San Francisco Examiner September 25, 1991
"Buck sheis de do, shab? Khanna mangta hai. Boock laga hai..." he said, as he tugged my hand. He stood belt level and I turned away after glancing at him. He kept holding and tugging, as the teeming masses of Indians moved beside us on the sidewalk.

"Boock
laga hai, boock laga hai, tora khanna mangta
hai..." he said as he rubbed his stomach and tugged my hand. I tried
to look at him as we kept walking
in the crowd. In training
they had told us that we would
have to decide how to handle
beggars. In training, they had told us that 1/2 of
India's beggars were purposefully maimed.
"How
do they get a statistic like that, does the
government go around and ask, `Did you purposefully maim your
kid?'" I had skeptically asked.
During my first five minutes in the streets, I
had trouble starring into the face of
this boy whose cheek had a whole in it
the size of a Kennedy silver dollar, ringed with pus, sores, exposed teeth and ugly gums. Ahead, curbside on the
street, were skateboards that American kids careen around on for
fun. In Bombay they
are used by kids without hands, ankles or legs to reach the
car or taxi at the light, grab its
handle and beg, "Paise de do, shab... Gorib admi, shab.."
The homeless
and poor seemed to be everywhere. In the financial
district of the city, where piles of garbage were left to be picked up
early in the morning, I naively asked the
scavenger, searching the piles which the rats always worked, what he was
doing. A weak "Khana
(food), shab," was his reply,
as he continued slowly
searching the mounds of garbage.
On a train trip, I laid on my pack at a village station and watched a
family with a pants-less child defecate diarrhea on the train platform, and use his fingers to lick it.
As a kid living on the poor side of Cleveland,
I met
only one beggar, whose cut foot
my mother cleaned after she brought him
into the house and fed him. As a
Peace Corps volunteer, I saw them maimed and crippled and begging
all day, everywhere.
Of course,
I got to see the Taj Mahal, Ajanta
and Allora Caves and stuff a kid
from a working class family would not
have had the vacation money to see. Those tourist sights made me develop
a simplified philosophy of why the India I knew in
the late-60's had the human
problems it had, and has. To build the palaces for the rich, and naturally
cooled, hand carved caves for the
influential religious classes
took a tremendous number of
manhours and resources. Energy
that was not spent on irrigation
systems, infrastructure and education.
Little did I realize how some of those
experiences working on Urban Community
Development in the slums of Bombay would
prep me for today's America. My first work site, the
Worli Chawls slum had
water available for only an hour a day,
usually with enough pressure to
reach the 2nd story of the typical four
story tenements, from about 3:00 a.m. to 4:00 a.m. If you lived on the third or
fourth story, you bucketed water up to store in your water drums.
For years now I have lived in affluent Marin
County, California, where in recent years we were limited to 50 gallons
of water per day per person. The
I captured rain water in drums and saved shower water in buckets and bucketed
it to some very basic toiletry needs.
Homelessness and begging has
become a growing problem in
Marin and a bigger problem
in Big
Brotherly San Francisco.
On
a shrinking planet whose resources are limited and whose population is pushing 5 billion with an increasing
number of homeless and hungry,
there is little justification in doing
more Taj Mahals, even if we had
powerful S&L financing and
visionary Trumph leadership.
There is obvious justification for increasing irrigation systems,
infrastructure and education worldwide.
My two
years of oversees work reinforced
my belief that there is a tremendous need for
expanding the Peace Corps overseas and
its resultant educational benefits at home.
Working on affordable housing
and land use problems in the North Bay of
San Francisco for almost 9 years continually exposed me to opponents of affordable housing, whose view of the world is dominated
by preserving what they got and only allowing more palatial estates to
be built. How their relatively
powerful actions play on the stage the
rest of the world must live on matters not.
They fail to see
how the use of our land to support
and provide energy efficient transit modes and
affordable ownership housing impacts not
only those near their county borders but those oceans away in our shrinking and ecologically fragile
planet. The NIMBYs (Not In
My Backyard) elect NIMTOs (Not In My Term of
Office) who usually produce
LULUs (Less than Useful Land Uses) by doing DECME (Density Erasers Causing
Million Dollar Estates) projects rather
than meeting the working people's and the environment's housing, transit and community development
needs.
The Maharajas'
produced Taj Mahals by
edict. We do it through a
more democratic process of meetings that produces a veiled but
often similar result. To a Peace Corps
volunteer who has seen and sensed what
wasted hours and resources can do, it is hard
to fathom why people would fight to add another 2% of
Marin's land to the 88% which is already in open space, agricultural
preserve and parks; rather than support a rail oriented development that would
provide affordable housing, child care and less car-dependent communities.
Failing to
comprehend such logic, I
often fall back to thoughts Kishore
Thakar, an Indian friend, left me.
Referring to his own caste-and-class riddled society he said,
"People need to walk a mile in
other peoples' sandals to understand the toil
and misery that goes into living the life of those who struggle. For those
who move about easily, the
blisters developed from that walk
remove both the calloused perceptions some have of
others and the scales that blind their view of what their actions
do to others. It would do the world good if more people who move about
easily served a few years doing what
you Peace Corps are trying to do.
"Buddhists believe that each life should bring more enlightenment and less need for selfish desires. If in this life we do not become enlighten over what our actions cause to others, then our reincarnation should be to walk endless miles in the sandals of those upon whom our actions stepped most heavily."
Dwayne
Hunn is a Mill Valley free lance writer.