It was love at first sight. Her family railed against marrying a blind man. Since then, their life has been full of twists, sometimes cruel. Yet Chitra and Muthuraja face life with courage and hope. This is their love story. 🧵

ruralindiaonline.org/en/articles/ch…
2| Chitra plucks 1-2 kilos of jasmine flowers at a farm for daily wages. She has worked long, back-breaking hours since she was 10, much of it as a farmworker and cotton mill employee
3| Chitra and Muthuraja walk back to their home in Solankuruni village, in Madurai's Thiruparankundram block, after she finishes the day's work at the jasmine farm
4| Chitra’s chest scans from when her heart ailment was diagnosed in 2017. Recently, doctors found another problem with her heart. She needs surgery, but can't afford it.
5| A month after their wedding, in 2017, Chitra began to have trouble breathing. After many tests, it was discovered that her heart was weak. The doctors said they were surprised she was alive this long. Her family – for whom she had toiled all her life – refused to help.
6| Chitra watches over her four-year-old son, Vishanth Raja, who was born after anxious months and prayers
7| Their son is their world; without him, Muthuraja says, he and Chitra would have ended their lives
8| They cannot afford to buy milk for tea – so the son drinks only black tea. “But I like this only,” says Vishanth, as if he understands his parents, their life, their losses – and their love. Vishanth usually entertains his parents by singing and dancing with them.
9| Chitra goes to her father-in-law's house nearby to use the bathroom because they don’t have one in their rented home
10| The asbestos roof of Chitra and Muthuraja’s house was blown away by strong winds and heavy rain. Their relatives helped them get a new roof sheet
11| The family of 3 walks to the pump two streets away to fetch water everyday
12| Chitra cannot lift anything heavy because of her heart condition, so Muthuraja carries the pot and she guides him
13| In their crumbling home, Chitra has safely preserved all their medical bills
14| His arm on her shoulder, she guides his steps – this husband and wife team in Madurai district faces life together. But poverty, poor health and disability make everyday existence hard for them.

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More from @PARInetwork

26 Aug
By simply implementing the recommendations of the Swaminathan Commission (National Commission on Farmers). The extensive reports’ main features are condensed into 25 simple points here. Have a look 🧵 Image
2| To make farming a viable activity and reverse farmers’ distress, the following factors need to be taken into account— unfinished land reform agendas, quantity and quality of water, technology fatigue, accessible, adequate, and timely institutional credit, and assured markets. Image
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This is a report by Aajeevika Bureau (an organisation working with migrant workers in Gujarat and Rajasthan) in April 2020. It explores the experiences faced by ‘circular migrants’ employed in the informal labour markets of Ahmedabad and Surat. 🧵

ruralindiaonline.org/en/library/res… |Free
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24 Jul
This report contains the results of a study on the pandemic’s effects on women from households with a monthly income of less than Rs. 20,000, their livelihoods, access to essentials, assets, debt, food, nutrition, sanitation, and time use.

Download: ruralindiaonline.org/en/library/res…| 🧵
2| The report includes testimonies through telephonic interviews of about 15,000 women and 2,300 men from low-income households across 10 states: Bihar, Gujarat, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha, Telangana, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal.
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With traditional symbiosis b/w farmers and pastoralists on the decline, Kuruba shepherds are migrating greater distances with their herds and belongings – on an ever-harder journey. Here's a peek into their lives in this long photo essay🧵

ruralindiaonline.org/en/articles/ku… 📷Prabir Mitra
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22 Jul
Pari Education offers a new lens to see the world, and develops both empathy and understanding. 🧵 Image
Perhaps in our rush to make them global citizens, we have alienated them from their own history and geography. We need to expose our students to the rest-of-India, get them to engage with the wider world around them – that of rural India where 800 million people live and work Image
Why don’t we know more about them and why are their stories of resilience and unique skills not mandatory learning? Image
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