DEVELOPMENT: THE BEGGARS OF TANDO ALLAH YAR
Accompanied by her children, Maighi Jogi* leaves her house in the Jai Ram Jogi settlement, to beg and collect some wheat and rice in the nearby villages. She returns home in the evening to cook whatever she has managed to get by begging to feed her three daughters and two sons, none of whom go to school. “It is part of our daily routine to visit different villages, going from door to door to beg so as to survive another day,” says Maighi. “Some of us are also snake-charmers but poverty compels us to beg for food. We beg from dawn to dusk and return at night with some eatables. This is what we have done all our lives for generations. My children will also become beggars and snake-charmers.” Maighi’s husband is a snake-charmer who goes to Karachi and returns after two or three weeks with not more than 2000 to 3,000 rupees.
The Jai Ram Jogi settlement is located in the union council (UC) Dad Khan Jarwar, district Tando Allahyar, Sindh. According to a survey conducted in 2016 by the National Rural Support Programme (NRSP), the Jai Ram Jogi settlement comprises 77 households with a total “population” of 387 people. The inhabitants of the village belong to the Jogi community, jogi being a colloquial term for yogi, a Sanskrit word that refers to people who practiced yoga as a daily ritual. Interestingly, they are settled in Gujarat and Rajasthan in India and in Tharparkar in Sindh, Pakistan. With time, a community has developed and subsequently it became a caste. Along with snake-charming and begging for a living, they are also involved in fortune-telling and exorcism. Mostly, they are worshippers of Shiva and wear the traditional saffron-coloured dress. Some Muslim jogis who live in taluka Thari Mirwah, district Khairpur, Sindh belong to a branch of the Rajper Sama tribe, which ruled the state of Sindh in the past. The majority of the Hindu jogi community is settled in the lower parts of Sindh such as Badin, Umerkot, Mithi and Tharparkar districts.
The settlement has been named after Jai Ram jogi, a snake-charmer and mendicant in his earlier life. Jai Ram was also known as a murli nawaz (murli player) and he played murli or flute on the radio and television in the early ‘90s and received numerous awards and certificates for his performances including the Latif Award for lifetime achievement by Syed Qaim Ali Shah, the then chief minister of Sindh.
A community of beggars and snake-charmers struggles to change their lives
Despite his achievements, Jai Ram feels sad that the people of his village have no other means of livelihood but snake-charming and begging due to which they are stuck in poverty. They lack basic amenities of life such as power and gas connections, have no access to toilet and safe drinking water. Since one hand pump for the whole village is insufficient to fulfil the needs of drinking water for the whole community, women fetch water from wells and tube wells after a 30 to 45 minute-walk. Children wander on the streets as there is no school to attend in the village, and parents are not willing to send their children to school away from their village. As per the Poverty Score Card Survey conducted in district Tando Allahyar in 2016, all of the 134 children (5-16 years) do not attend school.