In Bundelkhand’s sweltering heat, Dayaram and his wife remove silt from the bottom of a dried-out pond. |
In early May, Pal returned from a spell of work in the
distant state of Haryana, where he earned 250 rupees, or about $3.70, a day
toiling long hours as a laborer. Fifteen other members of his family also
migrated to various cities, searching for work and leaving behind women,
children, the elderly and a handful of younger men to tend to the land. Pal
borrowed money from the bank and a local moneylender to pay for medical
treatment for his mother, who has cancer, and he was now deep in debt.
Back in Khakron, his village, Pal found himself not only in
debt, but also with no water for his fields, no crops to harvest, no food for
his family, no money for his mother’s treatment. He awoke one morning in
mid-May, before dawn, and killed himself in his field
Read The World Post
story - “Parched Land. Farmer Suicides. Forced Migration: Drought Is Crippling Rural India.”
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