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Authors: Rose George

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_______________________

Wall of shame, Kalyani, India

(Author)

 

 

OPEN DEFECATION–FREE INDIA

HUSBAND WANTED; MUST HAVE TOILET

____________

 

 

In a village in the eastern Indian state of Orissa, far from any city, our car is stopped by an oxen traffic jam. It's harvest time, and the oxen are on their way home. All day, I'd seen women in roadside fields forking hay with pitchforks in Thomas Hardy scenes, their bright saris and gold jewelry glittering amid yellow grass. There is no point sounding horns at the oxen, because horns are blared so often on Indian roads they have long lost any effect of outrage or advantage. There is nothing to do but wait, so I open the car door to get out.

“Be careful,” says Joe Madiath, who is traveling with me. “You are about to step on the village toilet.”

Joe is a thoughtful host. He is a busy man with a huge job, as his organization, Gram Vikas, is trying to install latrines and water supply in as many Orissan villages as possible. Nonetheless, he always remembers to point out the sights. “That's where the toilet starts,” he says, often, pointing to the side of a road just outside a village. I don't need to specify which village, as only 4 percent of the population of Orissa has a latrine, and the sanitation story is the same everywhere. Sometimes, returning in the dusk, I play a safari game. There: an old man squatting, his buttocks exposed. Over there: a woman who has stood up suddenly at the sight of a car, and hastily pulls down her sari, but her face is
resigned, not embarrassed. Here: two men walking back companionably, each holding a plastic
lota
that contained the water they have used to clean themselves. This standing up straight and the carrying of water vessels—these are the signs of the open defecator.

Every day, 200,000 tons of human feces are deposited in India. I don't mean that they are dealt with, or sent down sewers or given any treatment or containment. These 155,000 truckloads are left in the open to be trodden on, stepped over, lived among. It is a practice known as “open defecation,” and it is done on a scale, in the words of Sulabh International, that compares to “the entire European population sitting on their haunches from the Elbe in the east to the Pyrenees in the the west.” Indians sit on their haunches from the deepest forest to the heart of the cities. They do it beside train tracks, as V. S. Naipaul recorded with disdain in 1964, and still do. The Indian journalist Chander Suta Dogra recently described an early morning scene familiar to any train traveler in India: “Right in your face are scores of bare bottoms doing what they must.” Open defecation is so endemic, people do it even outside public toilets in the center of a modern city. I see this one afternoon in the bustling city of Ahmedabad, where by early afternoon the pavement outside the toilet entrance is dotted with shit. I choose not to examine the interior.

An Indian businessman called Milon Nag tells me that when foreign clients came to visit his plastics factory near Pune, he kept a folder in the car, ready to hold up to distract his visitors from the sight of a roadside defecator. Nag is a considerate man, and the sight of people defecating in the open distressed him enough that he decided to do something about it. His accountant and sales manager became self-taught sanitation specialists. After years of research, his factory developed the most lightweight plastic latrine squatting platform on the market, now used by many aid agencies in emergencies. “For an Indian,” Nag says, “open defecation is the maximum embarrassment.” That's not quite true. The maximum embarrassment for Indians is trying to defecate in traffic or a wheat field, keeping one hand free to cleanse and yet managing to keep faces covered with saris, all the while watching for lurkers and lookers. Open defecation damages women most, because modesty requires them to do it under cover of darkness, leaving them vulnerable to sexual assault, snakes, disease, and infection. Blocking
natural body functions like urination and defecation can cause bladder and urinary tract infections and worse.

In some Indian villages, things have changed. We drive past a woman squatting and my companion says, “Years ago, she would have stood up when a car passed, from shame. Now there's too much traffic. She can't be up and down like a yo-yo.” Also in times past, she would have covered her face. Joe calls this technique “Cover the face, expose the base.” A woman in an Orissa village now equipped with toilets told me how things used to be: “Anyone could see the bottom as long as they didn't know whose it was. We had to keep our dignity somehow.” How? She laughs. “With difficulty!” (I think of a joke someone told me in Moscow: How do you use a latrine in a Russian winter? Quickly.)

 

The arguments against open defecation are more than aesthetic. In public health terms, the practice is incredibly dangerous. Excrement is not automatically toxic. You could probably eat your own, if you wanted to (and some people do, as do most dogs), with no harm done. The trouble with excrement is other people, and specifically other people's diseases.

Worms, for example, love to travel in it. Public health experts use the term “worm burden,” a pretty way of describing an ugly reality. The world's worm burden is heavy: at any one time, about one billion people are carrying hookworm in their guts and expelling it in their feces; over a billion people have
Ascaris lumbricoides
, better known as ringworm, which can survive in human excrement for years. In the warm environment of a human gut, an egg can produce worms half a meter long. A public health bible,
Health Aspects of Excreta and Wastewater Management
, puts the number of infections that feces can transmit at fifty. These include salmonella, schistosomiasis, and cholera. Cryptosporidiosis and campylobacter. Giardia, meningitis, shigellosis (which leads to dysentery). Hookworms, roundworms, tapeworms. Dengue, leptospirosis, hepatitis A. Typhoid, scabies, and botulism.

These are all called water-related diseases because most travel from one host to another in water. More accurately, they're shit-related diseases. Water gets contaminated by excrement, and people then drink or wash in it. Or they ingest feces directly by the 5 F's, various fecal-oral
contamination pathways summed up in the famous “F-diagram” developed in 1958. Feces can get into fluid and onto fields, fingers, flies, and foods. The goal of sanitation is to prevent excrement traveling from anus to mouth. Basic, adequate sanitation is containment.

Nearly 800 million Indians are spreading possibly contagious bugs around with abandon. The scale of open defecation in India may shock because it persists in a country with a galloping GDP growth rate of 8 percent a year. Or because the Indian government has been trying to combat it for decades. Over the last twenty years, millions of latrines have been constructed throughout the country, and billions of rupees have been set aside for sanitation targets. Between 1986 and 1999, the Government of India Central Rural Sanitation Program (CRSP) installed 9.45 million latrines, and 7.4 million more people a year gained access to sanitation. Population growth makes all targets immediately outdated (between 1990 and 1999, India's population increased by 144 million). Even so, the state's efforts increased latrine coverage by 15 percent. But numbers deceive. Millions of Indians may have received a new latrine, but that doesn't mean they use it.

 

On a road somewhere else in Orissa, Joe makes the driver stop the car. By the roadside are some modest houses, and in the yard are two small brick structures. Their walls rise shoulder high, and they have no roof. Their interiors contain grain sacks and, barely visible, a latrine pan, broken and clearly never used. Joe is scornful. “Look! There's the Government of India's sanitation program. There is what passes for a latrine.” He says you can find unused latrines everywhere. The country is covered with them.

All over India, in fact, those millions of government-built latrines have been turned into millions of firewood stores or goat sheds. Surveys found latrines that were unused, misused, or ignored. There are some obvious reasons why: the CRSP latrines were expensive. They were made of brick and cement. Consequently, some people found themselves with a structure that was nicer than their house. They didn't want to waste it by using it as a toilet when there was a perfectly good bush out back, and so
the latrine became a temple, or an extra room. Some people had a latrine but no water supply, so they preferred to carry on defecating near a water source rather than heft the water to the new latrine. Many people didn't want to defecate anywhere near where they ate and slept—religious texts recommend defecating away from habitation—and a stroll to the defecation grounds was good for the digestion. Some latrines were badly designed for the terrain, so when their pits filled too quickly, they were abandoned. Some were badly designed in the first place. They didn't have screens on the vent pipes, so flies got in. People used to the open air naturally preferred it to a dark, fetid, infested concrete box.

The lesson of the Indian government's latrine-building program is a strange and perplexing truth: giving someone a latrine—even someone whose only other option is open defecation—doesn't mean they'll use it or maintain it. In development-speak, the government's methods were “top-down.” They hadn't bothered to ask people what they wanted before giving it to them. At a sanitation forum, West Bengal's health minister, Dr. Suryakant Mishra, illustrated this with a cartoon that showed a man balancing a toilet on his head. “Earlier,” Dr. Mishra said, “instead of a person sitting comfortably on a toilet, the toilet was imposed on him.”

The government program concerned itself with supply. It didn't bother looking at whether there was demand. Rural people had been defecating out of doors forever. They didn't necessarily think there was anything wrong with it. Over the last decade, two new approaches have arisen to deal with this. Their strategies are different but their purpose the same: they want to make people want a toilet.

 

I had first met Joe Madiath in a cold hall. It was the second day of a sanitation conference, and despite the freezing temperature of the air conditioning, energy was diminishing. I was about to join the considerable numbers of delegates who had snoozed through “Safeguarding the Health of Public Toilet Users” and “Air Hygiene Control in Public Washrooms,” when a bearded Indian man wearing a striped kurta pajama went up to the podium. “Good afternoon,” he said in Indian-accented
English. “My name is Joe Madiath and I work for a shit organization.” This woke me up. No one had yet used the word
shit
. (I once attended a conference of cemetery managers, and they didn't use the word
dead
, either.) But Indians do, and especially Indians who want to sort out their country's execrable sanitation situation. They have no time for verbal niceties. Even so, Joe apologized for his “unparliamentary language. But these words are used everywhere every day so allow me to use them.” Then he told a story.

Akbar was a great Mughal emperor. One day, Akbar asked his favorite minister Birubar what the most compelling need of a human being was. When Birubar said, “Sire, to shit and piss,” the emperor was offended and dismissed him. A few days later Akbar was on his boat in the river Ganges and he came to need the toilet. But Birubar had made sure there were no toilets on the boat, and Akbar became desperate, until Birubar sent him to a secret place where there was a toilet. Akbar came back and said, “You are right. The most compelling need of the human is to shit and piss and it is also something that gives you the greatest amount of relief.” Birubar kept his job.

Akbar's epiphany came late to Joe. In 1971, equipped with a degree in English, he went to work with refugees who had fled from the newly created Bangladesh. Later that year, a cyclone hit Orissa, bringing a poor state already on its knees flat to the ground. With a few friends, Joe headed for Orissa to see what he could do. He meant to stay for a year and hasn't left since.

Today he runs Gram Vikas (Village Development), whose headquarters consists of a rural wooded campus in beautiful scenery five hours from Bhubaneshwar, Orissa's capital. There are no mobile phone signals, there are bicycles to borrow, and the campus canteen makes excellent Indian chow mein for breakfast, at least when the monkeys aren't baiting the cooks. The place runs efficiently and confidently. Gram Vikas has won major international awards, like the 2006 Kyoto World Water Grand Prize, a big deal in the watsan world.

Yet its mission didn't start with toilets. The young Madiath began by lobbying for land reform, because people were moving to the cities when life on the land got too hard, and the land was suffering. Eventually, his focus shifted to biogas, which also made poor farmers' lives
easier. Over 50,000 cow-dung digesters were installed over ten years. Still it wasn't enough. Gram Vikas conducted field surveys to find the most acute problem stifling village development. They concluded that it was poor health linked to excrement. More than 80 percent of diseases were caused by contaminated water supplies. Sixty percent of women had skin and gynecological diseases because they were bathing in feces-contaminated water.

BOOK: The Big Necessity
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