Skip to content Skip to navigation

Life of beggars

In ancient times the Hindu Society begging for mendicants and their students . The students were allowed to beg for their teacher. But they were never called beggars. They were received with highest respect and it remained tradition from age’s ago. The common house people felt lucky to receive them . But later these mendicants got greedy and degenerated and wanted to make out of begging.

Now in India begging is a fashion , a compulsion, a privilege and a recreation. The number of beggars is very much larger in our country than other countries. Our heads hang down in shame when we read description of our country India given by the foreigners in a hateful manner. To westerners, India is a land of the mendicants and snake-charmers. Beggars are found in villages and town roads, crossings and footpaths. But their favourite hunts are bathing ghats, temples, religious or festivals fairs, railway stations , everywhere trains and bus stands all over places we can find them more. They are mostly children beggars who are mostly handled by some notorious gangs to earn money for them making them blind, crippled or diseased totally. They loiter around here and there by begging near colleges, institutions, bazaars like fancy bazaar etc. When you are waiting for a bus at the Bus stand or walking down a road with your friend, they appear from somewhere and start endless wooly of entreaties and blessings. They follow you close at your heels and keep pestering you till you give them some coins out of a sense of sheer disgust and helplessness. And if you don’t give them coins then they curses you badly.

There are various types of beggars in India. The religious ; beggars cluster round pilgrim centres and attract public attention by their wonderful feats. There are crippled and disabled beggars who remain lying on road-sides or at railway or river bridges arousing sympathy of the passers by making all kinds of pitiful gesture; There are beggars who are quite slout and able-bodied . Begging for them is not a necessity but a profession. They are unwilling to earn their bread by hard work. They often operate in gangs and their leaders hold a bank balance that would be credit to an important business magnate. They are disguised as physically disabled or handicapped. They use as tools are young women’s who give birth to young babies who are taken for begging and all young children who are being handicapped or paralyzed for only begging purpose. This people become crime oriented people and mostly crimes, and the children also become criminal because of poverty and poorness. Unemployment, Illiteracy, ignorance and never ending population are other causes of begging.

Now as a citizen of India I can say that government should put some law and rules and regulation against such begging and the crime of begging small children in the streets. The government should establish work-houses where able-bodied beggars should be kept and compelled to work. Begging is a very bad thing and it against human rights and very inhuman to look at this condition of people around us begging for food which makes me cry to think. Government should make law to stop crime begging and all starved beggars fully from our country. But before doing so the government should make arrangements to rehabilitate them and to give work and shelter for them , and treatments for those who are ill. The common man should also support them give some help to them and love and care through helping hands. And people can open N.G.O for to help them in order to make our country India proud.

Richa Barua
Cotton College ,Mass Comm Deptt.
Guwahati

Comments

Gopika Kanta's picture

Now a days beggaring is become a social problem and we have to think about that ongoing social cause.

Pages

Add new comment

Other Contents by Author

A hardcore ULFA militant was killed at an encounter with security forces at Namsai along the Assam-Arunachal Pradesh border on Saturday. According to police, the encounter took place in the afternoon with 12th Assam Rifles jawans where the militant died on the spot. The identity of the militant was not yet known.
All of a sudden security has been beefed up across the state. Security forces have concentrated on Guwahati on Friday following a threat by ULFA’s anti-talk faction. According to information, police has specific inputs of ULFA’s plan to strike in Guwahati likely on Saturday. That’s why, security alert has been sounded. Security forces have been put on maximum alert following fresh threat of attack in Sibsagar, Jorhat, Dibrugarh and Tinsukia towns.
Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi on Friday sought more tribunals to detect and deport the Bangladeshi immigrants from the state. During his meeting with Union home minister Sushil Kumar Shinde on Friday in New Delhi, Gogoi told Shinde that the state lacks adequate tribunals to detect Bangladeshi immigrants. According to him, the cases pending before the tribunals are huge in number and that more judges are required to expedite the process. Before that Chief Minister Gogoi submitted a set of guidelines for updating the national registrar of citizens before Shinde.
Union home minister Sushil Kumar Shinde on Friday said that the overall situation in the violence-hit BTAD areas and Dhubri was normal. Talking to reporters after getting update on BTAD situation from Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi in Delhi, Shinde said that refugees in large number have left the camps. He said that those still remaining would also be rehabilitated.
An uneasy situation prevails in Nalbari town on Friday after unidentified miscreants shot dead at a local businessman in broad day light. Identified as Ashis Maskara, the victim was on his way to a bank when miscreants sprayed several rounds of bullets before looting Rs 30 lakh from his bag. Maskara was rushed to the civil hospital. But he was declared brought dead. Local people in large number came out alleging it law lawlessness and insecurity. Boxed by circumstances, police arrested two persons in this connection. Identified as Chandan Kalita and Kunaldeep Sindhu, they confessed that they attacked the businessman. Police further recovered 5 lakh rupees from their possession.
The Centre is likely to reject the Assam government’s request to set up more tribunals to clear the immigrants cases. According to sources, the Centre is likely to ask the Assam government to put the existing tribunals to better use by setting out modalities to fast track the pending cases. Thirty six tribunals, the Centre believes, are enough to decide cases in quick time and it can be done by fast tracking 200 cases on a daily basis.
The Assam government writes to the Centre seeking 64 additional tribunals to fast track the deportation of the Bangladeshi immigrants. In a letter to home ministry, Dispur has asked for more than five extra tribunals in Dhubri, Goalpara, Nagaon, Barpeta, Cachar and Sonitpur and one each in Chirang, Baksa and Udalguri districts. The has 36 foreigner tribunals that are yet to dispose of about 3.13 lakh cases. Notably, the state has been witnessing decadal growth of a particular community in 11 out of 27 districts.
Thousands of tea garden workers are all set to go for a day long strike on September 19 demanding puja bonus on the price of ration items, tea workers of the state. The workers would sit in strike under the aegis of Akhil Bharatiya Chah Mazdoor Sangha (ABCMS) to demand a 20 per cent annual puja bonus before Durga Puja in October. ABCMS officials said that the demand is that the price of the ration items should be incorporated while calculating the annual bonus of tea workers.
Assam home department maintains strict vigil following the reports of mysterious disappearance of a section of refugees from the camps set up at the height of the BTAD violence. According to reports, some inmates of relief camps in the violence-hit Dhubri district have gone missing. These are suspected to have crossed over to Bangladesh. Dispur has intelligence inputs suggesting that some inmates had crossed over to West Bengal but there is no specific inputs of the exact number of missing inmates. Altogether 213 camps have 1.92 lakh inmates in Kokrajhar, Dhubri, Chirang, Bongaingaon and Barptea districts.
In a major achievement for police, a huge cache of arms and ammunition was seized in Bokajan. The arms and ammunition were intercepted from a Bolero car at Khatkhati during a routine checking. Four persons were arrested when they were on their way to Manipur from Saujang. The arrested persons were identified as Antony Changloi, Lalboi Kitgen, Kakar Hauki, Jalang Palalng Thuralai. These arms include an AK-47 rifle, one AK-56 rifle, one M-16 rifle along with 700 rounds of live bullets.