Lack of crematorium
forced Zore family to bury Bhagyashri’s body in jungle
by Rajendra Kerkar
This TOI story is forwarded to this blog by Dr.Anthony Rodrigues who has expressed concern on this case and others, and currently litigating before Goa State Human Rights Commission seeking directions that there must be public crematoriums owned by the state and accessible to all. Matter is slotted to come up for hearing on July 21, 2014.
In many areas of
Sattari, the public crematoriums are almost absent and this repeatedly forces
the socially backward families to bury or burn their deceased relatives in the
remote jungle or in the no man’s land of rivers.
When the dead body of
Bhagyashree who had died on the evening of June 4, 2014 was handed over to the
family members on June 5, after post mortem, they had to continue long search
for a piece of land to bury the deceased body. The Dhangar, who are among the
Other Backward Communities (OBC) of Goa’s society are landless since the
generations and when a person is dead, it is difficult to get place in the
crematorium maintained by the village community easily. “In Village Panchayat
Keri, at Baherilwad under the Zilla Panchayat Fund, crematorium has been built.
It is a public crematorium”, said Sameer Parrikar, the secretary of Village
Panchayat. However, in this crematorium, a place for performing the last rites
is not easily available and hence the corpse of Bhagyashree was taken 14km away
and she was buried at the foot hill of the Vagheri far away from the human
settlement.
“When a woman dies
during the pregnancy, prevailing superstitions that her evil spirit will haunt
and trouble the locality account to bury dead body outside the boundaries of
village. Bhagyashree was buried at the foothill of Vagheri since there is no
public crematorium nearby and she was four month pregnant when she was killed”,
laments B.D. Mote, the social leader of the Dhangar community from Sattari.
He further said, “During
the last week, the Deputy Sarpanch of Pissurle Vaibhavi Humane was died. Her
body was cremated behind her residential house as no crematorium available for
the Dhangar community in Sattari except Bhuipal. It is inhuman and painful that
life after death of Dhangar too results in struggle.”
The Dhangar, being
nomadic, never possessed land. They just roamed the mountains with no fixed
home. Overwhelmingly today they are engaged in agriculture as landless
cultivators and as casual labourers.
Director of Social
Welfare Meena Naik Goltekar when contacted by TOI said, “In order to have
funeral in decent manner of a deceased person belonging to the Dhangar we have
introduced the Antya Sanskar Yojana and providing the financial assistance of
Rs. 20,000 or actual cost whichever is less with the provision of essential
certificates. We are also in process in solving various other issues of the
community.”
In 2012, brother of Bhagyashree’s
husband Baburao earlier died at Dhangarwada. While performing the last rites no
crematorium or land was available. The deceased body was taken to Haddwada of
Talekhol in Maharashtra where villagers too took objections when his body was
cremated.
Dhaku Pavane, from
Bhuipal of Sattari says, “The condition of our community, all over Goa is very
pitiable, we are still landless. The area where our houses are situated is also
not owned by us. So, we face lots of difficulties while doing the last rites of
the deceased.”
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