Caste prejudices hit Bihar's anganwadi
centres: Report
Thursday May 03, 2012 05:18:00 PM, Imran
Khan,
IANS
|
|
|
Patna: Caste and
religious prejudices in Bihar's villages are affecting the central
government's education and health schemes - such as anganwadis -
for impoverished families, says a report by the Institute of Human
Development.
The report, a copy of which is available with IANS, cites cases
where upper caste children were not allowed to go to anganwadi
centres in Dalit or lower caste hamlets and vice versa. Anganwadis
are government sponsored child and mother care centres at the
grassroots.
Also, anganwadi centres in Muslim hamlets see no children from
upper caste and Dalit families, says the report.
Anganwadi centres are part of the Ministry of Women and Child
Development's flagship Integrated Child Development Scheme.
The deeply-ingrained biases are depriving hundreds of children
from education, mid-day meals and vaccination, says the report.
The report was prepared after an on-the-spot survey of 14 villages
of nine districts in Bihar by a team of researchers from the New
Delhi-based institute.
The report says in Amrahi village of Rajpur block in Rohtas
district, upper caste children did not go to the anganwadi centre
in a lower caste hamlet. This led to many children not getting
vaccinated against serious diseases.
Vaccination could not take place either in the Dalit Paswan
hamlets or the Brahmin hamlets because the Brahmins refused send
their children to Paswan hamlets nor allow Paswan children into
their area, says the report.
In Madhubani district's Mahisan village, children from backward
caste Yadav and extremely backward castes Kahtve and Musahar did
not attend anganwadi centres in a Muslim hamlet.
Similarly, in Jitwarpur in Araria district, tribal Santhal
children did not attend centres in a Brahmin hamlet since only the
Brahmin were given food there, the report says.
In Dewan Parsa village of Gopalganj district, Paswan children were
summoned only when there was an inspection, though the headcount
was kept the same throughout the year.
Similarly, the caste of Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHA)
also face prejudices in their work. It was found that they
received cooperation or no cooperation depending upon their caste.
ASHAs are an integral part of the rural health care system related
to deprived sections of society. In Dewan Parsa village, Brahmin
women had no inhibitions in admitting that they did not cooperate
with ASHAs who were Dalits, says the report.
"In fact, caste is dominant and has destroyed the idea of
cohesiveness and common schooling, which was the prime objective,"
the report says.
It says that the ramifications of practicing strict caste rules
from an early age have far-reaching impact on socialisation and
such obnoxious caste laws do not lend to community teaching and
common school systems despite such huge fund interventions.
The report also mentions the lack of facilities at the anganwadi
centres due to rampant corruption.
(Imran Khan can be contacted at imran.k@ians.in)
|
Home |
Top of the Page
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Top Stories |
Gujarat police brutality makes Congress MP
cry in Lok Sabha
A Congress MP from Gujarat, Prabha Kishor Taviad, broke down in
the Lok Sabha Wednesday as her colleague Girija Vyas recounted how
she was allegedly punched
»
Politics of hatred has triumphed in Gujarat: Harsh Mander
Authorities in Gujarat protecting perpetrators of 2002 riots: HRW
|
|
Most Read |
When
Malegaon almost became a district
October 03, 1981 was a momentous day
in the history of Malegaon when the then chief minister of
Maharashtra, Abdur Rehman Antulay on a day-long visit to the city
announced that Malegaon would be declared
»
|
'Half of all child deaths in India due to
pre-term births'
Nearly half
of all child deaths in India are caused by pre-term births, the
highest amongst its neighbours, a report by 'Save the Children'
revealed Wednesday. "Born Too Soon: The Global Action Report on
Preterm Birth" said that every year, 27 million
»
|
|
News Pick |
Activist's killing: Eight cops to undergo polygraph test
A Maharashtra
court here Wednesday granted permission to the CBI to conduct
polygraph test on at least nine accused, who include eight
policemen, in the 2010 murder of transparency activist Satish
Shetty,
»
|
Forced
conversion of Hindu women in Pakistan: BJP corners government
The government will make a statement on the alleged forcible
conversion of Hindu women in Pakistan, Home Minister P.
Chidambaram told the Lok Sabha Wednesday after
»
|
AMU students make world's largest envelop,
set world record
The 37×27 feet envelop made by a group of about two
dozen students belonging to the faculties of Engineering,
Architecture
»
|
|
Picture of the Day |
 |
The
massive expansion project of the Grand Mosque, which has
necessitated the acquisition and subsequent demolition of
thousands of properties, has escalated the rate of migration
from the center of the city to the suburbs.
(Photo: IINA)
|
|
|
|