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Open Defecation and Caste Attitudes

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November 19, 2017

What is the issue?

  • The recently released “Health of the Nation’s States” report highlights the uneven progress made by India’s states in improving public health.
  • The likelihood of the average Indian falling sick due to unsafe water and poor sanitation is 40 times higher than in China.
  • This calls for an increased attention to the problem of open defecation.

How serious is open defecation?

  • Strikingly, more than half the population of the country defecate in open fields and by the roadsides.
  • Resultantly, water supplies in rural India get contaminated with this.
  • This in turn contributes to repeated spells of diarrhoea and widespread maternal and child malnutrition.
  • The resulting “stunting” and “wasting” causes the tragedy of millions of Indian children growing up physically smaller.
  • And with inherent reduced learning abilities even before they enter the schools.
  • As a follow up of this is the reduced potential of workforce when these undernourished children get into the working age population.

What perpetuates open defecation?

  • Some observations reveal that it was not poverty, illiteracy or a lack of water that impeded the use of toilets.
  • Evidently, according to the 2011 Census, about half of rural households that had no toilets had water facilities.
  • Similarly, in about half of households where one member has completed school, the practice of defecating outside continued.
  • More than 80% of countries with worse literacy rates than India’s have lower percentages of people defecating outside.
  • In India, it is the notion of purity and cleanliness, associated with caste, that actually makes households unwilling to have a toilet at home.
  • The perceptions of caste hierarchy, people's roles, etc hinder communities from opting out of open defecation.
  • Most villagers are unwilling to close and then empty inexpensive open-pit latrines for reuse, even long after the contents have decomposed into compost.

What is desired?

  • Promoting social equality is indeed a prerequisite for achieving India's goals on open defecation free environment.
  • Before insisting on building toilets, the social attitudes about caste and cleanliness have to be changed.

 

Source: Business Standard

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