra, under Mr. Vilasrao Deshmukh, approached the organization for help.

Under this program, local youth leaders were trained as part of the Youth Leadership Training Program (YLTP). The Project Vidarbha - Swavalamban Program has been specially designed to give the farmers:

  • Improved health through tools to combat depression and fear
  • Economic prosperity by techniques to improve agricultural produce
  • Better quality of life by building the relevant infrastructure

Youth leaders and their team of volunteers then took charge of one or more villages. To begin with, 1,086 local youth were trained, and began work in the Amravati region in Vidarbha. They implemented the project at all levels:

Teaching stress-elimination programs such as

  • YLTP,
  • The Art of Living Part I course,
  • Samagra Arogya Shibirs

Taking on other relevant projects such as

  • Organic Farming,
  • Zero-budget farming,
  • Rainwater Harvesting,
  • Hygiene,
  • Construction of toilets, etc.

The program assists them in conserving rain water through soak pits. It preaches the revival of the age-old farming technique of using compost for crops instead of the more expensive pesticides and fertilizers. The reason: reducing the input cost for the crop to increase a farmer’s livelihood.

Besides helping out farmers, the program also seeks to create better living conditions for villagers and empower women through vocational courses. In a nutshell, it seeks to address the psychological breakdown of farmers and their financially-unviable farming techniques.

In these villages, the mornings begin with the village folk gathering for breathing exercises and meditation under the supervision of the Yuvacharyas. By teaching stress-relieving breath techniques to help boost farmers’ morale, along with alternative farming practices to give them better yield in the long run, efforts were made to end vicious cycle that farmers were trapped in. Through these programs, more than 613,133 lives were touched. The Youth Leadership Training Programme (YLTP) was carried out on a large scale. Around 3,725 youth were trained to act as Yuvacharyas.

Results

At the end of the initial implementation, project coordinator Jayant Bhole said, “There has not been a single instance of suicide in the 151 villages we have worked so far. There are about 1,000 villages in the Amravati region of Vidarbha. The current suicides are happening in the other villages we have yet to reach. We are training more youth leaders to reach out to all the villages.” At the end of two years, 507 villages had been reached and not a single suicide has been recorded in the villages that were reached by The Art of Living Foundation.

The government of Maharashtra issued a circular urging the collectors of the other affected districts – Yavatmal, Akola, Buldana, Washim and Wardha – to take on the “Swavalamban” project: “With a view to stop the suicides among the farmers in the Morshi taluka VVKI (Vyakti Vikas Kendra, India) had initiated The Art of Living programs ….The programme has helped the affected farmers and we have now asked VVKI to initiate similar programs in your district ….. you are requested to render necessary assistance ….”

In November 2006, at an Art of Living gathering in Mumbai, Maharashtra’s Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh lauded the efforts of the organization, saying, “The Art of Living has given a new lease of life and stopped the suicides. This is what Guruji (Sri Sri Ravi Shankar) is able to do, for which the Government is very happy. I am happy that the organization has given farmers the strength to live.” He further said, “The government is grateful that AOL is working in Morshi and Amravati districts. I request them to take up the other six districts as well.”

After this, The Art of Living took up work in all the six districts.

Over 4,512 villagers also learnt The Art of Living’s breathing technique, “Sudarshan Kriya” which reduced stress levels. The courses received a tremendous response from farmers with 16,000 locals from Morshi Taluka, Amravati, taking the course in 14 days. Pimpalkhuta, Nimbhi, Nerpingalai, Udkhed, Riddhapur Tiwsa, Hivarkhed, Vadsa, Kolvai are a few other villages where the courses were conducted.

As of October 10, 2007, Art of Living has covered 507 villages. 3000 ft of CCT farming has been done, 65 field ponds (10x10x10m) have been completed. This number went up to 500 by March 2007.

Testimonials

“Before Art of living, there was depression and debt everywhere. I'm confident that with the zero budget farming taught in the course, the produce will improve and debts will be cleared,” says Devendra Borde, a farmer from Vidarbha.

“I am confident that things will get better,” said Anand Rao Sabde from Nimbhi village in Morshi district. Debts and poor yield had caused him to give up on his fields. “The pranayaam and Sudarshan Kriya have made me a stronger and happier human being. I was so encouraged by the natural farming sessions that I started cultivating my fields once again,” he said.

Families of farmers, who also underwent trauma, participated in the courses. Youth like 22-year-old Pravin Thakre gave up alcohol and gutkha after the training camp. Thakre, who used to lease his three acres of land to other farmers now says, “The skills I have learnt have given me the confidence to cultivate my own land instead of giving it out to others.”

“I was tired of life and on the verge of committing suicide. The Art of Living Programme changed my life. Now I have found a new direction in life and motivation to cultivate my own land.” - Sanjay Manikdarkar, Farmer

“In spite of financial assistance from the state government, the mental stress and tension of the farmers were not reduced… the transformation brought about by the Art of Living is there for all to see.”

"It is a matter of gratification that Art of Living has initiated grass-root projects and programmes to relieve stress and change the attitude of the affected farmers in Vidarbha."

`The project has certainly restored normalcy in the lives of farmers and relieve them of trauma. Art of living has given them a new lease of life and reduced the rate of suicides. The government is grateful that Art of living is working in remote parts of Vidarbha by expanding their services, especially the Youth Leadership Training Programme, which is helping the youth to be strong, both mentally and physically, and serve the society at large." - Sri Vilasrao Deshmukh, Chief Minister, Maharashtra

Data

The Art of Living’s Project Vidarbha-Swavalamban Programme started in August 2006. The Project is active in the Amravati region of Vidarbha, in all the six affected districts: Amravati, Wardha, Yeotmal, Washim, Akola, Buldhana.


No. of villages where Art of Living has initiated activity in Vidarbha 507


No. of people who have undergone the stress-elimination workshops 6,13,133


No. of people who have learnt chemical-free farming 16,312


No. of soak pits built 91 in 44 villagesNo. of tree plantations 3436