Nidhi Dugar Kundalia’s The Lost Generation: Chronicling India’s Dying Professions is a collection of essays about anachronistic professions that continue to exist in India even as modernisation makes them barely relevant. Traditional, ancestral trades, for the most part determined by caste, are practised around the vast landscape of India, and Nidhi seeks out 11 such professions to write about.
The Lost Generation brings together the rudaalis (mourning women-in-black) from Rajasthan and the letter writers of Bombay, the storytellers of Andhra and the Urdu scribes of Delhi. Clearly, technology has rendered some obsolete — what value is there of oral storytellers who walk through a region gathering and spreading news, fact and fiction, when television and radio have penetrated all parts of the country. Similarly, with mobile phones in every household or at least neighbourhood, the painstaking art of letter writing has been virtually lost. These are professions that were once immensely significant in connecting people, and date back centuries, but today the penultimate or possibly last generation of practitioners eke out a living in conflict with urbanisation.
There is a sense of nostalgia pervading the pages of Kundalia’s essays as we recall other occupations that once existed and now are rarely heard of. Some are particularly significant to Hinduism, like the genealogists of Haridwar, “Pandas — the priests who double up as genealogists” who maintain the family registers with details of marriages, births and deaths. Once, even the ink was a “pure Brahmin product” containing ingredients like almond peels and sap from banana trees but today, Pandas make do with commercial ink. As the world becomes less concerned with family roots, as caste ceases to be the sole determinant of how a life will be led, and as sons of Pandas are becoming bankers, the more traditional and religious families continue to update their registers via the Pandas but the relationship is unravelling.
A look at traditional occupations in India and their practitioners who are losing relevance as times change
The Pandas, of course, belong to the highest of castes — the Brahmins — while many of the other identified professions belong to more vulnerable segments of Indian society. They lack permanent residences, live semi-nomadic lives and are unable to benefit from state support. Across the essays and castes, however, there is a sense of pride and prejudices of the practitioners and the communities they serve. The professions are defined by many layers of which caste is but one; class and gender are equally relevant.
The rudaalis from the sand dunes of Rajasthan are professional female mourners for the feudal lords or Rajput Thakurs of the region. While social mores prevented the author from speaking to a rudaali, the Thakur explained the need for bought tears to Kundalia, saying, “We don’t allow the women in our families to make a sight of themselves outside our homes. High-caste women do not cry in front of commoners. Even if their husbands die, they need to preserve their dignity. These low-caste women, rudaalis, do the job for them. The whole village feels the loss … She represents their sadness.”
Among the Rajputs, patriarchy and male hegemony finds expression in more extreme ways than just controlling the tears of ‘their’ women. “The birth of a daughter, even from a legitimate wife, is not liked by the Rajputs”, writes Kundalia, alluding to female infanticide which continues to take place in the region. Women who survive birth to a low-caste mother, and lose their husband or for some other reason become impoverished, have few choices, and learning to cry on demand is a better profession than the few other choices open to them.