Ambika Paraja, nine, is the little girl fronting this year’s
Trócaire Lenten campaign. Claire O’Sullivan travels to Jhilligoan,
India, to discover how Trócaire has helped to change the lives of Ambika
and her family
I
DON’T know where the Trócaire box sits in your house. In mine, it’s
always on the window sill above the kitchen sink. And so every time I
have washed my hands in the past few weeks, I have felt the staring
brown eyes of a nine-year-old Indian girl who was chosen to be the face
of this year’s Lenten campaign.
Each Lent, when a new box
goes up, the same questions go up from my sons. Who is that girl and why
is that box there again? And so begins an often hilarious conversation
about how there are things in life — such as education, clean water, and
being fed every day — that millions of other children in the world
can’t depend upon. But each year, as they get older, these simple
questions become more difficult to answer as the young boys balk at the
injustice of it all.
The face of this year’s campaign is a
young girl is called Ambika and, as I sat on the floor in her family
home in the village of Jhilligoan, I chatted to a painfully shy Ambika
Paraja and her parents about what difference Trócaire’s work in India
has made for her.
Trócaire, through local organisation South
Odisha Voluntary Action, has been working in the village for seven years
now. Ambika’s dad Hari explains that Trócaire had brought “big change”
to the villagers’ lives.
“There is a lot of change. I am a
farmer and I have learnt from SOVA improved agriculture,” he says.
“Before I only grew rice but now I use better seeds that SOVA taught me
about. Now I also grow all kinds of vegetables that can be eaten all
year around.
“Before, we often went without food for days. My
wife had nothing to cook. But I have learnt new things and earn money
from the vegetables. Before, I never earned money and now, through this
change, I hope my daughter’s life will change.”
And change it
certainly will. Sitting on a green straw mat on the concrete floor of
the home that the family received as part of Trócaire’s global gift
campaign, Ambika’s parents say “they are no longer blind” to the outside
world and to what their children could achieve because of the rights
awareness work that Trócaire has started in this community.
It’s important to remember that Trócaire isn’t about “feeding black
babies” any more. It’s about teaching their parents life skills and
educating them or their rights so they can feed their own children and
then offer a future where education is a real possibility.
IN
INDIA, where a daughter’s dowry can cost €20,000, there is often little
interest in “wasting” money on education. Instead, from birth, it’s
the dowry that parents save for and often it can be the payment of a
dowry that torpedoes a hard-pressed family into starvation when they are
forced to mortgage their land and sell off their animals.
Ambika’s mother Dharama laughs at the thought that she herself could
have gone to school for more than a year or two. “When we were young, we
didn’t know what an education was,” she says. “We had to work to eat,
so school didn’t happen.
“I would love my daughter to have an
education, to have a job and earn money, to go travel to different
places and learn about the world. Then she can take care of herself and
also of her father and me.”
Dharama and Hari had little
chance to learn about the world. The furthest they have ever got is
Koraput — a town 90 minutes’ drive away.
However, Ambika wants
to be a teacher. “I’d like to go to Ireland too, as lots of people from
Ireland come to see me,” she smiles as she clutches her school uniform.
Trócaire, through SOVA, has been working in the village for
seven years now. Its objective is to help the village build its own
community development committee so villagers can learn more about their
rights under Indian law and develop the self-confidence to go out, as a
group, and demand those rights.
A potent mixture of
corruption, unaccountability, and transparency means government
agencies rarely go out to rural areas to spread awareness of rights.
As India’s tribes are one of the most excluded groups in the country’s
hierarchical society, before SOVA began this work, these people didn’t
know that they had a right to rice, butter, and kerosene from the
government; that they were entitled to 100 days’ work a year, and that
they can also seek title to the land that they have farmed for
generations. And so they regularly went hungry when the rice harvest had
been all eaten; lived in mud shacks where the rain poured through
during rainy season; and education was something that only happened to
other people.
There’s something wonderfully quaint and Irish
about Trócaire boxes. I remember them at my granny’s kitchen sink and at
my own mother’s sink when I was a child. My mother used to faithfully
throw money into that box every Friday night when Dad got paid.
Trócaire boxes and the questions around social justice that they
provoke have probably created awkward moments for Irish parents for
generations. As adults, we know we can’t solve the world’s problems, but
we should continue to do our bit to support the social justice work
Trócaire is doing for 40 years now. The Lenten campaign makes up 50% of
their funding for the year worldwide.