People's Archive of Rural India Profile picture
Sep 28, 2019 3 tweets 8 min read Read on X
"As time passes,it seems like the only reason to farm is if it is a hobby...All you can do in these times is grind some extra chilli as that’s all you can afford to eat with rice," says Augustine Vadakil, a #farmer reeling under the effects of #ClimateChange in #Wayanad,#Kerala. ImageImage
Once boasting of an "air conditioned #climate",erratic rainfall patterns in the area, coupled with capitalism driven changes in cropping patterns, reduced forest cover & forms of land use, are making #coffee & #pepper cultivation unsustainable in #Kerala. ruralindiaonline.org/articles/why-i… ImageImageImage

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More from @PARInetwork

Apr 25
Lenindhasan, or Lenin– as he is called – and his friends, are trying to replace modern rice varieties and resist mono-cropping. Their plan is to restore lost diversity. And to germinate a rice revolution.

It's a different kind of revolution, led by another kind of Lenin. Image
Lenin cultivates 30 varieties of rice. He sells another 15 raised by fellow farmers. And he conserves 80 types of paddy seeds. All this, in his family’s six-acre farm in Tamil Nadu’s Tiruvanamalai district. Image
It seems as if he’s been farming and selling paddy for decades. But it’s only been six years.

Before he became a farmer, Lenin was a corporate employee in Chennai, with two degrees and a good salary. Image
Read 10 tweets
Apr 19
Life has only become harder in the last 10 years (A thread) Image
India's poorest homes continue to rely on minor forest produce like mahua and tendu leaves, along with the assured Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee (MGNREGA) programme. Image
As they prepare for voting today in the General Elections 2024, Adivasi villagers here in Arattondi village say their lives have only become harder in the last 10 years... Image
Read 12 tweets
Nov 18, 2023
MP govt is punishing "rioters" who had engaged in stone-pelting by destroying private property.

But the idea of Wasim pelting stores is difficult to digest. He had lost both his arms in 2005.

Then why was his house shop razed down too?
[read ahead]
Image
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In Wasim’s shop, customers would tell him whatever they needed and help themselves. “They would place the money in my pocket or the drawer in the shop and leave,” he says.  “I had put whatever money I had raised into my shop. It was my livelihood for 15 years.”
But on a warm April day in Khargone, Wasim Ahmed watched in horror as a bulldozer ordered by the state govt crushed and destroyed his shop and the valuable material inside. That day, bulldozers flattened 50 other shops and homes in this Muslim-dominated locality.
Read 8 tweets
Nov 15, 2023
A student once asked us:
"Why is inequality bad? The kirana owner has a small store & Ambani has a big business because of how hard they work. People who work hard, succeed."

PARI is hoping to address these misconceptions by showing the lives of hardworking Indians [a 🧵] Image
Unpacking the idea of ‘success’ is possible with a PARI story on unequal access to education, healthcare and justice.

We draw on them in classrooms to share the lives of hardworking people – on farms, in forests and the underbelly of cities, and more.
Students like Chennai high schooler, Arnav admit, “we view them [people below their socio-economic group] as statistics rather than an actual person who goes through things we often go through.”
Read 10 tweets
Oct 15, 2023
Every day is Rural Women's Day here at PARI. Don't take our word for it. Browse our website to find stories of some of the most incredible women from rural India!
A thread to get you started 👇

#InternationalDayOfRuralWomen Image
1/ Seaweed is an essential algae to a wide array of industries, including the pharma industry. But who goes down into the sea to get it? @MPalani17304893 introduces you to the fisherwomen who spend 7-10 hours in the sea every day to harvest it.

ruralindiaonline.org/en/articles/ta…
2/ Shanti Devi is possibly India's first woman mechanic who has been working at a depot just outside Delhi for over two decades. She changes tyres, fixes punctures, repairs engines and breaks stereotypes.
ruralindiaonline.org/en/articles/a-…
Read 10 tweets
Sep 3, 2022
In 2017, there were 363 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births in Assam’s tea estates, over twice as many compared to the national average.

This @Oxfam report reveals the plight of Assam tea plantation workers. Women get the worst end of the stick.👇🧵

ruralindiaonline.org/en/library/res…
In the 160 years since the British established tea production, Assam has become the largest tea-producing state in India, the largest tea-producing region in the world and the world’s fourth largest tea exporter.
Still, for every kilogram of packaged Assam tea sold, less than 5% of the cut goes to the workers.

850 million Indians consume tea daily. But who produces it?
Read 13 tweets

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