Situation reflects grim employment
India has 3.72 lakh beggars of whom 21% are literate,
having passed senior secondary certificate exams and above. In fact, more than
3,000 of them have professional diplomas, or are graduates and even
postgraduates, according to the Census 2011 data on `Nonworkers by main
activity and education level' released earlier this week. Many of them have turned the adage `Beggars cannot be
choosers' on its head -especially considering they are literate but chose
beggary after their degrees failed to land them satisfactory jobs. “I may be
poor but I am an honest man. I beg as it fetches me more money , Rs 200 a day .
My last job of a ward boy in a hospital got me only Rs 100 a day ,“ said Dinesh
Khodhabhai (45), a class 12 pass who can speak half-way decent English.Dinesh is part of a motley group of 30 beggars who seek alms
around Bhadra Kali temple in Ahmedabad.Before their work begins, they sip hot
tea offered gratis by a city philanthropist. Sudhir Babulal (51) is a third-year BCom fail beggar who
earns Rs 150 per day .Sudhir had come to Ahmedabad from Vijapur town with
dreams of a good life but masonry jobs were erratic, fetching him Rs 3,000 for
a 10hour shift and nothing for weeks on end. “After my wife left me, where was
the need to keep a house? I sleep on the riverfront and beg,“ said Sudhir. Dashrath Parmar (52), who has an MCom degree from Gujarat
University , is another pan-handler. This father of three, who aspired for
government service but lost even the private job he had, today lives off free
meals offered by charity organizations. His mother is hospitalized. Ashok Jaisur, who cleared high school from Mumbai, begs in
Lal Darwaza area. He left his job as a security guard after he lost sight due
to cataract and now begs.
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